
Religious Leaders Join UN, WEF to Push the Global Climate Agenda
Published on December 6, 2023
Deep in a Cambodian old-growth forest, Buddhist “ecology monks” wrap trees in saffron clerical robes before ordaining the trees into the Buddhist faith. The practice is an example of “forest activism” that spread to Cambodia after Thai monks in the 1990s began ordaining trees as they would a new monk. Ordained trees become sacred and protected from illegal logging because harming an ordained monk is taboo in the Buddhist religion. The recognition that religion can be a powerful tool when applied to selling the global warming narrative has been gaining traction at the United Nations and the World Economic Forum (WEF), where faith has traditionally been kept at arm’s length....
