Littlejohn, the founder and president of Women’s Rights Without Frontiers, told podcasts hosts David and Stacy Whited: “Having watched China for so many years, I became very concerned when I started seeing this vaccine passport being floated in the United States. For these vaccine passports, they support the same digital platform as the China social credit system. It’s a digital platform that they use in China to track everything about a person and come up with a score.”
She explained that this Chinese digital platform uses real-time facial recognition and geolocation. “They know what you look like; where you are; where you live … [and] work; all of your social media posts or internet search history; all your spending history; your criminal history; your credit cards and your bank accounts.”
According to Littlejohn, the social credit score reflects how much an individual is compliant and meek. Anyone going against the grain could be censored as punishment, with further sanctions including loss of employment, travel bans and deactivation of credit cards and bank accounts.
The human rights activist and China affairs expert noted that everyone was afraid when the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) hit, which the vaccine makers capitalized on. The idea of “the unvaccinated endangering other people” paved the way for the vaccine passport, she added.
“That was the pretext of floating these vaccine passports where you would be able to be free if you were [vaccinated] and boosted – the implication being: ‘You would not be free if you were not vaccinated.’”
Littlejohn noted that the name does not matter – whether it is called a vaccine passport, smart health card, Excelsior pass, digital driver’s license or anything – as long as the platform shares similarities with the Chinese social credit system.
The Sovereignty Coalition, which Littlejohn and her friend Frank Gaffney established, grew out of the World Health Organization‘s (WHO) push for the vaccine passport. The global health body had been espousing the use of it as part of its so-called “pandemic treaty.” (Related: China tells WHO it wants to control global “vaccine passport” system.)
Over at home, she mentioned that the Improving Digital Identity Act has already advanced to the Senate floor for debate. If it passes, the bill will mandate the establishment of an inter-agency task force to support “reliable, interoperable digital identity verification in the public and private sectors.”
She dubbed the legislation as a “digital gulag bill.”
“This is a very dangerous thing. It’s not called a vaccine passport. They are not. The pretext is not to check your health status. The pretext is preventing identity fraud or identity theft. It can support the same platform and we’ve got to oppose it,” Littlejohn added.
Visit Watched.news for more stories about digital surveillance.
Watch this video to know more about the WHO’s next plan as shared by Reggie Littlejohn.
This video is from the Flyover Conservatives channel on Brighteon.com.
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]]>If we’ve learned anything over the last two-and-a-half years, it’s that nothing is impossible when it comes to our rights. We cannot trust the GOP to protect us; Mitch McConnell’s attack on the 2nd Amendment proves that beyond a shadow of a doubt. We cannot trust law enforcement to stay true to the Constitution when the people signing their paychecks are holding them hostage. We cannot trust any of the safeguards that have allowed Americans to live relatively carefree for decades.
We’re on our own, and here’s the problem with that. Many of our family, friends, and neighbors do not have the appetite for pushing back against tyranny that most of us have. If you’re reading this, there’s an excellent chance you’re an America First patriot who will do everything in your power to push back against oppression, even from our own governments. Unfortunately, we saw during the lockdowns, through January 6, and with ongoing medical tyranny that there are far fewer of us than perhaps we once thought.
In the article below by Art Moore from our news partners at WND News Center, a scenario is described in Communist China may be a harbinger of what we should expect at some point in the near future right here at home. There’s a strong delusion spreading across this nation, one that is making far too many people think good is evil and evil is good.
Stay frosty, folks. It’s time to alert as many people as possible that we cannot sit back and expect anyone else to save us. Only God can do that if it is His will. I choose to fight the good fight and be ready to act if He calls upon me. Here’s Art…
Many countries and several U.S. states have employed digital vaccine passports, touting them as a handy way for restaurants and other businesses that require COVID-19 vaccination to vet patrons.
California is one of those states, and its Department of Technology director said last year that it’s great for the patrons, too, contending the system is “really for the purpose of empowering individuals to access the official copy of their own immunization records.”
But privacy advocates, including the ACLU, have raised concerns. And some critics have argued that such technology in the hands of a tyrannical regime might not turn out so well for citizens who cherish liberty. That already has proven true in communist China.
Reuters reported Chinese authorities thwarted a protest planned by hundreds of bank depositors seeking access to their frozen funds in Henan province. They did that simply by flipping the health code apps on the phones of the protesters from green to red.
Reuters noted that without a green code, Chinese citizens are denied access to public transport and spaces such as restaurants and malls. And they no longer are allowed to travel across the country.
“They are putting digital handcuffs on us,” a depositor from Sichuan province surnamed Chen told Reuters.
In some regions of China where there are COVID outbreaks, travelers have been required to register their plans online. A Wuhan resident named Wang Qiong said her health code had turned red after she registered to travel to Henan on June 11.
“The police had my identity details from the last time I went to protest in April,” said Wang.
She said she has lost access to 2.3 million yuan, which is about $341,550. Reuters spoke with other depositors who said they arrived in the city of Zhengzhou by train or car, but their codes turned red as soon as their phones were scanned in the city.
Newsweek reported last August that New York, California, Oregon and Hawaii had rolled out digital vaccine passports. The news site cited an article by a senior analyst for the American Civil Liberties Union, Jay Stanley, expressing concerns about how the technology might be used for other purposes aside from vaccination.
“Given the difficulty of creating a digital vaccine passport, we could see a rush to impose a COVID credential system built on an architecture that is not good for transparency, privacy, or user control,” he wrote in an article titled “There’s a Lot That Can Go Wrong With ‘Vaccine Passports.”
“That could lock us into a bad standard,” he warned, “as other parties that need to issue credentials piggyback upon it to offer everything from age verification to health records to hunting licenses to shopping accounts, memberships, and website logins.”
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