The enactment of the Digital Identity Program seems benign to many citizens but it will put the government and its outside agencies in control of every detail of your life. The World Economic Forum (WEF) in a recent whitepaper, published its proposal for “a far-reaching digital ID system that will collect as much data as possible on individuals and then use this data to determine their level of access to various services,” adding that “banks should lead the way.” The WEF’s Taskforce on Data Intermediaries explores the potential to outsource human decision points to an agent acting on an individual’s behalf, in the form of a data intermediary.
Take note that government agencies, banking institutions, as well as the Digital ID dealers pushing this dystopian system, market it as a tool that will improve your quality of life, enhance privacy, improve service and wait times and protect your online information from fraudsters, thieves and spies. The truth of the matter is that this is a weapon of warfare meant to completely control the masses and usher in a social credit system.
Some Solutions: Be wise and don’t comply. Use cash, not debit or credit; refuse the ArriveCan App using Action4Canada’s Travel Notice of Liability; pull out of banks who support digital ID; if possible, get rid of your cell phone (**a former senior intelligence officer Juneau-Katsuya said Canadian government agencies are likely using spyware to hack into people’s cellphones without them knowing).
The enactment of the Digital Identity Program seems benign to many citizens but it will put the government and its outside agencies in control of every detail of your life. The World Economic Forum (WEF) in a recent whitepaper, published its proposal for “a far-reaching digital ID system that will collect as much data as possible on individuals and then use this data to determine their level of access to various services,” adding that “banks should lead the way.” The WEF’s Taskforce on Data Intermediaries explores the potential to outsource human decision points to an agent acting on an individual’s behalf, in the form of a data intermediary.