Jacques Attali

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5Person.png Jacques Attali   Amazon Facebook IMDB Keywiki Twitter Website WikiquoteRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(academic, author, editor, deep politician, banker)
Jacques Attali.jpg
Born1943-11-01
Algiers, French Algeria
NationalityFrench
Alma materLycée Janson-de-Sailly, École Polytechnique, École des Mines, Sciences Po, École nationale d'administration, Paris Dauphine University
Founder ofAttali commission, Slate.fr
Member ofGlobal Commission for Post-Pandemic Policy, Le Siècle
Intereststranshumanism
French author and academic who attended the 1975 Bilderberg. Le siecle.

“The real bourgeoisie running the world is about 1,000 people. They are running capitalism." He reconsiders: "Well, one might say it's 10,000, but no more than that. In a world population of 6.5 billion, that is not very many people”
Jacques Attali [1]

“A major pandemic would raise awareness of the need for altruism, at least self-interested. History teaches us that humanity only evolves significantly when it is truly afraid: then it first sets up defense mechanisms; sometimes intolerable (scapegoats and totalitarianisms); sometimes futile (distraction); sometimes effective (therapeutic, if necessary setting aside all previous moral principles). Then, once the crisis has passed, it transforms these mechanisms to make them compatible with individual freedom and to include them in a democratic health policy. The beginning of the pandemic could trigger one of these structuring fears.”
Jacques Attali (3 May 2009)  [2]

Jacques Attali is a French deep politician, economic and social theorist, futurist writer, political adviser and senior civil servant. He was counselor and gray eminence[3][4] to President François Mitterrand from 1981 to 1991, where he advised "economic rigour and replaced the French economic model with neoliberalism, and was the first head of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development 1991-1993. He attended the 1975 Bilderberg. He has been using the Covid-19-crisis for vocally pushing a total digital remake of the French and world economy, and a vaccine for everyone in the world[5].

Prophecies come true

Politically, albeit formally a socialist, he has championed neoliberalism. Since his earliest books, Attali foresaw signals of the future, albeit weak at the time, that later came true. To which degree Attali, as a guru for the establishment, helped make these prophecies true, is hard to measure.

In La parole et l'outil (1976), he announced and described the shift from an energy-based society to an information-based society. In Bruits, in 1977, he announced what would later be the internet, YouTube, and the importance of musical practice; in La nouvelle économie française, in 1978, he discussed the coming emergence of the personal computer, hyper-surveillance and self-surveillance. In Les trois mondes, in 1980, he announced the shift of the centre of power around the Pacific. In L'ordre Cannibale, in 1980, he announced the advent of a prosthetic society, now known as transhumanism. In Histoires du temps, he announced the rapid pace of history and the growing immediacy of relationships. In Amours, he announced the emergence of poly-romantic relationships. In Au propre et au figuré, he announced the break-up of property and its use, and subsequently he invented the concept of the "nomadic object." In Lignes d'horizons, in 1990, he predicted the relative decline of US power. In Brève histoire de l'avenir, he announced a corporate power grab by health data and insurance companies. In L'homme nomade, he described the great movement of populations whose sedentary life was only a temporary stage.

Attali analyzes history and present-day events in the light of the change of Merchant orders. The contemporary one — the ninth — is going through an extremely acute crisis, which will end with the demise of Pax Americana. Then a furcation will occur. In Attali’s view, either world government will be established at once or it will emerge as a result of a three-move process of the 2020-2060s: hyperempire (market without democracy), hyperconflict and hyperdemocracy with a supranational government at its head.

The analysis of Attali’s works shows that he expresses the interests of the top of the world capitalist class that adheres to ultra-globalist positions and works for the subversion of the sovereignty of nation-states. The terminology used by Attali, particularly “sustainable development” / “sustainable growth” (in reality, it is the combination of deindustrialization, depopulation and ecologism), indicates his neo-Malthusian and neo-colonialist preferences. “Sustainable development” is a metaphor of the new world order (à la Orwell’s Newspeak), which is nothing more than control over resources (including information ones) and human behaviour (psychosphere). The main thing in this order is the preservation of power, property and privileges of the world’s elite whose ideological representative Attali is.

(Andrei Fursov, 2014[6])

Early Life

Jacques Attali was born on 1 November 1943 in Algiers (French Algeria), with his twin brother Bernard Attali, in a Jewish family. In 1956, two years after the beginning of the Algerian independence war (1954–1962), his father decided to move to Paris with his family. Jacques and Bernard studied at the Lycée Janson-de-Sailly, in the posh 16th arrondissement, where they met Jean-Louis Bianco and Laurent Fabius. In 1966, Jacques graduated from the École polytechnique (first of the class of 1963). He also graduated from the École des mines, Sciences Po and the École nationale d'administration (third of the class of 1970).

In 1968, while doing an internship at the prefecture of a French department (Nièvre), he met for the second time with François Mitterrand, then President of the department, whom he had met for the first time three years before.

In 1972, Jacques Attali received a Ph.D. in economics from University Paris Dauphine, for a thesis written under the supervision of Alain Cotta. Michel Serres was among the jury of his Ph.D.

In 1970, when he was 27, he became a member of the Council of State. In 1972, aged 29, he published his first two books on political economy.

Attali taught economics from 1968 to 1985 at the Paris Dauphine University, at the École polytechnique and at the École des Ponts et chaussées.

In his laboratory in Dauphine, the IRIS, he gathered several young researchers Yves Stourdzé (who ran the European research program EUREKA co-founded by Jacques Attali), Jean-Hervé Lorenzi, and Érik Orsenna, but also leading figures in various fields (including journalism, mathematics, show business, financial analysis).

Political Career

Jacques Attali's close collaboration with François Mitterrand started in December 1973. His directed his political campaign for the presidential elections in 1974. He then became his main chief of staff in the opposition. In 1981, François Mitterrand, after he was elected President, named Attali as his special adviser. From this moment on, Jacques Attali wrote notes every evening for the attention of the French President, which dealt with economics, culture, politics, or the last book he read. He also attended all the Cabinet meetings, the Defense Council, and all bilateral meetings between President François Mitterrand and foreign heads of States and governments. The President also entrusted him with the role of "sherpa" (personal representative of a head of State) for the European and G7 summits. A CIA document from 1984 detailed that: "one constant at the Elysee is the strong influence of Jaques Attali who remains personally very close to the president"[7].

Attali then enlarged his circle of acquaintances to Raymond Barre, Jacques Delors, Philippe Séguin, Jean-Luc Lagardère, Antoine Riboud, Michel Serres and Coluche. He advised the President to get Jean-Louis Bianco, Alain Boublil and several young, promising graduates from the École nationale d’administration (like François Hollande and Ségolène Royal) to join his team.

In August 1989, Jacques Attali gave up politics and left the Elysée Palace. He founded the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), in London, and became its first president. He resigned from the EBRD's top post in 1993 amid charges of lavish spending[8] and mismanagement.

After 2000

In 2008 and 2010, he was asked by then President Nicolas Sarkozy to chair a bipartisan commission aiming at proposing reforms to "foster French economic growth", in reality to introduce more neoliberalism. The commission was composed of 42 members, freely appointed by Attali, and the ideas were adopted by Emmanuel Macron, then Minister of Economy, for his "Macron Law".

Other Activities

In 1980 he founded Action Contre la Faim.[9], together with Bernard-Henri Lévy and other intellectuals.

In 1994, Jacques Attali founded Attali & Associates (A&A), an international advisory firm which specializes in strategy consulting, corporate finance and venture capital.

In 1998, he founded Positive Planet, a microfinance organisation. In 2001, French police raided Attali's home, focusing on a payment of 1.5m francs ($213,000) payment from businessman Pierre Falcone to a consulting company belonging to Attali, in connection with an arms deal with Angola. Attali claimed the money was part of a microfinance deal[10].

In 2012, Attali became a member of the supervisory board of Kepler Capital Markets, a Swiss broker based in Geneva.[11]

He also presides over the supervisory board of Slate.fr.[12]

He has published over 75 books, translated into over 30 languages.

2009 Major Pandemic Prediction

In 2009, Attali wrote a letter[13] to L'Express:

A major pandemic would raise awareness of the need for altruism, at least self-interested,
History teaches us that humanity only evolves significantly when it is truly afraid: then it first sets up defense mechanisms; sometimes intolerable (scapegoats and totalitarianisms); sometimes futile (distraction); sometimes effective (therapeutic, if necessary setting aside all previous moral principles). Then, once the crisis has passed, it transforms these mechanisms to make them compatible with individual freedom and to include them in a democratic health policy.
The beginning of the pandemic could trigger one of these structuring fears.
If it is not more serious than the two previous fears of the last fifteen years linked to the risk of a pandemic (the [[|Mad Cow|mad cow crisis]] in Great Britain and that of avian flu in China), it will first have significant economic consequences (drop in air transport activity, drop in tourism and the price of oil); it will cost about $ 2 million per infected person and will lower the stock markets by about 15%; its impact will be very brief (during the avian flu episode, the Chinese growth rate declined only during the second quarter of 2003, only to explode higher in the third); it will also have consequences in terms of organization (still in 2003, very rigorous police measures were taken throughout Asia; the World Health Organization has set up warning procedures on a planetary scale ; and some countries, in particular France and Japan, have built up considerable reserves of drugs and masks).
If the epidemic is a little more serious, which is possible, since it is transmissible by humans, it will have truly planetary consequences: economic (models suggest that this could lead to a loss of 3 trillion dollars , i.e. a 5% drop in global GDP) and political (because of the risk of contagion, the countries of the North will have an interest in ensuring that those in the South are not sick, and they will have to ensure that the poorest have access to to drugs now stored for the richest only); a major pandemic will then raise, better than any humanitarian or ecological discourse, the awareness of the need for altruism, at least self-interested.
And, even if, as we can obviously hope, this crisis is not very serious, we must not forget, as for the economic crisis, to learn the lessons, so that before the next - inevitable - prevention and control mechanisms are put in place, as well as logistical processes for the equitable distribution of drugs and vaccines. For that, we will have to put in place a global police force, global storage and therefore global taxation. It will then, much faster than economic reason alone would have allowed, to lay the foundations for a real world government. In fact, it was through the hospital that the establishment of a real state began in France in the seventeenth century.
In the meantime, we could at least hope for the implementation of a real European policy on the subject. But here again, like on so many other subjects, Brussels is silent.


 

Quotes by Jacques Attali

PageQuoteDateSource
Emmanuel Macron“Emmanuel Macron? I’m the one who spotted him. I even invented him. Totally.”2017
The Auriol massacre“François Mitterrand said: These people are still very powerful. They will try to destabilize the regime. What happened to Salvador Allende can happen to me. I know it." He tells me, without details, that he received threats after May 10. One day, during a trip to the provinces, someone slips a message into his hand to prove that he can be assassinated, when the time comes, without difficulty.”Attali, Verbatim, volume I, 1981-1986, première partie 1981-1983, 1993, éd. Fayard, p. 83.

 

Related Quotation

PageQuoteAuthorDate
Andrei Fursov“Attali analyzes history and present-day events in the light of the change of Merchant orders. The contemporary one — the ninth — is going through an extremely acute crisis, which will end with the demise of Pax Americana. Then a furcation will occur. In Attali’s view, either world government will be established at once or it will emerge as a result of a three-move process of the 2020-2060s: hyperempire (market without democracy), hyperconflict and hyperdemocracy with a supranational government at its head.

The analysis of Attali’s works shows that he expresses the interests of the top of the world capitalist class that adheres to ultra-globalist positions and works for the subversion of the sovereignty of nation-states. The terminology used by Attali, particularly “sustainable development” / “sustainable growth” (in reality, it is the combination of deindustrialization, depopulation and ecologism), indicates his neo-Malthusian and neo-colonialist preferences. “Sustainable development” is a metaphor of the new world order (à la Orwell’s Newspeak), which is nothing more than control over resources (including information ones) and human behaviour (psychosphere). The main thing in this order is the preservation of power, property and privileges of the world’s elite whose ideological representative Attali is.

Andrei Fursov2014

 

Events Participated in

EventStartEndLocation(s)Description
Bilderberg/197525 April 197527 April 1975Turkey
Golden Dolphin Hotel
Cesme
The 24th Bilderberg Meeting, 98 guests
WEF/Annual Meeting/200421 January 200425 January 2004World Economic Forum
Switzerland
2068 billionaires, CEOs and their politicians and "civil society" leaders met under the slogan Partnering for Prosperity and Security. "We have the people who matter," said World Economic Forum Co-Chief Executive Officer José María Figueres.
WEF/Annual Meeting/201323 January 201327 January 2013World Economic Forum
Switzerland
2500 mostly unelected leaders met to discuss "leading through adversity"
WEF/Annual Meeting/201422 January 201425 January 2014World Economic Forum
Switzerland
2604 guests in Davos considered "Reshaping The World"
WEF/Annual Meeting/201620 January 201623 January 2016World Economic Forum
Switzerland
Attended by over 2500 people, both leaders and followers, who were explained how the Fourth Industrial Revolution would changed everything, including being a "revolution of values".
WEF/Annual Meeting/201717 January 201720 January 2017World Economic Forum
Switzerland
2950 known participants, including prominently Bill Gates. "Offers a platform for the most effective and engaged leaders to achieve common goals for greater societal leadership."
WEF/Annual Meeting/202222 May 202226 May 2022World Economic Forum
Switzerland
1912 guests in Davos


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