The message delivered by billionaire Bill Gates urges compliance with a new mandatory Digital ID system by 2028 or risk exclusion from society, setting the stage for a global initiative dubbed “50-in-5.”.
Collaborating entities including the United Nations, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and partners from the Rockefeller Foundation aim to expedite the implementation of digital identification, digital financial transactions, and expansive data sharing across 50 “first mover” countries within a Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) framework.
Gates’ envisioned Digital ID platform could empower governments and corporations with the ability to institute social credit scoring. This scoring system might govern travel permissions, consumption limits, and financial transactions via programmable currency. It might also involve tracking individual carbon footprints, implementing Ultra Low Emission Zones (ULEZ), and employing Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) programming to control specific purchases, aligning with the objectives of the Great Reset.
Presented as a “country-led advocacy campaign,” the 50-in-5 initiative, launched through a virtual event, aims to aid 50 nations in conceiving, launching, and expanding elements of their digital public infrastructure by 2028.
Advocates of DPI argue its merits for financial inclusion, convenience, improved healthcare, and environmental advancements, yet its implementation echoes the scope of vaccine passports on a broader societal scale.
The 50-in-5 campaign, facilitated by a collaboration among various foundations and organizations like Co-Develop (a joint effort by Rockefeller Foundation, Gates Foundation, Nilekani Philanthropies, and the Omidyar Network), strives for secure, inclusive, and interoperable digital public infrastructure across participating nations.
The United Nations underscores the necessity of a people-centric approach to smart cities through accessible and equitable digital public infrastructure, as detailed in their playbook on Digital Public Infrastructure. This blueprint asserts that digital identity, digital payments, and data exchange protocols are integral components facilitating government services and transactions.
The World Economic Forum envisions digital identity intertwined with various aspects of life, from financial services and healthcare to travel and digital governance, all constituting parts of the DPI concept.
India’s strides in implementing DPI, lauded during the G20 and B20 Summits, are cited as a model for success. Prominent figures like Nandan Nilekani champion DPI’s extensive applications, from vaccine passports to climate adaptation, emphasizing digital identity, smartphones, and bank accounts as essential tools for the future.
With G20 nations committing to net-zero carbon emissions by 2050, DPI initiatives are aligning to impose restrictions on consumption, purchases, and movement. Digital ID and CBDCs are seen as pivotal tools for tracking and controlling actions within envisioned “people-centered, 15-minute smart cities.”.
The 50-in-5 initiative, however, isn’t a grassroots movement but an agenda spearheaded by a coalition of unelected globalist entities like the Gates Foundation, the United Nations, and the Rockefeller Foundation. Together, they aim to accelerate a technocratic system of control through digital ID, payments, and extensive data sharing.
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