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50 reasons to be worried

The Light

|

Issue 42: February 2024

Technocratic juggernaut moving In for global takeover

- TIM HINCHLIFFE

50 reasons to be worried

THE 50-in-5 campaign is an agenda concocted by a coalition of unelected globalists to accelerate technocratic control through digital ID, Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) and massive data sharing.

The United Nations, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and partners of the Rockefeller Foundation, are launching the campaign in 50 countries under the umbrella of digital public infrastructure (DPI) by 2028.

The 50-in-5 campaign claims: 'DPI is essential for participation in markets and society in a digital era.'

The agenda bills itself as 'a country-led advocacy campaign' and that by 2028 the campaign will have helped 50 countries design, launch, and scale components of their digital public infrastructure.

Sold as a mechanism for financial inclusion, convenience, improved healthcare, and green progress, DPI is an all-inclusive phrase applied to a looming technocratic governance system.

The system will be powered by three foundational components digital ID, digital payments like CBDCs, and massive data sharing.

Advocates are adamant that DPI is essential for participation in markets and society - just like we saw with vaccine passports only on a much broader scale.

If successful, DPI will give governments and corporations the power to implement systems of social credit scoring that will determine where and how you can travel, what you are allowed to consume, and how you will be able to transact with your programmable money.

Think individual carbon footprint trackers, Ultra Low Emission Zones (ULEZ), and CBDC programmed to restrict 'less desirable' purchases all of which are being pushed by proponents of the great reset.

The stated goal of the 50-in-5 campaign is that in five years: '50 countries [will] have designed, launched, and scaled at least one component of their digital public infrastructure stack in a safe, inclusive, and interoperable manner.'

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