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Speaker describes digitally verified ID and its growth in China. In China, a traffic camera can catch you jaywalking, and the digital ID system has your blood, genetic code, and photograph, plus it can identify how you walk. So even without a visible face, you can be picked up by gate. It will convict you of jaywalking and take money out of your bank account with no intermediating judiciary at all and show a picture of you to the people in the neighborhood, so they know that you have jaywalked and reduce your social credit score. If your social credit score falls below a certain level, then you can't you can't buy drinks from a vending machine. You can't play video games. You can't go on a train. You can't get out of your fifteen minute city. All that's already in place in China. Do you think that that's that would be helpful or unhelpful? It would be I think it would bring in and has already in China. I think it'll bring in a totalitarian tyranny. So 100% complete that it would make George Orwell's 1984 look like a picnic.

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In China, if caught jaywalking by a traffic camera, the digital ID system with your blood, genetic code, and photo can identify you by your walk. It convicts you, deducts money from your bank account, and publicly shames you, lowering your social credit score. A low score restricts buying drinks, playing games, riding trains, or leaving your city. This system is already in place in China.

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Speaker 0: What about the public attitude held by millions of everyday Americans? All I've got on a computer is pictures of my family, CCTV cameras that are prevalent in a ton of American cities and overseas capitals. Those cameras are your friend if you're innocent and have nothing to hide. Speaker 1: Well, I'd say that's very much what the average Chinese citizen believed or perhaps even still to this day believes. But we see how these same technologies are being applied to create what they call the social credit system. If any of these family photos, if any of your activities online, if your purchases, if your associations, if your friends are in any way different from what the government or the powers that be of the moment would like them to be, you're no longer able to purchase train tickets. You're no longer able to board an airplane. You may not be able to get a passport. You may not be eligible for a job. You might not be able to work for the government. All of these things are increasingly being created and programmed and decided by algorithms, and those algorithms are fueled by precisely the innocent data that our devices are creating all of the time constantly, invisibly, quietly right now. Our devices are casting all of these records that we do not see being created, that in aggregate seem very innocent. Even if you can't see the content of these communications, the activity records, what the government calls metadata, which they argue they do not need a warrant to collect, tells the whole story. And these activity records are being created and shared and collected and intercepted constantly by companies and governments. And ultimately it means as they sell these, as they trade these, as they make their businesses on the backs of these records, what they are selling is not information, what they are selling is us. They're selling our future. They're selling our past. They are selling our history, our identity, and ultimately, they are stealing our power.

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Social credit system is basically an expansion of money or a new kind of money. The idea of the social credit is to monetize everything, to give value to every single thing you do in life, and this is your score. it could create the most totalitarian, again, systems in history where anything you do impacts your ability to get a job, to gain a loan, to travel. This because it's it's a function of surveillance, that traditionally, only some areas of life were monitored and surveyed. Now you can monitor everybody all the time. You don't need human agents or analysts. You have the computers, smartphones, cameras, drones, microphones everywhere, and you have the AIs analyzing all the ocean of information. So this creates the potential for total surveillance, and it can take the form of the social credit system.

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The speaker discusses the growing collaboration between government and corporations in restricting individual freedoms. They highlight China's extensive surveillance system and social credit system as examples of this control. The speaker warns that Western societies are heading in a similar direction due to technological advancements and the desire for security. They emphasize the dangers of digital identity, surveillance, and manipulation by both corporations and governments. The potential for a surveillance state and loss of personal autonomy is a significant concern.

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Speaker 0 argues that a Mussolini-quote about fascism being corporatism explains today’s emerging fascist state in America, describing a system where the government merges with corporate power. He notes a prior report on digital ID deployment by private companies with customer consent, claiming the government can collect and utilize data under legal immunity while avoiding a mandate on biometric ID. He asserts that, as during COVID, individuals can choose to consent or “leave the reservation” to fend for themselves. He introduces the idea that the social credit score is actively deployed in the US. Speaker 1 shares a personal experience about ordering food on Uber Eats and noticing an algorithm determining prices based on personal data, prompting reflection on how pricing works. Speaker 0 explains that Communist China’s social credit system, launched in 2014 to “build trust in society by punishing individual behavior,” allows banks to shut off money and restrict travel, enabling the government to condition behavior individually. He claims this is now being deployed in the United States as algorithmic pricing, using automated programs to dynamically set the price of goods and services in real time and on an individual basis. The algorithms rely on large amounts of data, including customer behavior, and can charge one individual more than another for the same product based on willingness to pay and personal data. He asserts that the social credit score is present across the US, and the New York Algorithmic Pricing Disclosure Act (launched 11/10/2025) compels private corporations to notify consumers that they are being charged based on personalized algorithmic pricing. The law defines personal data as any data that identifies or could be linked to a specific consumer or device, regardless of whether the data was voluntarily provided. He says this makes every aspect of life usable to determine pricing, calling the act the first of its kind and predicting expansion to all 50 states. He concludes that the social credit score is real in America and suggests a carbon tax is soon to follow. He also mentions an “AI run cryptocurrency economy” as the United States government’s and big banks’ chosen solution in response to debt and AI competition. Speaker 2 presents a scenario for 2027: special economic zones with zero red tape, with government intervention to accelerate progress. Speaker 3 adds that the promise of vast gains could attract governments to these zones despite protests from workers who would lose jobs and rely on universal basic income, suggesting trillions in new wealth as a compelling incentive. He notes the ongoing arms race with China and the ease with which forecasts could influence presidential decisions, especially when contrasted with regulatory delays. Speaker 0 closes with attribution to Greg Reese.

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Australian cities are implementing smart city programs with invasive technology like facial recognition cameras, license plate readers, and smart devices connected to wireless networks. However, this raises concerns about privacy and surveillance. The infrastructure for future lockdowns is being established, and by surrendering our data, we are allowing our behavior to be monitored and potentially turned into a social credit score. Central bank digital currencies will further restrict our spending without approval, and digital IDs will become mandatory for accessing government services, traveling, healthcare, and the internet. Many countries, including Canada and Scotland, are already implementing these systems. Australians need to wake up to the reality of this technocratic future before it becomes dystopian.

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China's social credit system is using high-tech methods to crack down on low-level offenders like jaywalkers. Cameras record their actions, zoom in on their faces, and shame them on nearby video screens. This system goes beyond traditional credit scores, taking into account behaviors like jaywalking, smoking on trains, and excessive video game purchases. If your score drops too low, you can be banned from buying plane tickets, renting a house, or getting a loan. Over 15 million people have already been prevented from traveling. Chinese technology firms are developing advanced cameras that use AI to track everything, including people, bikes, cars, and buses. Police in Beijing wear glasses that recognize faces linked to the government's database. The fear is that this system could be used to punish those not loyal to the Communist Party, with no real due process to challenge it.

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In China, a social credit score system is already in place, using facial recognition to monitor behavior like jaywalking and deduct money from accounts. This system can identify gender, estimate age, and even recognize car models. Implementation in Western nations could lead to invasive monitoring of personal habits and preferences, impacting individuals' social credit scores. This reality is already present in some places, highlighting the need for awareness and consideration of potential consequences.

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A man was locked out of his smart home because his smart device detected audio it deemed racist. This incident highlights the power of smart devices and terms of service agreements, as they can restrict access to our homes. In Australia, a politician warns that smart cities equipped with face recognition, cameras, and license plate readers will enable constant tracking of individuals. Additionally, with the introduction of centralized bank digital currencies, our spending will require approval, potentially leading to exclusion from government services, healthcare, vacations, and the internet. This could result in a new form of societal exclusion resembling gulags.

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Everywhere she goes, Oh Young Houyu is followed. What she buys, how she behaves is tracked and scored to show how responsible and trustworthy she is. It's called the social credit system. In one version now being tested, a person's reputation is scored on a scale of three fifty to nine fifty. And Halyuk, with a good score of seven fifty two, is okay with it. In fact, most people are. It's a mechanism, like, pushes you to become a better citizen. It's big data meets big brother, expanding how the government monitors, understands, and ultimately controls its 1,400,000,000 citizens. Thanks to advances in artificial intelligence and facial recognition Glasses. And a web of more than 200,000,000 surveillance cameras. Are people bothered by privacy concerns? We think, it's a lot of camera Keep the safety. It's really good. We can accept it. Companies are experimenting with the algorithms to help the government create the new national social credit system. The government also has pilot projects. In one, citizens are required to do hours of unpaid work to get benefits, and scores are docked for things like littering, a messy yard, gossip, even jaywalking. Video of offenders is shown on the local news. And information collectors like Jo Ai Ni are paid to report on their neighbors. Her quota, 10 injuries a month. Like the man who carried a drunk person home. A good deed, she says. Good social credit gets rewarded with perks like cheap loans and travel deals, but a bad score means public shame and worse. Hwang Hwaijun lost a court case and didn't pay. Now he's on a government blacklist. Beautiful. I can't buy airplane or train tickets, he says. And the list goes on. Being discredited makes it hard to get a job or put kids in top schools. The social credit system will go nationwide next year, and few here are willing to criticize it. Something that may pose a risk itself for a bad score and the life that comes with it. Janice Mackie Frayer, NBC News, Beijing.

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The speaker discusses a growing social credit-like system controlled by algorithms. If a person’s family photos, online activities, purchases, associations, or friends diverge from what authorities expect, they can lose the ability to buy train tickets, board airplanes, obtain a passport, or be eligible for a job, including government work. These constraints are increasingly created, programmed, and decided by algorithms. These algorithms are fueled by data our devices produce constantly and invisibly. The records we generate are not just visible content but often unseen traces, such as location and activity footprints. The speaker emphasizes that our devices create records that we do not see, which aggregate into a comprehensive picture of individuals. Even when the content of communications isn’t visible, metadata reveals much. The government and other actors claim they do not need a warrant to collect metadata, yet it tells a complete story about a person’s life. Activity records are continually created, shared, collected, and intercepted by both companies and governments. As these records are sold and traded, the speaker argues that what is being sold is not merely information but people themselves. They claim that companies and governments are selling “us”—our future, our past, our history, and our identity. In doing so, they assert that these entities are eroding personal power and making individual stories work for them. Overall, the message is that everyday data—seemingly innocent day-to-day traces—are aggregated into powerful profiles. These profiles determine access to travel, work, and official status, and the data economy is framed as commodifying and leveraging individuals’ identities. The core assertion is that the modern data ecosystem constructs a pervasive power dynamic where people’s histories and identities are exploited to control and monetize them, while the actual content of private communications may be less visible than the broader metadata that shapes life opportunities.

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For 30 years, the speaker has been warning about global manipulation and the agenda of creating a one world government, world central bank, and cashless society. They point out that China is the blueprint for this Orwellian society, where citizens are constantly tracked through face recognition cameras and their behavior is monitored by AI. The Chinese government rewards or punishes individuals based on their actions, leading to total control. The speaker emphasizes that this is the plan for the world. Another speaker from the World Economic Forum acknowledges China's achievements and considers their model attractive for many countries.

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The speaker expresses concern about the push towards a centralized digital currency and a social credit score system. They mention the possibility of connecting it to a health app and using another pandemic as a means to implement it. The speaker highlights the effectiveness and financial gains of such systems. They also mention the consequences in China, where a bad social credit score can restrict one's ability to buy a plane ticket, car, or get a loan. The fear of self-censorship is emphasized as people try to avoid being a part of this system.

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In China, there are 700 million cameras as part of a mass surveillance program. These cameras use facial recognition and body movements to identify individuals. They are linked to China's social credit system, where not following rules results in losing social credit points. This can lead to consequences like higher mortgage rates, taxes, slower internet, and expensive public transport. So, if you're in China, think twice before breaking any rules because you are being watched and will face consequences.

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Speaker 0 describes a view that the last mission of the Freemasons to achieve their world vision is creating AI, and that this will occur at thirty three degrees north of the equator—in Jerusalem. He claims this is the end game, with the Freemasons aiming to create a world government in Jerusalem, and identifies the center of this world government as Solomon's Temple, Silicon Valley, and AI. He asserts that currently AI like ChatGPT “doesn’t really do anything,” producing only cool images and helping students cheat, and notes that if you don’t go to school you might not see much value in using ChatGPT or paying for it. He contrasts this with the global investment in data centers, noting that “everyone’s putting money into AI,” but questions how to make money from AI if the goal is using it directly, suggesting that creating an AI surveillance state would be more financially sensible. Speaker 0 then explains what a surveillance state is, citing China as an example with digital ID and digital currency, where “everything you buy, everything you do will be tracked.” He says this allows the creation of a profile on individuals that reveals who they are, how they behave, and what they think, and that the government can manipulate thinking and behavior. He ties this to a religious frame by stating that such a surveillance state is “the mark of the beast.” He concludes by identifying Package three d k as a global AI surveillance system.

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In China, the social credit system tracks and scores citizens based on behavior. Good scores bring benefits like cheap loans, while bad scores lead to public shame and restrictions. Surveillance cameras and AI are used to monitor citizens, who can be penalized for littering or gossiping. The system will be nationwide soon, with few daring to criticize it for fear of a low score. This control raises concerns about privacy and freedom.

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The speaker expresses concern about the push towards a centralized digital currency and a social credit score system. They mention the possibility of using another pandemic as a means to implement these changes. The speaker finds this prospect scary because it has been financially effective in the past. They highlight the example of China, where a bad social credit score can restrict one's ability to make purchases or obtain loans. The speaker emphasizes the importance of not self-censoring and avoiding such a system.

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For 30 years, I've been warning about a global network called the cult that aims to establish a one world government, world central bank, and electronic cashless society. China serves as the blueprint for this Orwellian society, as they have millions of face recognition cameras tracking and identifying individuals. Their social credit system rewards or punishes behavior based on the state's approval. People who fall below a certain level face consequences like being banned from flying or using trains. This level of control and surveillance is what the cult plans for the world. The World Economic Forum has been involved in China's development since 1979 and admires China's achievements, considering it a role model for many countries.

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Australian cities are becoming digital surveillance precincts via smart city programs. Technologies like facial recognition cameras, license plate readers, smart lights, smart poles, smart cars, smart neighborhoods, smart homes, and smart appliances are all connected and communicating. The streets, mobile phones, and cities are spying, and infrastructure for future lockdowns is being put in place. People are being set up to be tracked through their movements and digital wallets. Handing over data allows monitoring of behavior, which will become a social credit score. Once central bank digital currencies are in place, spending money will require approval. Digital ID will soon become a reality in Australia, like in Canada, Scotland, and other countries. Eventually, access to government, public services, travel, healthcare, and the internet will require a digital ID. The last two years were a dress rehearsal, and Australians are sleepwalking into this technocratic future.

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Zhang Injie cosigned a loan for a friend who later skipped out, resulting in him being blocked from buying high-speed train tickets. To improve his social credit score, Zhang donates money at a local community office, although he doesn't know where the donations go. China plans to track, rate, reward, and punish all citizens by 2020. Despite the system causing him some suffering, Zhang supports the government's efforts. In another scene, the speaker is in a Walmart in London, noticing surveillance cameras in unexpected places like the meat and egg sections. The speaker questions the purpose of these cameras.

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The speaker discusses a future being built by the ruling class, referred to as a sustainable future. They mention the concept of 15-minute city smart grid apartments, which are designed to confine humans. China is presented as a blueprint for this smart grid system, where citizens' every movement is recorded to monitor their social credit score. Those who misbehave or refuse to comply are socially shamed and denied access to public facilities. Additionally, their friends on social media also face consequences through a reduction in their social credit score. The speaker suggests that this is a method of training humans to behave, and implies that smart cities sponsored by Klaus Schwab, the World Economic Forum, and BlackRock are on the horizon.

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The video portrays a coming system of digital control led by Gates, the UN, and a global elite, culminating in mandatory digital IDs. In the UK, the government vows a new digital ID mandatory for the right to work—“you will not be able to work in The United Kingdom if you do not have digital ID.” The plan allegedly links digital IDs to vaccines and extends to wearables—external, then internal implants—via microneedle patch implants that install quantum dots for vaccine passports. Lucy demonstrates a government-issued digital ID wallet reminding her of mandatory vaccination. The UN pact of the future allegedly demands biometric IDs for a global citizen, with disinformation punished by AI and bank/transport restrictions. In China, facial scans verify vaccination status for entry and pensions; the social credit system scores citizens (350-950) and ties benefits to behavior. Critics warn of a total surveillance state.

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Speaker 0 asserts that the control grid arrived in America via Apple, stating they worked for Apple for seventeen years and still hold stock, so they find no joy in revealing this. They claim there are no good guys here and argue that we need to shut it down while we can. They state that Apple just rolled out digital ID integration and acknowledge it sounds convenient, but warn that every convenience has a price. According to them, once identity goes digital, it becomes programmable, and once programmable, it becomes controllable. They contend that individuals are handing over their entire identity wrapped in a product, a file that can easily be deleted. If one does not comply, access is lost; if opinions are not liked, accounts are frozen. They claim that stepping out of line results in travel restrictions, bank transfer blocks, and loss of benefits. They insist this is not speculation and that it is already live. Examples are offered to illustrate the claim: Thailand has programmable digital currency; Europe introduced biometric wallets; Canada froze accounts during protests; China is described as having started the pilot and now in full production mode with a live social credit system. They assert that China is secretly building the infrastructure at a global level right now, not through laws or force, but through updates and convenience. They claim that in Vietnam, 86,000,000 bank accounts were deleted because people wouldn’t agree to a digital ID. Concerning the European Union, they state that by 2027, large cash payments will be outlawed, forcing people onto digital rails that can be controlled. They describe this as just the on ramp, arguing that freedom becomes conditional when identity is controlled by a corporation or a government that can revoke it with a keystroke. They describe the arrival of dystopia as occurring not with tanks or force, but with app updates or convenience. They conclude by urging listeners to pay attention and push back while they still can. The message ends with an appeal to “Let’s go,” emphasizing urgency to resist the rollout of digital identity and programmable control embedded in convenient updates and services.

Coldfusion

Big Brother: China Edition!
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China is leveraging technology to exert control over its society, exemplified by the 2018 vote allowing President Xi Jinping to rule indefinitely. WeChat, with over 1 billion users, is a tool for surveillance, as it shares user data with the government. The extensive surveillance includes 200 million cameras and a social credit system affecting citizens' lives. Despite concerns, a study shows 80% of internet-connected citizens approve of the system, viewing it as a means to encourage honesty.
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