 The dystopian Fourth Industrial Revolution will be very different from the first one by Anthony P. Mueller, an audio Mises Weyer narrated by Michael Stack. If one takes the publications of the World Economic Forum as an indication of how the Fourth Industrial Revolution will change society, the world is facing a massive onslaught against individual liberty and private property. A new kind of collectivism is about to emerge. Like the communism of the past, the new project appeals to the public with the assurance of technological advancement and social inclusion. Additionally, ecological sustainability and the promise of longevity or even immortality are used to entice the public. In reality, however, these promises are deeply dystopian. According to Klaus Schwab, the founder and current executive chairman of the World Economic Forum, the Fourth Industrial Revolution represents a new stage of the disruptive technological advances that began toward the end of the 18th century with the textile industry and the use of steam power. The Second Industrial Revolution took place in the decades before and after 1900. It created a plethora of new consumer goods and production technologies that allowed mass production. The Third Industrial Revolution began around 1950 with the breakthroughs in digital technologies. Now, according to Klaus Schwab, the Fourth Industrial Revolution means that the world is moving toward a true global civilization. The Fourth Industrial Revolution provides the potential to quote, robotize humanity and thus compromise our traditional sources of meaning, work, community, family, identity, end quote. Schwab predicts that the Fourth Industrial Revolution will lift humanity into a new collective and moral consciousness. Transhumanism is part of the transformation that comes with the Fourth Industrial Revolution as artificial intelligence will surpass even the best human performances at specific tasks. The new technologies, quote, will not stop us at becoming part of the physical world around us. They will become part of us, Schwab declares. In the forward to Schwab's latest book, Shaping the Future of the Fourth Industrial Revolution, the CEO of Microsoft, Sacha Nadella, states that the evolution of the new technologies is entirely within our power. Microsoft and the other high-tech companies are betting on the convergence of several important technology shifts, mixed reality, artificial intelligence, and quantum computing. Sacha Nadella informs readers that Microsoft, Amazon, Google, Facebook, and IBM will cooperate in an artificial intelligence partnership that will work to develop and test the technology in fields such as automobiles and healthcare, human-AI collaboration, economic displacement, and how artificial intelligence can be used for social good. In the preface to his latest book, Klaus Schwab predicts that the Fourth Industrial Revolution will, quote, upend the existing ways of sensing, calculating, organizing, acting, and delivering, end quote. He states that the negative externalities of the present global economy harm the natural environment and vulnerable populations. The changes that come with the new technologies will be comprehensive and will topple the way we produce and transport goods and services. The revolution will upset how we communicate, the way we collaborate, and the way we experience the world around us. The change will be so profound that the advances in neurotechnologies and biotechnologies are forcing us to question what it means to be human. Like Sacha Nadella's forward, Schwab's text reiterates several times the claim that the evolution of the Fourth Industrial Revolution is entirely within our power when we use the window of opportunity and drive for empowerment. The we that both authors speak of is the global technocratic elite that calls for central control and state interventionism, called shaping the future, in a new system that is characterized by intimate cooperation between business and government, or more specifically between high tech and a handful of key states. The World Economic Forum's webpage about the Great Reset proclaims that the COVID-19 crisis presents a unique window of opportunity to shape the recovery. At the present historic crossroads, the world leaders must address the inconsistencies, inadequacies, and contradictions ranging from health care and education to finance and energy. The forum defines sustainable development as the central aim of the global management activities. The Great Reset calls for global cooperation to attain goals such as harnessing the Fourth Industrial Revolution, restoring the health of the environment, redesigning social contracts, skills, and jobs, and shaping the economic recovery. As thematized at the October 20-23, 2020 Jobs Reset Summit, a green recovery from the COVID-19 crisis promises a green horizon. The World Economic Forum Summit in January 2021 will specifically address the transformations that are to come. The main topics include stable climate, sustainable development, a zero-carbon economy, and agricultural production that would reduce cattle farming in tune with the global reduction of meat consumption. The rise of living standards together with the growth of the world population became possible because of the Industrial Revolution. Those who want to bring down capitalist society and the economy must necessarily opt for declining living standards and depopulation. The promoters of the plans to bring about a new world order with the force of the state negate that radical capitalism could do much better, provided the means to move to a better world, as has been the case since the inception of the first Industrial Revolution. What brought about the Industrial Revolutions of the past were free markets and individual choice. As Mises explains, it was the laissez-faire ideology that produced the first Industrial Revolution. There was a spiritual revolution first that brought about an end to the social order in which a constantly increasing number of people were doomed to abject need and destitution, and where the manufacturing activity had almost exclusively catered to the wants of the well-to-do, and their expansion was limited by the amount of luxuries the wealthier strata of the population could afford. The ideology of the World Economic Forum is that of the pre-industrial era. While the website of the forum teams with terms like power, organization, and managed sustainable development, concepts like freedom, market coordination, and individual... Concepts like freedom, market coordination, and individual choice are blatantly absent. The forum hides the fact that instead of human progress, impoverishment and suppression is the future of humankind. The implicit consequence of the planned ecological economy is the drastic reduction of the world population. With the abolishment of markets and the suppression of individual choice, which the collectivist plans of the WEF propound, a new dark age would come. Different from what the planners presume, technological progress itself would come to a standstill. Without the human creativity that springs from the mindset of individualism, no economic progress has ever been possible. The new technologies that come with the Fourth Industrial Revolution can be of immense benefit to humankind. The technologies per se are not the problem but how they are used. A dystopian future awaits us if the global elite of the World Economic Forum has its say. The result would be a technocratic terror regime marked as a benevolent world government. Do it again. The result would be a technocratic terror regime, marked as a benevolent world government. Yet there is an alternative. As widely proven over the past 200 years, free markets and individual choice are the sources of technological advancement, human progress and economic prosperity. There are no rational reasons to presume that the Fourth Industrial Revolution would require collectivism. Free markets are the best way to cope with the challenges that come with new technologies. Not less, but more capitalism is the answer. For more content like this, visit Mises.org.