Digital ID

The End of Privacy and Freedom

The world’s most valuable resource is no longer oil, but data.”

The Economist, 2017

Digital ID is essential to the implementation of CBDC and as well as complete purchase history it would consist of detailed and extensive personal data stored in a smart phone app that would be one’s ‘key’ to accessing all goods and services.

This data would include financial records, vaccine and other health records, biometric identification (facial, retinal and voice scans, fingerprints, DNA etc.), passport, drivers’ license, social insurance number, police interactions, online search patterns, passwords, usernames, and credit rating as well as a record of one’s whereabouts, social contacts and activities, travel, and other behaviour.

Political commentator and radio host Glenn Beck on the WEF Digital ID Framework.

Smartphone-based apps such as Google Pay and Apple Pay are convenient but they are also part of the initial conditioning phase of a CBDC system in which a smartphone would be necessary for everything we do and purchase.

Similarly, we are being incrementally conditioned for this system when we allow the digital scanning of our ID or our faces at pubs and other establishments, airports, and even self-checkouts at the grocery store that are equipped with cameras.

We are under surveillance and our data is being collected and stored without our explicit consent and it is no coincidence that the Canadian government, for example, has created a personal information bank (PIB) where large amounts of of Canadians’ personal information is stored (scroll to last section for categories of information).

Aman Jabbi shares his expertise on surveillance technology and explains how cameras, facial recognition, and digital ID are connected.

Opposition to Digital ID and CBDC

Digital ID and CBDC are facing fierce opposition in many parts of the world from citizens, journalists, and politicians courageous enough to speak out and stand up for freedom.