Digital gulag requires total participation, so everyone must be connected to internet!!!

3 months ago
2

The UN Summit of the Future's Action Day served as a rallying cry for globalists to push their vision of a dystopian digital future, where individual freedoms are sacrificed for the sake of a centralized, controlling system. To achieve this goal by 2030, the speakers highlighted several key steps that need to be taken.

First, they emphasized the need for universal access to electricity, without which people cannot access the internet or use devices, and AI data centers cannot function. Microsoft President Brad Smith lamented the 'electricity divide' between the global south and the rest of the world, citing that 43% of Africans lack access to electricity.

Next, they stressed the importance of internet connectivity for all, as a digital control grid cannot be built without universal internet access. This would enable the installation of Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI), which includes digital IDs, fast payment systems like programmable digital currencies, and massive data sharing.

GSMA Director General Mats Granryd highlighted that 2.6 billion people remain unconnected to the internet, primarily due to handset affordability. 'These 2.6 billion people, the vast majority — 95+ percent live beneath a mobile broadband coverage,' said Granryd. 'We don’t need more stuff, we don’t need more base stations, we don’t need anything in the sky either — it is just there to use, but they can’t use it.'

Granryd's solution is to make mobile handsets more affordable, with around $20 being the “sweet spot.” With a $20 phone and mobile coverage, 2.6 billion people can join the “digital economy,” or digital control grid, depending on how you look at it. This would enable the UN's vision of a digital future, where everyone is connected and controlled.

The next speaker, US NTIA Admin Alan Davidson, took the stage to drive home the point that internet connectivity is not a luxury, but a necessity. He cited the pandemic as a reminder of this, implying that those without internet access were somehow left behind or disadvantaged.

But what he's really saying is that the digital gulag requires total participation. Without universal internet access, the AI-powered surveillance state cannot function as intended. Davidson's statement is a thinly veiled threat, warning that those who don't have internet access will be left behind in the coming AI revolution.

Davidson reiterated this point, stating that connectivity is not a luxury, but rather a necessity for thriving in the modern digital economy. He sees this as an opportunity to connect everyone in the world with the tools they need to thrive in this new economy. However, this is just a euphemism for enslaving people in a digital control grid, where their every move is monitored and controlled.

This is a classic tactic of the globalists: create a sense of urgency and scarcity around a particular technology or system, and then use that to justify its imposition on the entire population. In this case, the 'necessity' of internet connectivity is being used to push for a universal, AI-driven control grid.

It's clear that these speakers are working from the same playbook, pushing for a dystopian future where individual freedom and autonomy are sacrificed at the altar of 'progress' and 'connectivity'. The UN's Summit of the Future is nothing more than a propaganda exercise, designed to sell the public on a future they don't want and didn't ask for.

The digital gulag requires total participation, and these globalists will stop at nothing to ensure that everyone is connected and controlled. The question is, will the public buy into this dystopian vision, or will they resist the push for a centralized, AI-driven surveillance state?"

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