Difference between revisions of "David de Rothschild"

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{{person
 
{{person
 
|wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Mayer_de_Rothschild
 
|wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Mayer_de_Rothschild
|twitter=
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|twitter=https://twitter.com/drexplore
 
|constitutes=environmentalist, billionaire
 
|constitutes=environmentalist, billionaire
 
|image=David Mayer de Rothschild.jpg
 
|image=David Mayer de Rothschild.jpg
|interests=
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|interests=Climate change
 
|nationality=British
 
|nationality=British
 
|birth_date=25 August 1978
 
|birth_date=25 August 1978
 
|birth_place=
 
|birth_place=
|death_date=
 
|death_place=
 
 
|description=$10 billion Rothschild family fortune. High interest in the [[climate change]] agenda.
 
|description=$10 billion Rothschild family fortune. High interest in the [[climate change]] agenda.
 
|parents=Evelyn Robert de Rothschild, Victoria Lou Schott
 
|parents=Evelyn Robert de Rothschild, Victoria Lou Schott
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In the late [[2000s]], de Rothschild developed a mission to raise awareness of the [[Pacific Garbage Patch]], a gyre where plastic trash gathers, in which he invented a new form of sustainable ship in [[San Francisco]], called the Plastiki. In March 2010, de Rothschild launched the boat, a 60-foot (18 m) catamaran built from approximately 12,500 reclaimed plastic bottles and a unique recyclable technology called Seretex. Seretex, which was developed by de Rothschild and his team, was meant to reuse PET in a novel way, finding new uses for a waste product.<ref>https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2009/oct/11/sailing-plastiki-david-de-rothschild</ref>  
 
In the late [[2000s]], de Rothschild developed a mission to raise awareness of the [[Pacific Garbage Patch]], a gyre where plastic trash gathers, in which he invented a new form of sustainable ship in [[San Francisco]], called the Plastiki. In March 2010, de Rothschild launched the boat, a 60-foot (18 m) catamaran built from approximately 12,500 reclaimed plastic bottles and a unique recyclable technology called Seretex. Seretex, which was developed by de Rothschild and his team, was meant to reuse PET in a novel way, finding new uses for a waste product.<ref>https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2009/oct/11/sailing-plastiki-david-de-rothschild</ref>  
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=== 2007 Alex Jones interview ===
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He was interviewed by [[Alex Jones]] for his [[Infowars]] radio program in [[2007]] about his views.<ref>https://odysee.com/@AlexJonesChannel:c/ALEX-JONES-Interviews-David-Mayor-de-Rothschild-(FULL-Global-Warming-Debate---2007)-:b</ref>
  
 
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==References==
 
==References==
 
{{reflist}}
 
{{reflist}}

Revision as of 16:37, 7 August 2023

Person.png David de Rothschild   TwitterRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(environmentalist, billionaire)
David Mayer de Rothschild.jpg
Born25 August 1978
NationalityBritish
Alma materMillbrook House, Harrow School, Oxford Brookes University, College of Naturopathic Medicine London
Parents • Evelyn Robert de Rothschild
• Victoria Lou Schott
Member ofRothschild family, WEF/Young Global Leaders/2007
Interests“Climate change”
$10 billion Rothschild family fortune. High interest in the climate change agenda.

David Mayer de Rothschild is a British billionaire adventurer and environmentalist with a fortune of perhaps 10 billion dollars.[1]

Background

David de Rothschild's father, Evelyn Robert de Rothschild is a double Bilderberger UK financier whose name appears in Epstein's black book.

Activities

De Rothschild writes that he first "began to grasp the scale and complexity of climate change" during a trip to the North Pole. "Standing in the midst of the Arctic, surrounded by 5.5 million square miles of frozen ocean, I felt like nothing more than a speck of dust on the endless horizon of Earth’s most raw, majestic and environmentally significant ecosystem."[2]

In the late 2000s, de Rothschild developed a mission to raise awareness of the Pacific Garbage Patch, a gyre where plastic trash gathers, in which he invented a new form of sustainable ship in San Francisco, called the Plastiki. In March 2010, de Rothschild launched the boat, a 60-foot (18 m) catamaran built from approximately 12,500 reclaimed plastic bottles and a unique recyclable technology called Seretex. Seretex, which was developed by de Rothschild and his team, was meant to reuse PET in a novel way, finding new uses for a waste product.[3]

2007 Alex Jones interview

He was interviewed by Alex Jones for his Infowars radio program in 2007 about his views.[4]


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References