Requirements #4 and #5 listed in the Technocracy Study Course (1938) state, “Provide a specific registration of the type, kind, etc., of all goods and services, where produced and where used” and “Provide specific registration of the consumption of each individual, plus a record and description of the individual.” This is only possible with a universal ID system.This is also proof that China is a Technocracy and that the rest of the world is being rapidly converted to the same system of Scientific Dictatorship. ⁃ TN Editor
Law and justice are a central part of the social contract, but many people do not have access to the system. The UN wants to change this. Everyone must be included in the legal system, but this also means that they themselves can be held liable if they violate international law and fail to obey the dictates from above. To remedy this, a digital legal identity is required. This also opens the door to a programmable digital currency, social credits and automated decision-making. The international law specifically refers to Agenda 2030. It should not be possible to escape fulfilling the sustainable development goals. This applies to nations, companies, and individuals.
As former UN Agenda 2030 coordinator David Nabarro stated in an interview with Swedish Radio 2016:
Agenda 2030 is not something you can choose to say yes or no to – it is mandatory, it is the key to the survival of humanity and the planet.[1]
As early as 2012, the UN held a High Level Summit on the Rule of Law, which stated in the resolution:
…our collective response to the challenges and opportunities arising from the many complex political, social and economic transformations before us must be guided by the rule of law, as it is the foundation of friendly and equitable relations between States and the basis on which just and fair societies are built.[2]
International law must be in tune with the great transformation (the post-2015 international development agenda).
To work, there must be a universal access to the Internet. Digitization is the key and forms a central part of the UN’s partnership with the World Economic Forum. As expressed in the strategic framework 2019::
“Digital Cooperation – Meet the needs of the Fourth Industrial Revolution while seeking to advance global analysis, dialogue and standards for digital governance and digital inclusiveness.”
A legal identity for all is closely linked to the development of a digital ID and is part of Agenda 2030 GOAL 16: Promote Peaceful and Inclusive Societies for Sustainable Development. This is the purpose of the public–private partnership ID2020 and in the long run means that everyone needs a digital ID and internet connection to access various forms of community service.[3] Behind this initiative are the Rockefeller Foundation, GAVI, Accenture and Microsoft, in collaboration with, among others, the United Nations International Computing Center (UNICC), Mastercard and Facebook. Their annual meetings have been held at the UN headquarters in New York since 2016. (I also describe this in the chapter “The Passport” in The Global Coup D’état).
In 2016, the World Economic Forum also released the report A Blueprint for Digital Identity (with participation from actors such as Identity 2020 (ID2020), Mastercard, Visa, Lloyds, Gates Foundation and BlackRock) led by the auditing firm Deloitte where the benefits of developing a digital identification system were investigated and how the financial industry could help to realize this goal.[4] In 2018, digital identity was linked to “the new social contract” when WEF, under the leadership of the IT consulting company Accenture, released the report Identity in a Digital World with a number of smiling happy children on the front page.
Before COVID-19 got all public attention, the problems with paperless refugees was a recurring theme in the media. This was driven by, among others, ID2020 in the wake of the great refugee crisis in 2015.
In 2019, UN Secretary-General António Guterres established the High Level Panel on Internal Displacement under the chairmanship of European Commission Vice President Federica Mogherini and Donald Kaberuka of the Rockefeller Foundation. Their purpose was to address “the global refugee crisis” and “to achieve sustainable solutions for people displaced by armed conflict, general violence, human rights violations, as well as disasters and the adverse effects of climate change.”
The solutions include creating partnerships with the private sector (World Economic Forum and their corporate members) and a massive data collection to study the refugees’ movement patterns and needs.[5] These partnerships include Displacement Tracking Matrix and the Joint Data Center on Forced Displacement. The latter is a partnership between the World Bank and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). A digital ID for refugees, as identified by ID2020, the World Bank and UNHCR, was an important component in how this data collection could to be carried out.[6]
To this end, the World Bank Group runs the ID4D (Identification for Development) initiative together with the UN with a focus on developing countries. The initiative includes the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Secure Identity Alliance (founded by French Thales who primarily work for the defense industry), the World Food Program and Mastercard.[7]
Their purpose is to develop an identity system that is “inclusive, trusting, responsible” and used to “improve people’s lives” and achieve the sustainability goals. It is a customary language of beautiful painting in order to legitimize a comprehensive population control. It is in this context that “inclusive” should be understood.
COVID-19 was a powerful trigger to kickstart this development. This now also concerns the developed part of the world. As the World Economic Forum writes in the report…
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