, founder of the
WEF, are often used to illustrate the phrase online especially in
memesAlthough Auken's essay was published more than three years before the
COVID-19 pandemic, the phrase gained currency among critics of the WEF after the organization announced the
Great Reset initiative for global economic recovery after the pandemic. In 2023,
Jim Geraghty wrote in
National Review, referring to the WEF, "Very few of us see owning our own homes, owning our own cars, and owning our own clothes as a major problem to be solved, the sort of crisis that requires Danish legislators and global business elites to gather and come up with a plan to rescue us."
Adrian Monck, the WEF's managing director, traced the phrase's mimetic origin to a
4chan post, the content of which he described as "Own nothing, be happy — The
New World Order 2030". According to him, during the pandemic far-right groups and individuals started pushing the phrase on 4chan and its
/pol/ board to promote a conspiracy theory, according to which the pandemic was "orchestrated" by the WEF "to take control of the global economy"; the phrase became viral and spread by such resources as
Fox News and
Sky News Australia, and popular content creators like
Russell Brand shared it with their audiences. Monck said that the WEF removed all media related to Auken's essay from its web site "because of the online abuse and threats she had faced." In an interview with CBC News, Monck blamed state-sponsored
disinformation campaigns and
antisemitic canards for the spread of false conspiracy theories concerning the WEF. A
Reuters fact check noted that claims about the WEF have been conflated with criticism of the
United Nations'
Sustainable Development Goals, which does not currently have "property ownership for all by 2030" as a stated goal. ==See also==