UN Pushing for Global Vaccine Passports, Digital IDs, Mass Censorship
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Unelected globalists at the United Nations (UN) are pushing for the governments of sovereign countries to usher in vaccine passports and digital IDs for their citizens.
In addition, the UN is demanding mass censorship online to silence those who disagree with the agenda.
Later this month, world leaders will gather in New York to discuss plans for handing the UN and its Director General Antonio Guterres sweeping new powers.
The event seeks to enshrine digital ID and online censorship on a global level.
Proposals to be discussed at the 79th U.N. General Assembly include the Pact for the Future.
The Pact for the Future is described by the UN as an “opportunity to create international mechanisms that better reflect the realities of the 21st century and can respond to today’s and tomorrow’s challenges and opportunities.”
The proposed Pact for the Future encompasses 11 policy proposals.
Among those policies are plans to hand the UN ultimate control over “emergencies” such as pandemics or “climate change,” digital IDs, the online information flow, and global vaccine compliance.
To manage these new policies, the organization is pushing for the establishment of a UN “Emergency Platform” and a “Global Digital Compact,” and policy proposals on “Information Integrity” and “Transforming Education.”
Also among the UN’s proposals is the “Declaration on Future Generations.”
Under these proposals, the UN’s secretary-general would have “standing authority” all over sovereign nations.
The UN would then have the power to declare “an Emergency Platform in the event of a future complex global shock of sufficient scale, severity and reach.”
Under the plan, the UN would be able to override local laws, meaning the organization could order sweeping censorship of the American people even if their First Amendment rights are being violated.
Discussions for the Pact for the Future will take place under the auspices of the Summit of the Future.
The event is described as “a high-level event, bringing world leaders together to forge a new international consensus on how we deliver a better present and safeguard the future.”
The proposals are part of “Our Common Agenda,” an initiative described as “the Secretary-General’s vision for the future of global cooperation.”
The plan includes policies that globalists such as the UN, World Economic Forum, Bill Gates, and the World Health Organization (WHO) have been demanding for some time.
Just last week, Gates called for mass censorship of so-called “vaccine misinformation,” as Slay News reported.
Gates is calling for all questions and concerns about vaccines to be censored in real time by artificial intelligence (AI).
According to the Microsoft co-founder, one of the key missions of his Gates Foundation is stopping the spread of “vaccine misinformation” online.
Gates argues that critics of official narratives regarding vaccines must be silenced in order to convince skeptical or unwilling members of the public that experimental injections are “safe and effective.”
In order to stamp out “vaccine misinformation,” Gates is calling for opinions that counter the official narratives to be shut down with the help of AI.
Gates laid out his vision during an interview with CNBC.
According to Gates, the public’s free speech rights are a major obstacle to his plan.
He lamented that America’s Constitution and its speech protections are standing in the way of AI setting new “boundaries” for the flow of information online.
Gates claims to support free speech but insists that the First Amendment should have “rules” in case a person expresses a view that is “causing people not to take vaccines.”
“We should have free speech, but if you’re inciting violence, if you’re causing people not to take vaccines, where are those boundaries that even the US should have rules?” Gates said.
“And then if you have rules, what is it?”
Gates told CNET that there must be limitations on free speech or order to crack down on “misinformation.”
He laments that Americans’ First Amendment protections are making it “tough” to censor online content.
“The U.S. is a tough one because we have the notion of the First Amendment and what are the exceptions like yelling ‘fire’ in a theater,” Gates explained.
“I do think over time, with things like deepfakes, most of the time you’re online you’re going to want to be in an environment where the people are truly identified, that is they’re connected to a real-world identity that you trust, instead of just people saying whatever they want,” Gates added.