The idea of "ecology" is actually insightful, as described by Fursov in the interview above. In essence human beings are treated like a form of cattle. Man is just a plague on the earth that needs to be contained. According to Fursov, a caste system is being developed in which the elites hope to survive hundreds of years, while the cattle below subsist on bugs and chemicals. To get to this new society there needs to be an "anthropological" revolution. This kind of thing has been talked about for a long time by futurists and eugenicists. It was a common line of thinking throughout the 1900's but was taboo after the second world war as it was associated with Nazi ideology. I find it of interest that it is resurfacing now.
It makes sense that this transition is occurring at least from a technological perspective. Industrial capitalist societies require labor and production to provide value for elite classes. A stable and flourishing middle class was highly necessary for their benefit. If technological advances surpass a certain point, much of human labor (at least in the de-industrial west) becomes unnecessary. This might allow for them to maintain much of the infrastructure without the human capital. They can afford to do away with human capital (depopulation) and must reduce the middle class, which poses a threat to their order. They have to create a dumbed down permanent slave class.
This is why they are pushing the phony carbon neutral, "green" policy narrative. The West has to stop growing, the middle class population has to be reduced.