5
Central Banks of Australia, Canada, and Colombia put CBDC projects on ice     (www.kitco.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Technocracy 1 week ago (+5/-0)
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https://www.kitco.com/news/article/2024-10-11/central-banks-australia-canada-and-colombia-put-cbdc-projects-ice

The ‘inevitability’ of central bank digital currencies (CBDC) has taken a hit recently as multiple countries – including Australia, Colombia, and Canada – have paused their CBDC initiatives, calling into question the need for digital fiat.
6
apparently,🚨EU - is planning an all asset database of every citizen’s assets so they know what citizens own!     (x.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Technocracy 1 week ago (+6/-0)
3 comments last comment...
https://x.com/Artemisfornow/status/1843196598915866784

techno-communism on steroids. if true
15
Damning Evidence Censored: mRNA Jabs Linked To 74% Of ALL Deaths     (www.technocracy.news)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Technocracy 3 weeks ago (+15/-0)
4 comments last comment...
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Bill Gates has arrived in Ethiopia to meet with the Prime Minister, aiming to radically reshape African agriculture, dairy, poultry, and hybrid seed farming.      (x.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Technocracy 1 month ago (+24/-0)
24 comments last comment...
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Berkeley Law School Dean: Constitution "Outdated", "Threatens The United States     (www.zerohedge.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Technocracy 1 month ago (+2/-0)
0 comments...
https://www.zerohedge.com/political/berkeley-law-school-dean-constitution-outdated-threatens-united-states

Berkeley Law School Dean Erwin Chemerinsky, promoting his very patriotic book “No Democracy Lasts Forever: How the Constitution Threatens the United States,” recently penned an op-ed and appeared on MSNBC to float the idea that we need to toss out the United States Constitution — arguably the most eloquent and functional if imperfect governing document ever written, which every Western nation has modeled their own on — and replace it with something a little more Democratic™.
4
UN cybercrime treaty passes in unanimous vote      (therecord.media)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Technocracy 1 month ago (+4/-0)
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https://therecord.media/un-cybercrime-treaty-passes-unanimous

>The United Nations passed its first cybercrime treaty on Thursday in a unanimous vote supporting an agreement first put forward by Russia.

The passage of the treaty is significant and establishes for the first time a global-level cybercrime and data access-enabling legal framework.

The treaty was adopted late Thursday by the body’s Ad Hoc Committee on Cybercrime and will next go to the General Assembly for a vote in the fall. It is expected to sail through the General Assembly since the same states will be voting on it there.

The agreement follows three years of negotiations capped by the final two-week session that has been underway.

Russia also supported the draft treaty, which was a surprise given earlier concerns raised by the country’s representative.

Opponents of the treaty include human rights organizations and big tech companies.

Both factions have concerns over text that says authorities investigating crimes in any nation are entitled to obtain electronic evidence from other nations as well as ask internet service providers to hand over data.

There were disagreements on just a couple of parts of the latest text voted on Thursday, but the final outcome is a treaty that does not significantly change earlier, controversial versions of the draft agreement, said Raman Jit Singh Chima, the Asia Pacific Policy Director at the digital freedoms organization Access Now.

i can just say ayy lmao
8
Bug Diets, Once Labeled 'Conspiracy Theory' By MSM, Now Becomes Fact After UK Gov't Backs 'Sustainable' Food     (www.zerohedge.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Technocracy 1 month ago (+8/-0)
6 comments last comment...
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Australians will be required to submit ID to access the internet and police must have access to their social media including private messaging      (x.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Technocracy 2 months ago (+51/-3)
42 comments last comment...
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“CopenPay” – Europe’s first Climate-centric Social Credit Scheme     (off-guardian.org)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Technocracy 2 months ago (+12/-0)
5 comments last comment...
https://off-guardian.org/2024/07/25/copenpay-europes-first-climate-centric-social-credit-scheme/

The world’s first climate-related social rewards scheme came into being two weeks ago, when the city of Copenhagen officially launched it’s new “CopenPay” system.

Through the CopenPay scheme, tourists visiting the city will be rewarded for “green actions” – such as using public transportation or cycling – with access to “cultural experiences”, free meals etc.

For example, arriving at the CopenHill dry ski slope by foot or on a bike will get you 20 free minutes of ski time, while anyone who volunteers at an organic urban farm will get a free lunch (vegetarian, naturally).

coming to a city near you
3
Kamala Harris says US must ‘reduce population’ to fight climate change in latest gaffe     (nypost.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Technocracy 2 months ago (+3/-0)
5 comments last comment...
https://nypost.com/2023/07/15/kamala-harris-says-us-must-reduce-population-to-fight-climate-change-in-latest-gaffe/

Vice President Kamala Harris on Friday called on the US to “reduce population” in an effort to combat climate change, but she meant to say “reduce pollution,” according to the White House.

The shocking gaffe happened as the 58-year-old vice president delivered remarks at Coppin State University in Baltimore, Md., on the need to build a “clean energy economy.”

lol these ppl
3
Tesla to produce ‘humanoid’ robots next year – Musk     (www.rt.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Technocracy 3 months ago (+4/-1)
2 comments last comment...
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Putin outlines new digital currency policy     (www.rt.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Technocracy 3 months ago (+3/-0)
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https://www.rt.com/business/601217-digital-ruble-russia-putin/

The pilot launch of the digital ruble has been a success, the Russian president has said

The newly launched digital ruble should be fully incorporated into the Russian economy now that the test phase of its adoption is drawing to a close, President Vladimir Putin announced on Wednesday.

Speaking at a government meeting on economic issues, Putin said the pilot launch of the electronic currency had proved a success, and that the project is ready for wider implementation.

“The pilot launch of the digital ruble platform has shown its efficiency and functionality. And now we need to take the next step, namely to move toward a wider, full-scale implementation of the digital ruble in the economy, in business activities and in the field of finance,” the president suggested. He added that he plans to discuss the steps intended to speed up this process with regulators
17
ah, yes...     (pomf2.lain.la)
submitted by boekanier to Technocracy 3 months ago (+17/-0)
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Head Of Chase Bank Warns Customers: Era Of Free Checking Is Likely Over     (www.zerohedge.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Technocracy 3 months ago (+17/-0)
14 comments last comment...
https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/head-chase-bank-warns-customers-era-free-checking-likely-over

The 'problem-solving' elites in Washington, DC, who advocate interventionist policies and overregulate the economy into oblivion, often cause unintended consequences. The latest example comes from the head of America's largest retail bank, which has a warning for its 86 million customers: The era of free checking is likely over.

Marianne Lake, head of Chase Bank, a division of JPMorgan Chase, was quoted by The Wall Street Journal as saying the bank is preparing to charge customers for now-free services, including checking accounts and wealth-management tools, if new rules pushed by politicians in Washington are enacted. These rules include capping overdrafts and late fees.

"The changes will be broad, sweeping, and significant," Lake said, adding, "The people who will be most impacted are the ones who can least afford to be, and access to credit will be harder to get."


as the magic date of 2030 approaches these banks and institutions will nudge the public towards the anal schwab's (WEF) vision of the future for mankind
7
Common Sense and Memes Are Viruses to the New World Order (must read!)     (www.theburningplatform.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Technocracy 4 months ago (+7/-0)
2 comments last comment...
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Ex-Goldman Sachs MD: AI will eliminate junior coders by 2028     (www.efinancialcareers.com)
submitted by iSnark to Technocracy 4 months ago (+6/-0)
4 comments last comment...
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Mastercard Launches Its Biometric Retail Payment System In Europe, Using Poland As A Testing Ground     (www.nakedcapitalism.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Technocracy 4 months ago (+3/-0)
0 comments...
https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2024/06/mastercards-biometric-retail-payment-system-finally-arrives-in-europe-following-pilot-tests-in-global-south.html

After running pilot tests in Brazil and parts of the Asia Pacific for roughly two years, Mastercard is finally rolling out its biometric retail payments system in Europe. The world’s largest payment card company appears to be determined to wean consumers off not only cash, its eternal rival, but also credit and debit cards, its main line of business until now. To that end, it is piloting its Biometric Checkout Program in Poland in collaboration with local fintech company PayEye, which will be providing its iris and face biometric technology.
21
Cognitive Warfare, Mental Manipulation and the Tyranny of Digital Transformation     (www.globalresearch.ca)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Technocracy 4 months ago (+21/-0)
5 comments last comment...
14
Sweden introduces draconian ‘security zone’ in gang crime hotspot, giving police indiscriminate powers to search anyone     (rmx.news)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Technocracy 4 months ago (+14/-0)
8 comments last comment...
https://rmx.news/article/sweden-introduces-draconian-security-zone-in-gang-crime-hotspot-giving-police-indiscriminate-powers-to-search-anyone/


Swedish police have introduced the first “stop-and-frisk-zone” in the country’s history, giving officers the power to search any individual or vehicle without the need for reasonable suspicion.

The draconian measure is in response to a double shooting on Monday evening in the Hageby residential district of Norrköping, a city southwest of Stockholm. Two men were pronounced dead at the scene.

As of Wednesday, the authorities are introducing what is also known as a security zone or visitation zone in the area as officers continue to hunt for perpetrators. A man in his 20s has already been arrested on suspicion of murder

they created this prob by allowing the immigrant filth to come and now they are pushing their reaction/solution to their self created prob
4
russian book in english about the upcoming technocratic state      (link.springer.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Technocracy 4 months ago (+4/-0)
0 comments...
14
Climate Professor Thinks We Should 'Cull' the Human Population to Reach Emissions Targets     (pjmedia.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Technocracy 4 months ago (+14/-0)
15 comments last comment...
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digital ID in iceland      (x.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Technocracy 5 months ago (+33/-0)
26 comments last comment...
https://x.com/iamLeonHill/status/1791106077167169636

I'm Australian, but live in Iceland: a country that already has an all-encompassing digital ID system. If you're wondering how Australia's new system will play out, I'll tell you here.

And also, how Australians who don't want a digital ID can attempt to protect themselves... at least for a short while.

In Iceland, the digital ID system is linked to each person's kennitala, or social security number.

I sign into everything with my electronic ID (rafræn skilríki) via my phone. Any time I access my bank account, phone services, accounting, tax, insurance, credit score, manage my assets (car/house), power bill, medical record, when I vote, or even want to pull up a store receipt of something I've bought, it's all linked to my digital ID.

Everything in one place. Everything.

You cannot NOT have a digital ID to live in Iceland. It's impossible.

You can't get power turned on, get a phone number, buy or register a car, rent or buy a house, or even buy certain items without having a kennitala or digital ID. You need one.

This has its benefits (it makes life more streamlined when you're trying to do something in daily life), but it also means there is no privacy at all in Iceland.


Anyone can look up where I live. The license plate of my car. How much tax I paid last year. My phone number. You name it. It's public and available--and all you need is my kennitala to find it all out.


But the government has access to more.

The Icelandic government and tax office has access to my bank accounts and knows every transaction I make, what I spend, and what I earn. They don't need a warrant, or anything else to access it--it's theirs. They just need probable cause to look at it.

Australians, this is what's coming for you.

Over the coming years, the government will make it impossible to opt out of the digital ID system. You'll need one for everything.

And most importantly, they'll coerce Australians into adopting it by creating laws that link it to the most important thing you need to survive in today's modern world: your bank account.

They'll do it on the grounds of anti-money-laundering and financial safety. The gov't will enforce laws onto banks (among the many ID and verification laws already mandated on banks) that if you don't have the digital ID, you won't be able to open, keep, or use a bank account.

If your refuse, you'll effectively be locked out of society. Because in today's modern world, you need access to banking services to survive.

Banking will be first. Then everything else in society will be linked to your digital ID.

Nothing will ever again be private. Just like in Iceland today, the government will know everything. Always. Forever.

So, are there ways to opt-out or protect yourself?

Yes, and also no.

It all comes down to having other options. If you're solely a citizen or resident of Australia and nowhere else, you will have no other options. You will be forced to stay in the ecosystem of Australia.

If you have a second passport however, you will have a second nation to fall back on to use its banking, economic, and social system if you don't want to be forced into adopting Australia's. You can still live in Australia, but potentially hold bank accounts in your other nation.

If you don't have a second passport, but know you're eligible for one via a parent, grandparent, or other means, I would seriously suggest taking action to claim it as soon as possible.

But what if you are stuck? Sure, you could leave Australia. But that's not for everyone.

One backup plan that may help you for a while, is becoming an eResident of another country.

eResidency (or digital residency) allows you to access the services of another nation (like banking, etc) without living there. The two major eResidency programs offered today exist in the Baltic EU nation of Estonia, and the island nation of Palau.

You never have to go to either country to claim eResidency. It's a background check, and a small payment, and you can be then sent a nationally-recognised ID card from that nation, that will allow you to among many other things, set up a bank account.

Simply search for "Palau digital residency" or "Estonia eResidency" online if you're interested in either.

It's not a perfect solution. It won't completely protect you if your decision will be to stay in Australia long-term. On a long enough timeline--like in Iceland--you will eventually have to get Australia's digital ID.

The government will make it impossible for you to live otherwise.

But having a backup plan--like a bank account, or money/assets in a location that is harder for the Australian government to access or block you from--might be something you are interested in.

And I'm all for having backup plans.

But again, the best backup plan will always be a citizenship/passport of at least one more nation, or at the very least, your having a permanent residency permit elsewhere. Somewhere that believed in citizens having freedom and privacy.

I hope this helps.


personally i think that once this is being adopted the people will be utterly fucked for good. the plan is to enable this shit worldwide
3
New “Guide” Teaches UK MPs to Spot “Conspiracy Theories”     (off-guardian.org)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Technocracy 5 months ago (+4/-1)
0 comments...
1
Unification Of CBDCs? Global Banks Are Telling Us The End Of The Dollar System Is Near     (alt-market.us)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Technocracy 5 months ago (+1/-0)
1 comments last comment...
https://alt-market.us/unification-of-cbdcs-global-banks-are-telling-us-the-end-of-the-dollar-system-is-near/

Unfortunately, I suspect the time is coming soon for the US and it may be in the form of a brand new Bretton Woods-like system that removes the dollar as world reserve and replaces it with a new digital basket structure. Global banks are essentially admitting to the plan for a complete overhaul of the dollar-based financial world and the creation of a CBDC-centric system built on “unified ledgers.”

Bank For International Settlements Unified Ledger

Not more than a day after the IMF announced their XC platform goals, the BIS announced their plans for a unified ledger for all CBDCs called the ‘BIS Universal Ledger.’ The BIS specifically notes that the project is meant to “inspire trust in central bank digital currencies” while “overcoming the fragmentation of current tokenization efforts.”

While the IMF is focused on international policy control, the BIS is pursuing the technical aspects for the globalization of CBDCs. They make it clear in their white papers that a cashless society is in fact the end game and that digital transactions need to be monitored by a centralized entity in order to keep money “secure.” As the BIS argues in their extensive overview of Unified Ledgers:

“Today, the monetary system stands at the cusp of another major leap. Following dematerialisation and digitalisation, the key development is tokenisation – the process of representing claims digitally on a programmable platform. This can be seen as the next logical step in digital recordkeeping and asset transfer.”

“…The blueprint envisages these elements being brought together in a new type of financial market infrastructure (FMI) – a “unified ledger”. The full benefits of tokenisation could be harnessed in a unified ledger due to the settlement finality that comes from central bank money residing in the same venue as other claims. Leveraging trust in the central bank, a shared venue of this kind has great potential to enhance the monetary and financial system.

As the IMF noted in a discussion on centralized ledgers in 2023:

“We could end up in a world where we have connected entities to some degree, but some entities and some countries that are excluded. And as a global and multilateral institution, we’re sort of aiming to, you know, provide a basic connectivity, a basic set of rules and governance that is truly multilateral and inclusive. So, I think that is—the ambition is to aim for innovation that is compatible with policy goals and that is inclusive relative to the broad membership of, say, the IMF.”

To translate, decentralized systems are bad. “Inclusivity” (collectivism) is good. And the IMF wants to work in tandem with other globalist institutions to be the facilitators (controllers) of that economic collectivism.


There are three major assertions made by the BIS in their program – First, the digitization of money is unavoidable and cash is going to disappear primarily because it makes moving money easier. Second, decentralized payment methods are unacceptable because they are “risky” and only central banks are qualified and “trustworthy” enough to mediate the exchange of money. Third, the use of Unified Ledgers is largely designed to track and trace and even investigate all CBDC transactions, for the public good, of course.

The BIS system deals far more in the realm of private transactions than the IMF example. It is the technical foundation for the centralization of all CBDCs, governed in part by the BIS and the IMF, and it is scheduled to go into wider use in the next two years. There are already multiple nations testing the BIS ledger today. It’s important to understand that whoever acts as the middle-man in the process of the global exchange of money is going to have all the power, over governments and over the populace.

If every movement of wealth is monitored, from the shift of billions between governments to the payment of a few dollars from an individual to a retailer, then every aspect of trade can be throttled on the whims of the observer.

SWIFT Cross Border Project – Another Way To Control The Behavior Of Countries

As we’ve seen with the attempt to use the SWIFT payment network as a bludgeon against Russia, there is an ulterior motive for globalists to have a high speed large scale monetary transaction hub. Again, this is all about centralization, and whoever controls the hub has the means to control trade…to a point.

Locking Russia out of SWIFT has done minimal damage to their economy exactly because there are alternative methods for transferring money to keep the flow of trade running. However, under a CBDC based global monetary umbrella, it would be impossible for any country to work outside the boundaries. It’s not only about the ease of shutting a nation out of the network, it’s also about having the power to immediately block the transfer of funds on the receiving end of the exchange.

Meaning, any funds from any Russian source could be tracked and cut off before they are allowed to get into the hands of, say, a recipient in China or India. Once all governments are completely under the thumb of a centralized monetary system, a centralized ledger and a centralized exchange hub, they will never be able to rebel and this control will trickle down to the general population.

I would also remind readers that the majority of nations are going right along with this program. China is most eager to join the global currency scheme. Russia is still part of the BIS, but their involvement in CBDCs is still unclear. The point is, don’t expect the BRICS to counteract the new monetary order, it’s not going to happen.


CBDCs Automatically Require The End Of The Dollar As World Reserve

So what do all these globalist projects with CBDCs have to do with the dollar and its venerated position as the world reserve currency? The bottom line is this: A unified CBDC system completely excludes the need or use-case for a world reserve currency. The Unified Ledger model takes all CBDCs and homogenizes them into a puddle of liquidity, each CBDC growing similar in characteristics over a short period of time.

The advantages of using the dollar disappear in this scenario and the value of currencies becomes relative to the middle-man. In other words, the IMF, BIS and other related institutions dictate the properties of CBDCs and thus there is no distinguishing aspect of any CBDC that makes one more valuable than the others.

Sure, some countries might be able to separate their currency to a point with superior production or superior technology, but the old model of having a big military as a way to ensure Forex and trade favors is dead. Eventually the globalists will make two predictable arguments:


1) “A world reserve currency under the control of one nation is unfair and we as global bankers need to make the system “more equal.””

2) “Why have a reserve currency at all when all transactions are moderated under our ledger anyway? The dollar is no longer any more easy to use for international trade than any other CBDC, right?”


Finally, the dollar has to die because it’s an integral part of the “old world” of material exchange. The globalists desire a cashless society because it is an easily controlled society. Think of the covid lockdowns and the attempts at vaccine passports – If they had a cashless system in place at that time, they would have gotten everything they wanted. Refuse to take the experimental vaccine? We’ll just shut off your digital accounts and you will starve.

This was even partially attempted (think Canadian trucker protests), but with physical cash there’s always a way around a digital embargo. Without physical cash you have no other options unless you plan to live completely off the land and barter goods and services (a way of life most people in the first world need a lot of time to get used to).

I believe that a sizable percentage of the American populace will go to war before they accept a cashless society, but in the meantime, there is still the inevitability of a dollar crash to deal with. Globalist organizations are pushing CBDCs to go active VERY quickly, and as this happens along with the centralized ledgers the traditional dollar will swiftly lose favor. This means that those trillions in greenbacks held overseas will start flooding back into America all at once causing an inflationary disaster well beyond what we are witnessing today.

As much as the economy has benefited from world reserve status in the past it will suffer equally as the dollar fades, only to be replaced by a framework even worse than fiat. That is, unless there’s a dramatic upheaval that removes the globalist order from the equation entirely…
1
To Appease Environmentalists, the FTC Will Cripple U.S. Energy     (realclearwire.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Technocracy 5 months ago (+1/-0)
1 comments last comment...