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United Nations global digital ID bid

The Light

|

Issue 47 - July 2024

THE United Nations, through its Sustainable Development Goals, has revealed how it sees itself as a 'global governance regime'.

- IAIN DAVIS AND WHITNEY WEBB

United Nations global digital ID bid

The UN uses what it calls the 'policy tool' of human rights to place citizens at the centre of international crises.

This enables the UN and its 'stakeholder partners' to seize crises as 'opportunities' to limit and control our behaviour.

The global public-private partnership (G3P), with the UN at its heart, redefines and even discards our supposed human rights entirely, claiming 'crisis' as justification.

The overall objective of Sustainable Development Goal 16 (SDG16) is to strengthen the UN regime.

The UN acknowledges that SDG16.9 is the most crucial of all its goals. It is, the regime claims, essential for the attainment of numerous other SDGs.

At first, SDG16.9 seems relatively innocuous: "By 2030, provide legal identity for all, including birth registration." But, as ever, when it comes to UN sustainable development, all is not as it initially appears.

SDG16.9 is designed to introduce a centrally controlled, global system of digital identification. In combination with other global systems, such as interoperable Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs), this can then be used to monitor our whereabouts, limit our freedom of movement and control our access to money, goods and services.

Universal adoption of SDG16.9 digital ID will enable the G3P global governance regimes to establish a worldwide system of reward and punishment. If we accept the planned model of digital ID, it will ultimately enslave us in the name of sustainable development. The UN underwent a quiet revolution in the 1990s. In 1998, then UN Secretary General Kofi Annan stated that "the business of the United Nations involves the businesses of the world."

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