The Demise of Davos: The Attack on the New World Order

(January 21, 2026, Davos, Switzerland) For decades, the global elite have presented globalism as inevitable, benevolent, and morally superior to national sovereignty. From the annual gatherings of the World Economic Forum to the language of “stakeholder capitalism,” citizens have been told that borders are obsolete, national identity is dangerous, and centralized technocratic control is the future.

But history—and prophecy—suggest otherwise.

Recent confrontations by Donald Trump and others against this ideology have been widely mischaracterized by media narratives as bullying, nationalism, or isolationism. In reality, what we are witnessing may be something far more disruptive to the global order: a direct challenge to the post–World War II architecture of global governance itself.

Today, in a highly anticipated speech, President Donald Trump addressed the leaders of the Globalist Elite directly. Many of those attending this annual gathering are the world’s power brokers; bankers, politicians, Presidents, Prime Ministers, Kings and other elitists who have made a living in lecturing the rest of the world as to how nations should be governed and have presented their vision for humanity of the future. In the words of the World Economic Forum founder, Klaus Schwab, his grand vision for mankind are that everyone else will “eat bugs, own nothing, and be happy.”

Enter today — the President of the United States, one of few on the world stage willing to take on those who have sold a false narrative to mankind — that they alone have the answers for the future of mankind. In his speech, the most powerful person in the world, the U.S. President informed these self-made messiahs of mankind that it is in no one’s best interest to follow the failed model of globalism.


Globalism on Trial

Globalism promised peace but delivered endless wars. It promised prosperity but concentrated wealth. It promised unity but dissolved cultures.

The institutions born after World War II—designed initially to prevent another global conflict—have gradually transformed into mechanisms of control rather than cooperation. Unelected bodies now exert influence over national economies, borders, energy policy, speech, and even elections.

When these systems are challenged, the response is not debate—it is delegitimization.

Those who question globalism are branded extremists. Those who defend sovereignty are portrayed as threats. This is not the behavior of confident systems—it is the reflex of failing ones.


Trump as Disruptor, Not Aggressor

The popular caricature casts Trump as the “schoolyard bully.” But a more accurate analogy is this: he is the one confronting the bully.

Globalism thrives on intimidation—economic, political, and cultural. Nations are pressured into compliance through trade dependency, debt, migration crises, and regulatory capture. Leaders who resist are isolated or removed.

Trump’s confrontations—whether at international forums or through policy—represent a rupture in this pattern. His actions challenge the assumption that global institutions are untouchable.

This is why the backlash is so fierce.


Greenland and the Panic of Europe

Nowhere is this clearer than in the reaction to Trump’s remarks about Greenland.

He never proposed invasion. He never suggested coercion.

What he proposed was mutual interest:

  • Strategic defense in the Arctic
  • Access to rare earth minerals
  • A counterbalance to expanding Chinese influence

Yet the response from European elites was immediate and hostile.

Why?

Because Greenland is not just territory—it is strategic leverage. Control of resources, shipping lanes, and defense positions in the Arctic represents future power. And globalists do not want sovereign nations negotiating power independently of centralized frameworks.

The irony is striking: those objecting most loudly are unelected European officials, not the Greenlandic people themselves—raising a fundamental question:

Who truly decides the future of nations—the people, or supranational institutions?


Venezuela, China, and the Western Hemisphere

Trump’s actions toward Venezuela were likewise dismissed as reckless—until one considers the broader picture.

The issue was never only narcotics or corruption. It was foreign influence in the Western Hemisphere.

China has invested heavily across Latin America, embedding itself economically, technologically, and politically. Venezuela became a key node in that strategy. Disrupting that influence sends a message: the Monroe Doctrine is not dead.

Whether one agrees with every tactic or not, the objective is unmistakable—rolling back the steady encroachment of rival powers enabled by globalist indifference.


Micah’s Startling Prophecy

This brings us to Micah 5:7-9: “The remnant of Jacob will be in the midst of many peoples
like dew from the Lord, like showers on the grass, which do not wait for anyone or depend on man. The remnant of Jacob will be among the nations, in the midst of many peoples,
like a lion among the beasts of the forest, like a young lion among flocks of sheep, which mauls and mangles as it goes, and no one can rescue.Your hand will be lifted up in triumph over your enemies, and all your foes will be destroyed.

A Crucial Prophetic Pivot

Micah’s prophecy does not end with dominance. Beginning in verse 10, the tone shifts sharply: “And it shall be in that day… That I will cut off your horses… destroy your chariots…” (Micah 5:10)

This is God removing power from Jacob itself, not from pagan nations.

The Warning Embedded in the Blessing

Micah confirms a recurring biblical principle: Power without righteousness invites judgment.

The same God who grants national greatness also withdraws it when corruption becomes entrenched—just as He did with ancient Israel and Judah.

Why This Matters Today

If modern descendants of Joseph are indeed experiencing a temporary reassertion of power, Micah’s prophecy warns that such moments are not permanent.

They are:

A final opportunity

A test of repentance

A warning before correction

Prophetic Bottom Line

Micah 5 does not promise endless dominance. It foretells a last assertion of strength—followed by divine reckoning.

At the height of Jacob’s power, God cuts it off—not because enemies prevail, but because righteousness fails.

This is where America stands today – still at the height of power – and at a time when moral and political corruption is being exposed.  America’s leadership class are being held accountable, and a nation truly “under God” must recognize its shortcomings and repent.

Europe’s Coming Reckoning

Europe’s reaction to these disruptions may be the most prophetic of all. For decades, European unification has been presented as irreversible. The framers of the Common Market, followed by the European Union have sought unity and strength through relaxing border restrictions, a single currency and a European Parliament.

Yet the results of modern Europe show a collapse of culture, and erasure of national pride, mass immigration without integration, rising Islamic extremism. Clearly, the European experiment has been an abject failure of colossal terms.

If globalism collapses, Europe will be forced to reckon with a truth long suppressed: unity without sovereignty breeds instability, not peace.


What Comes Next?

Prophetically, moments like this rarely resolve cleanly.

Challenges to entrenched power provoke backlash.
Backlash produces instability.
Instability accelerates realignment.

Micah foresaw a world where false securities collapse and nations are stripped of their illusions of control.

The demise of Davos, if it comes, will not be polite. It will be resisted. And it will expose where real power—and real accountability—lie.

Europe, now challenged by a powerful personality in the American President, insistent that globalism does not shape the future of the world, is prophesied to revisit its ancient — and some think glorious roots. Revelation chapter 13 is one of the most chilling of end time prophecies. It reveals the resurrection of an unholy alliance of State and Church that will dominate the world, politically, militarily, economically and religiously.


Final Thought

Globalism is not failing because of one man.
It is failing because it contradicts human nature, national identity, and ultimately God’s design for nations.

Micah’s prophecy reminds us that no system endures that exalts itself above truth. What we are witnessing may not yet be the end—but it may be the beginning of the end.

And history, once again, is moving faster than those who believed they controlled it.

World News & Prophecy Review

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