I'm not actually a Marxist, but more of an evolutionary ecologist in my thinking. I believe Marx was on the right track in terms of seeing economic (i.e. ecological) factors, rather than belief systems or great men, as the general driving dynamic of history, and for his recognition of competitive economic divisions within society as opposed to the one-happy-nation ideal of racialists and nationalists. But his political polemic led him to roll self-serving notions of objective value into his framework, which invidiously corrupted the science of society and history he was trying to create. Some Marxist terms and insights are useful though, if not carried to absolutist extremes.
I completely agree that we are all actors in our own right, and that there may be many different plans rather than just one Master Plan. The three elements I raised though-- vax-covidianism, woke, and welcoming illegal immigrants-- all seem to be coming down from a few super-billionaires of WEF, and all seem specifically designed to destroy the current citizenry and replace them with rightless people who can be exploited or disposed of without recourse. That seems to me to reflect a single objective shared by a small set of powerful people, and if that is a conspiracy theory, then so be it.
People downstream from the principle conspirators may be quite clueless, and likely go along because vectors of finance and influence from those at the top make it worth their while.
On the other hand, there are probably oodles of other plans by other actors in play as well, and we should not fall into the funk of supposing the WEF-ers to be all-powerful. But there has been a drastic change over the past few years. Formerly, we in the West enjoyed governments based on economically independent citizens with rights, rights that could largely be enforced because there was a granular balance of power among the people. Now, the power of the citizens is shattered, but their old government still exists and has become the tool of the oligarchs.
Our democracy/republic is practically dead. Going forward, it will be a titanic struggle among the oligarchs who have bought up our institutions, for supreme power. Our own politics will be reduced to attaching ourselves to one or another of these oligarchs. There will be no political nuance to find common ground, and we will have little individually to say in setting the political agenda.