reSee.it - Tweets Saved By @songpinganq

Saved - November 16, 2025 at 3:06 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
I warn against following China's steps. Digital ID, tied to the social credit system, can blacklist me from using WeChat’s digital wallet, cutting off money and jobs, which could push me toward homelessness.

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

Do not follow China's steps! Digital ID is the foundation of China's social credit system. Once you are blacklisted by social credit system, you are banned from using digital wallet WeChat to spend and receive digital money. ——This makes it hard for you to find a job to make a living. So you become homeless. Because of Digital ID, tens of thousands young Chinese people are becoming homeless😭. They are searching food in garbage bins, and sleep in the streets.

Saved - October 1, 2025 at 8:02 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
I learned that in China, getting vaccinated can earn you 4 social credit points. A police drone even announces, "Scan the QR code to verify your vaccine passport!" It's a constant reminder that we must show our vaccine status to move freely, highlighting the control of Digital ID over us.

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

Fun fact: you can earn 4 social credit points in China for getting vaccinated. A police drone shouting in the sky: ''Scan the QR code to verify your vaccine passport! Or you can't pass through our checkpoint..'' Everywhere we go, we Chinese need to verify our vaccine passport. ——That's how Digital ID controls Chinese people.

@JimFergusonUK - Jim Ferguson

🚨 WARNING: Digital ID was China’s FIRST step. It became the foundation of their Social Credit system — and now the West is copying it. One “mistake” and you lose your bank, your job, your family, your freedom. Reject it. Totally. https://t.co/09xZ2zWoYQ

Video Transcript AI Summary
The transcript describes a system where education correlates with rights: "A good school brings benefits, but people with low scores lose rights." It depicts public shaming on screens that label people untrustworthy and plaster their details publicly. It argues that this is a matter of principle: those people have to be condemned and pay the price. It calls for a blacklist of so-called bad citizens whose ratings have dropped to zero; on it are companies and 23,000,000 people. Among them is journalist Liu Hu, who was blacklisted after pursuing corruption among high-profile party members and being sued for defamation. He discovers the ban when he cannot buy a train ticket. Once blacklisted, one cannot get a bank loan, start a business, buy an apartment, or send children to private school. The piece frames this as a digital dictatorship and warns freedoms may be eroded.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: A good school brings benefits, but people with low scores lose rights. The cinema names and shames people considered untrustworthy, plastering their details, even their addresses across big screens. It's a matter of principle. Those people have to be condemned. Those people aren't honest, so they have to pay the price. It's only right to pay your debts. You have to blacklist those that don't. The supreme court has created a blacklist for so called bad citizens, those whose ratings have dropped to zero. On it are companies, but also 23,000,000 people to date. Among them is this journalist Liu Hu. He got a little too close to uncovering corruption among high profile party members. After being sued for defamation by the subject of a story he'd written, he was blacklisted. He only realized when he tried to buy a train ticket and was told he was banned from traveling. That tells me I'm still on the blacklist. Punished because he's been branded untrustworthy by the state. Once you're blacklisted, you can no longer get a bank loan, start a business, buy an apartment, or even send your children to a private school. Yuhu is among a tiny minority of people who have dared to criticize the system, which some are calling a digital dictatorship. I worry because I think many people like me will be deprived of individual freedoms.
Saved - October 1, 2025 at 7:43 PM

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

You can lose 5 social credit points for messy garden in China.. Your neighbor can get 1 to 5 points for reporting you https://t.co/fbHkgYajvJ

Video Transcript AI Summary
Across the village, residents are expected to maintain their front yards in neat, tidy condition, and Phong Lan enforces this requirement with notable rigor, making no exceptions. This strict stance applies even to the elderly. One resident affected by these rules is Zhou Li Chong, who is 84 years old this year. Although retired, twenty years ago he served as a prominent deputy secretary who managed the village and supervised its affairs. He has been a party member for more than half his life, reflecting long-standing political involvement. However, in the present moment, he vehemently opposes the party's current method.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Is expected to keep their front yard neat and tidy. And she is rigorous in enforcing the rules. Phong Lan makes no exceptions. Even for the elderly. Zhou Li Chong is 84 this year. Although he's retired now, twenty years ago, he was a prominent deputy secretary managing this village. He's been a party member for more than half his life, but now he vehemently opposes the party's current method.

@Original_DJ_Ten - DJ Ten

@songpinganq How many social credit points will my neighbour get for reporting my messy garden?

Saved - September 25, 2025 at 4:58 PM

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

Facial recognition and a valid vaccine passport are required to enter supermarkets in China. ——If you are not vaccinated, you are banned from buying food. This is how Chinese government uses Digital ID to control people. https://t.co/ST263yo5Z6

Video Transcript AI Summary
刚才,大叔问:你这个装了三台,大街快了多少钱?我说30万,20天。吓我一跳。我们出场,掉一个1万8块钱。 Just now, the uncle asked: 'You installed three units, how much money did it speed up the street by?' I said 300,000, 20 days. It scared me. We left the scene and lost 10,008 yuan.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: 刚 才 分 8 万 大 叔 我 说 你 这 个 装 了 三 台 大 街 快 了 多 少 钱 我 说 3 0 万 2 0 天 吓 我 一 跳 停 留 我 们 出 场 掉 一 个 1 万 8 块 钱

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

Digital ID will control every aspect of your life like never before!🚨🚨 Everywhere Chinese people go, they need to verify their vaccination status with a Covid passport scan. ——If you are not vaccinated, when you scan, immediately an alarm goes off..then the guards will be alerted and come to arrest you.

Saved - September 23, 2025 at 4:55 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
Digital ID systems are increasingly controlling lives, as seen in China where vaccination status and Covid test results dictate access to public facilities, including toilets. Citizens have protested against these measures, risking severe consequences, including imprisonment or worse. The system enforces compliance through strict monitoring, with alarms triggered for those who fail to meet health requirements. This raises concerns about personal freedoms and the potential for authoritarian control over daily activities.

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

Digital ID will control all aspects of your life like never before!!🚨🚨 In China, you need to verify your vaccination status and Covid test result with a Covid passport scan, in order to use public toilet. ——If you are not vaccinated, you can't use public toilet!🚨🚨 https://t.co/nljoWjjKDw

@EssexPR - Adam Brooks AKA EssexPR 🇬🇧

Danger of having a Digital ID under an Authoritarian Government like this one… Imagine they decided to turn off your ability to travel on public transport or claim benefits, simply because they’d seen you on an anti Gov’t protest or similar… Look at China 🇨🇳

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

Digital ID will dictate all aspects of your life like never before🚨🚨 Chinese people hated Digital ID (China's Covid passport) so much that they risked their lives to took to streets to protest directly against Xi Jinping, called for him step down. In China, if you protest against Xi Jinping, you could get locked up in a mental hospital, and get tortured for life.

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

Digital ID will dictate every aspect of your life!!🚨🚨 China, Jinan city You need to verify your vaccination status and Covid test result with a Covid passport scan in order to use public toilet. ——If you are not vaccinated, the public toilet door won't open for you!🚨🚨 https://t.co/9uP3EOEp3I

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

Everywhere Chinese go, they need to verify their vaccination status and Covid test result with a Covid passport scan..even enter public toilet. If the code is yellow (you missed a Covid test) or the code is red (you are not vaccinated), immediately an alarm goes off..then the guards will be alerted and come to arrest you. Finally you will be sent off to a quarantine camp.

Saved - January 3, 2025 at 12:24 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
I observed a Chinese health official leading people to a quarantine camp due to their expired vaccine passports. With these passports, they couldn't access hotels, taxis, or restaurants, leaving them with no escape. This situation highlights how the digital vaccine passport and contact tracing integrated into WeChat enforce a social credit system. If your health code turns red, indicating you're unvaccinated or a close contact, you're sent to quarantine. It’s clear that the digital vaccine passport significantly influences daily life.

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

One Chinese health official is leading hundreds of people to a quarantine camp. You may ask why didn't people run away? Because they all had an expired vaccine passport, which made it impossible for them to rent a hotel, take a taxi, eat at restaurant..they had nowhere to run. https://t.co/DNJTAgNU5B

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

@PeterSweden7 In China, digital vaccine passport and contact & trace are all built in digital wallet WeChat, who are helping Chinese people to build social credit system. If your code turns to red (means you are not vaccinated or a close contact), you will get sent off to a quarantine camp. https://t.co/a3e2p400zd

Video Transcript AI Summary
In China, daily life is heavily influenced by a code system where green indicates safety and red signals possible isolation or quarantine. This system enables the tracking of the entire population for contact tracing. Delivery workers must undergo daily COVID tests, expressing fear of the virus. Contracting COVID leads to mandatory quarantine for individuals and their close contacts, often in large facilities converted from convention centers, which can be unsanitary. One man shared he has been quarantined six times this year due to his building being classified as close contacts. He feels less fearful of COVID, believing omicron is less severe and his family is fully vaccinated.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Code dictates all of our daily lives in China. Green means good to go. Red means I may have to isolate at home or go to a mass quarantine facility. This allows China to track the movements of virtually all 1,400,000,000 people in the name of contact tracing. I've gotta scan my code to get into a taxi, a public park, a mall, or a coffee shop, even a public bathroom. Speaker 1: I ran into a group of delivery people on the street. They've gotta do COVID tests every single day to do their jobs. This woman tells me the pandemic has been hard on her. I ask her why. She says it's because she's scared of the virus. Speaker 0: Getting COVID in China is unlike anywhere else in the world. You and your close contacts all get sent to a quarantine center. This is a convention center in Beijing that's been turned into a massive quarantine facility with thousands of beds. But some of these facilities in the country, they are in very rundown and unsanitary condition. And then your whole building or community could go into lockdown. So I need Speaker 1: I spoke to a man who's been in and out of quarantine 6 times already just this year. He tells me his whole building of more than 200 families went to a quarantine facility last month because they were considered close contacts. He says he's not scared to get COVID because omicron is less severe and his whole family has been vaccinated. I

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

Digital vaccine passport will dictate all your life.

Saved - December 6, 2024 at 3:05 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
I shared that Chinese police robots are now equipped with facial recognition cameras and net guns to subdue suspects. Additionally, I noted that police facial recognition glasses can identify car plates and faces, linking them to a database for potential arrests.

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

Chinese police robots are equipped with facial recognition cameras and a net gun that can fire at suspects and subdue them. 1/2 https://t.co/EeM0To4KVf

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

Chinese police facial recognition glasses can identify car plates and human faces & more...and automatically match them with police database, to search and arrest anyone considered as enemy of the State. https://t.co/0c55m4xiZA https://t.co/J3Tht8K9RF

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

Chinese police use net guns to subdue suspects or catch animals. 2/2 https://t.co/WDZLMQ2YF0

Saved - November 23, 2024 at 11:31 PM

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

@_whitneywebb Elon Musk wants to copy and turn Twitter into WeChat. In China, WeChat is a social media app as well as China's digital wallet. ——If you are blacklisted by social credit system, immediately WeChat bans you from spending your own digital money!! https://t.co/iYWz9d23wn

Video Transcript AI Summary
They have been developing an edit button for a year, but it's a complex issue. In China, WeChat is essential for daily life, handling everything from payments to communication. It's a powerful app that we lack outside of China. The idea of copying WeChat for Twitter has been suggested, as it could enhance the platform significantly.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: They have been working on an edit button for a year. Well, it's a hard it's a tricky situation. And it's incredibly complex. Yeah. It's a good one. Indeed. I mean, we don't even have, a a a an app that's as good as WeChat in China. And, like, in China, you, like, live on WeChat, basically. Yeah. It's like yeah. Everyone everyone is like, they're like, you live on WeChat. You do payments. You do everything. It's like Yep. It's great. Basically, WeChat's kick ass. And we don't have anything like WeChat outside of China. So I was like, my dear would be like, how about if we just copy WeChat? Hey. Copy them. Buys Twitter copies WeChat? Yeah. Pretty much. Yeah.
Saved - November 10, 2024 at 2:12 PM

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

China is going door-to-door to install QR codes on citizens' homes. So everyone can instantly check the homeowners' social credit score by scanning this QR code. This is dangerous — it encourages people to treat their neighbors with low social credit scores as sub-human. https://t.co/rGMucoJRnd

Video Transcript AI Summary
南门社区设立了数字化文明积分门牌,居民可以通过二维码查看自己的文明积分。这一举措旨在鼓励居民养成良好的行为习惯和社会责任感,进一步弘扬文明风尚。通过这种方式,社区希望凝聚社会力量,营造共建、共治、共享的社会氛围。 Nanmeng Community has established digital civilization scoreboards, allowing residents to check their civilization points via QR codes. This initiative aims to encourage good behavior and social responsibility among residents, further promoting civilized practices. Through this approach, the community seeks to unite social forces and create an atmosphere of co-construction, governance, and sharing.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: 南 门 社 区 设 置 数 字 化 文 明 积 分 门 牌 在 积 分 至 实 行 的 基 础 上 为 获 得 积 分 的 居 民 制 作 文 明 积 分 门 牌 门 牌 设 置 二 维 码 手 机 扫 码 就 可 以 查 看 该 户 居 民 得 的 文 明 积 分 进 一 步 弘 扬 文 明 风 尚。 培 养 居 民 良 好 的 行 为 习 惯 和 社 会 责 任 感 凝 聚 社 会 力 量、 营 造 共 建、 共 治 共 享 社 会 之 旅 行 模 式

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

Once you are blacklisted by social credit system, you can no longer do online shopping in China. Because all online shopping sites require real name to login in, and you need to make payments with digital wallets Alipay and WeChat. https://t.co/tEck1ryZ3C

Video Transcript AI Summary
Leo Hu was banned from flying due to being on a list of untrustworthy individuals, a consequence of a court-ordered apology for his tweets. He feels constantly controlled by this social credit system, which assigns scores to all Chinese citizens based on their behaviors. Positive actions like community service can improve scores, while negative actions, such as fraud or smoking in prohibited areas, can lower them. Advanced surveillance technology, developed by companies like SenseTime, enables the government to monitor citizens closely. The specifics of how the scoring system operates remain secret, raising concerns about potential abuse by the government. This system could be used to punish those deemed disloyal to the Communist Party, and challenging one's score is nearly impossible due to the lack of due process.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Leo Hu recently tried to book a flight, he was told he was banned from flying because he's on the list of untrustworthy people. Leo was a journalist who was ordered by a court to apologize for a series of tweets he wrote and was then told his apology was insincere. I can't buy property. My child can't go to private school, he says. You feel you're being controlled by the list all the time. And the list is now getting longer as every Chinese citizen is being assigned a social credit score, a fluctuating rating based on a range of behaviors. It's believed that community service in buying Chinese made products can raise your score. Fraud, tax evasion, and smoking in nonsmoking areas can drop it. China's growing network of surveillance cameras makes all of this possible. It can recognize more than 4,000 vehicles. Shu Li is the CEO of SenseTime, one of China's most successful artificial intelligence companies. It has created smart cameras for the government that can help catch criminals, but also track average citizens. You can tell whether it is an adult, a child, a male or female. Ken DeWoskin has studied China's economic and political culture for more than 3 decades. He says how the new scoring system truly works is kept secret and could be easily abused by the government. How far into people's daily mundane activities does this go? Well, I think that the government and the people running the plan would like to go as deeply as possible to determine how to allocate benefits and also how to, impact and shape their behavior. The fear, of course, is that the government may use this social credit scoring system to punish people that it deems not sufficiently loyal to the Communist party. And trying to clear your name or fight your score is nearly impossible because there is no due process. Ben Tracey, CBS News, Beijing.
Saved - September 10, 2024 at 7:30 PM

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

In China, if your social credit score gets so low that you get blacklisted, authority can jail you twice a year, 15 days a time, without a trial. https://t.co/gqa2DX2aTK

Video Transcript AI Summary
各位基金人,请你们在人民法院判决敲击审教部,人们凭审教法律义务亲爱发言警局,今年引发对你们实质司法解决措施,希望你们。 Translation: To all fund members, please note that the People's Court has ruled on the Ministry of Education. People rely on the legal obligations of the Ministry of Education to address the police station. This year, substantial judicial solutions have been initiated for you, and we hope you will take note.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: 各 位 基 金 人 请 你 们 在 人 民 法 院 判 决 敲 击 审 教 部 人 们 凭 审 教 法 律 义 务 亲 爱 发 言 警 局 今 年 引 发 对 你 们 实 质 司 法 解 决 措 施 希 望 你 们

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

@JohnStossel @jk_rowling In China, a single social media post that criticizes government can cost you 50 social credit points, leading to arrest and blacklisting. This can affect your career, your ability to take a train, your internet speed, and even your children's access to education. https://t.co/pLF1SzpwFl

Video Transcript AI Summary
Lawyer Chang Aija, a former school counselor, reposted a message on social media that cost her her job and home. The post was an apparent jab at China's president Xi Jinping. Chang Aija stated she was shocked that a few paragraphs got her into so much trouble. Police questioned her at her school, and days later, she was fired and forced to leave her school housing. She stated that it feels like a society with an emperor. She also noted that in other countries, people can criticize and even mock leaders.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Is the message that got you into such trouble. The lawyer Chang Aija, a former school counselor, showed us the message she reposted on social media, which cost her her job, even her home. It's incredible that these few paragraphs got you into so much trouble. I was shocked, she said. Our country is going backwards. The post was an apparent jab at China's president Xi Jinping. Police showed up at her school to question her. And days later, she was fired and forced to leave her school housing. This is the 21st century, she said. So why does it feel like a society with an emperor? In other countries, people can criticize, even mock leaders. Even mock leaders.
Saved - September 10, 2024 at 6:03 PM

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

Downside of cashless society In China, if your social credit score gets so low that you get blacklisted, immediately authority lockes your bank account and digital wallet WeChat (or Alipay), Makes it hard for you to find a job, book a taxi ride..or even buy food. https://t.co/v9SpW5Qnmz

Video Transcript AI Summary
Leo Hu, a journalist, was banned from flying and placed on a list of untrustworthy people after a court deemed his apology for tweets insincere. He reports being restricted from buying property and sending his child to private school. China is assigning every citizen a social credit score that fluctuates based on behaviors; community service and buying Chinese products can raise it, while fraud, tax evasion, and smoking in non-smoking areas can lower it. Surveillance cameras, capable of recognizing over 4,000 vehicles, enable this system. SenseTime CEO Shu Li says their smart cameras can identify adults, children, males, and females. Ken DeWoskin says the scoring system's workings are secret and could be abused by the government to impact and shape behavior. The government may use the system to punish those deemed not loyal enough to the Communist party, and there is no due process to fight the score.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Leo Hu recently tried to book a flight, he was told he was banned from flying because he's on the list of untrustworthy people. Leo was a journalist who was ordered by a court to apologize for a series of tweets he wrote and was then told his apology was insincere. I can't buy property. My child can't go to private school, he says. You feel you're being controlled by the list all the time. And the list is now getting longer as every Chinese citizen is being assigned a social credit score, a fluctuating rating based on a range of behaviors. It's believed that community service in buying Chinese made products can raise your score. Fraud, tax evasion, and smoking in non smoking areas can drop it. China's growing network of surveillance cameras makes all of this possible. It can recognize more than 4,000 vehicles. Shu Li is the CEO of SenseTime, one of China's most successful artificial intelligence companies. It has created smart cameras for the government that can help catch criminals but also track average citizens. You can tell whether it is an adult, a child, a male or female. Ken DeWoskin has studied China's economic and political culture for more than 3 decades. He says how the new scoring system truly works is kept secret and could be easily abused by the government. How far into people's daily mundane activities does this go? Well, I think that the government and the people running the plan would like to go as deeply as possible to determine how to allocate benefits and also how to, impact and shape their behavior. The fear, of course, is that the government may use this social credit scoring system to punish people that it deems not sufficiently loyal to the Communist party. And trying to clear your name or fight your score is nearly impossible because there is no due process. Ben Tracey, CBS News, Beijing.

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

China. No digital ID no food. Facial recognition as digital ID required for getting SIM card, bank account, digital wallet, traveling by public transportation ... Once you are blacklisted by Social Credit Systerm, you will be flagged as enemy of the State - no food for you!! https://t.co/edfDxffUyT

Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker reports being unable to buy food in China. After receiving a cell phone linked to a Chinese bank card, the account was flagged, requiring facial recognition identity verification. The speaker expresses disbelief at needing facial recognition to spend a gift card balance. The speaker failed the verification, as the phone setup was done by a cousin. As a result, the speaker is once again unable to buy anything.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: So the latest in this dystopian outrage that is now all of China, apparently, is I once again cannot buy food. A couple days ago, my uncle and my cousin helped me get a cell phone that is linked to a Chinese bank card so that I could buy anything. But now, apparently, it has been flagged for some reason, and I have to pass facial recognition identity verification, which is insane. Because all I wanna do is just spend my gift card balance on this debit card. I can't believe I'm doing this. I have to open my mouth. Oh my god. Terrifying. Of course, because it was my cousin who set this up for me, I did not pass verification. I guess it's a good thing that the Chinese app is not racist. But now I once again can't buy anything.
Saved - September 10, 2024 at 12:09 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
China's extensive surveillance network includes over 700 million CCTV cameras, monitoring its 1.4 billion citizens and assigning them social credit scores based on their behavior. Those with low scores face severe restrictions, such as being barred from trains and planes, although they can pay to improve their scores. Additionally, the government publicly shames individuals with the lowest scores by displaying their personal information on billboards, warning others to avoid them to protect their own social credit.

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

China's all-seeing skynet now has more than 700 million CCTV cameras (half of the world total), and it's real-time spying on all of its 1.4 billion citizens to give them a personal social credit score, based on how they behave. Social Credit System means Ultimate Control!! https://t.co/1qFKr0RnTw

Video Transcript AI Summary
Ohyung Haw Yu is tracked and scored on her behavior using a social credit system, with scores from 350 to 950. A good score, like Haw Yu's 752, is generally accepted. The system uses AI, facial recognition, and over 200 million cameras to monitor citizens. Some citizens aren't bothered by privacy concerns, citing increased safety. Companies are developing algorithms for the national system, and pilot projects are underway. These projects require unpaid work for benefits, and penalize actions like littering, gossip, and jaywalking. Informants are paid to report on neighbors. Good social credit earns rewards like cheap loans, while bad scores lead to public shame. Hwang Hui Jun, blacklisted for not paying a court case, can't buy plane or train tickets. A bad score hinders job prospects and school admissions. The nationwide system is launching next year, and criticism is rare, possibly due to fear of score reduction.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Everywhere she goes, Ohyung Haw Yu 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. And in 1 version now being tested, a person's reputation is scored on a scale of 350 to 950. And Howey, with a good score of 752, 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, the lot of camera keep the safety is 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 1, 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 entries 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 Hui Jun lost a court case and didn't pay. Now he's on a government blacklist. 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 MacKiepreyar, NBC News, Beijing.

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

https://t.co/OGglToklHp Millions of Chinese people can't take trains and planes anymore, because their social credit scores are too low...but you can pay money to Chinese government to raise your social credit score. https://t.co/CLY4DCOiEn

Video Transcript AI Summary
Zhang Yingjie cosigned a loan for a friend who defaulted, and despite paying his share, his social credit score was affected. Consequently, he was among millions blocked from purchasing high-speed train tickets and flights due to low social credit. To improve his score, Zhang donates money at a community office, believing it will go to charity, though he doesn't monitor where the donations actually go. Despite the system negatively impacting him, Zhang supports the government's social credit system. By 2020, China intends to track, rate, reward, and punish all citizens, converting personal experiences into transactions. Zhang, having regained his high score, is content with the system.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Zhang Yingjie cosigned a loan for a friend who later skipped out. He paid his share, but the local court didn't care. 4,000,000 people have been blocked from buying high speed train tickets over low social credit, and more than 11,000,000 from buying flights. To raise his score, Zhang gets in line at a local community office to donate money the government says will go to charity. Zhang keeps track of his social score closely, but he doesn't keep track of where his donations end up. The system might have caused him to suffer, but Zhang is unwavering in his support for the government's push to score him. By 2020, China plans to track, rate, reward, and punish all of its citizens, essentially turning every personal experience into a transaction. Not that Zhang minds. He's got his high score back, at least for now.

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

China names and shames citizens with the lowest social credit scores , by displaying their faces, IDs, addresses...on billboards in LED trucks, driving around the town for all to see This also alerts who you may want to 'stay away' from, lest your social credit score goes down!! https://t.co/ldBfUoS8LL

Saved - August 1, 2024 at 12:24 PM

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

BREAKING: China is about to mandate all citizens to use their digital ID for internet access. Already Chinese people with a low social credit score are banned from getting on internet. https://t.co/im1n6y0clh

@wideawake_media - Wide Awake Media

Unelected EU head, Ursula von der Leyen, asserts the need for an EU-wide digital ID, "that any citizen can use anywhere in Europe, to do anything from paying your taxes to renting a bicycle". But once your digital ID has been connected to the EU's incoming CBDC (which is programmable), you won't be able to rent a bicycle, or participate in society at all, if the unelected technocrats in charge of the EU decide you haven't been obedient enough, for whatever reason. Maybe you didn't get all the required injections? Maybe you expressed the "wrong" opinion on social media? Or maybe you had the audacity to criticise the totalitarian EU regime? Make no mistake: If digital ID and CBDCs are allowed to take root, unelected technocrats will be able to impose any arbitrary conditions they wish, to determine whether or not you are able to participate in society. In other words, it's the vaccine passport on steroids.

Video Transcript AI Summary
Wir wissen oft nicht, was mit unseren Daten passiert, wenn wir digitale Identitäten erstellen oder uns über Plattformen anmelden. Die Kommission plant eine sichere europäische digitale Identität, die es uns ermöglicht, die Kontrolle über den Datenaustausch zu behalten, vom Steuerzahlen bis zum Fahrradmieten. Translation: We often do not know what happens to our data when creating digital identities or signing up through platforms. The Commission is planning a secure European digital identity that allows us to control data exchange, from paying taxes to renting bicycles.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Jedes Mal, wenn eine Website uns auffordert, eine neue digitale Identität zu erstellen oder uns bequem über eine große Plattform anzumelden, haben wir in Wirklichkeit keine Ahnung, was eigentlich mit unseren Daten passiert. Und aus diesem Grund wird die Kommission demnächst eine sichere europäische digitale Identität vom Steuerzahlen bis zum Fahrradmieten. Vom Steuerzahlen bis zum Fahrradmieten. Eine Technologie, bei der wir selbst kontrollieren können, welche Daten ausgetauscht und wie sie verwendet werden.
Saved - July 16, 2024 at 2:04 AM

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

Now, Chinese people need a permission from police to withdraw cash more than 20,000RMB (2, 740USD). And daily cash withdraw limit from ATM is 500RMB (69USD). Cash is king. Cash is freedom. And Chinese government wants to take it from people. https://t.co/p5nEFNqvul

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

Facial recognition is mandatory to withdraw your deposit in China's bank now. Fail to do so could result the government confiscate your money. This family took the dying father to the bank to get their money. https://t.co/ZsSSMbSZgT

Video Transcript AI Summary
A powerful king walks on the vast land, banishing the darkness. The queen's light cannot illuminate the situation as bright as the strength in a man's chest, symbolizing strong moral principles.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: 很 大 的 王 走 在 了 大 地 上 凡 没 了 黑 暗 的 女 王 传 不 了 照 亮 太 大 情 况 你 像 男 儿 的 胸 膛 拥 有 的 力 量 就 一 个 坚 强 成 道 德 光
Saved - July 8, 2024 at 7:51 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
China's Covid lockdown resulted in tragic consequences as thousands of people were unable to escape fires due to welded doors. Additionally, there is a growing anti-vaccine sentiment in China due to the government's practice of locking up individuals in quarantine camps for refusing vaccination or missing Covid tests. As a result, China is witnessing one of the largest protests in decades.

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

China's Covid lockdown murdered tens of thousands of people, Because health officials welded doors to lock them inside, and they couldn't escape the fire 🔥. https://t.co/FKE1ptsQwW

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

@wideawake_media I became an anti-vaxxer because Chinese government locked me up twice in quarantine camps. During Covid, in China, if you refused to get vaccinated or you missed a Covid test, you would get locked up in a quarantine camp. I am against untested unsafe vaccine. https://t.co/Huao4kWVb7

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

China's Covid protest is the biggest protest for decades in the country, because Covid lockdown murdered tens of thousands people. https://t.co/y7tgPhy7fi

Video Transcript AI Summary
China is facing major protests due to a deadly apartment fire blamed on COVID barriers. People are demanding an end to the strict 0 COVID policy, which they say harms the economy. Officials plan to adjust the policy to reduce its impact on livelihoods and increase police presence to control protests. Translation (if needed): China is experiencing significant protests due to a fatal apartment fire caused by COVID barriers. Citizens are calling for an end to the strict 0 COVID policy, citing economic harm. Authorities will modify the policy to lessen its effects on livelihoods and increase police presence to manage protests.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: China is experiencing some of its biggest protests in decades. As the country nears its 3rd year of COVID lockdowns, the protests were triggered by an apartment fire that killed 10 people, which many believe was caused by COVID barriers that prevented rescuers from entering the building quick enough. Now the people of China are fighting back and demanding an end to China's strict 0 COVID policy, which many believe is hurting the the economy by forcing businesses and communities to shut down after any small outbreak. Chinese officials say they plan to modify the COVID policy to lessen the impact on people's livelihoods while also increasing police presence to crack down on protests.
Saved - July 8, 2024 at 7:42 AM

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

In China's Shandong province, every time you get caught with jaywalking, you lose 1 social credit point 👉.. After 5 times, you get blacklisted, means you will get banned from buying train or air ticket.. https://t.co/qCU9RgZWWR

Video Transcript AI Summary
Don't get publicly shamed in China for jaywalking. It's serious there.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Don't get public shamed. There it is. Look at this guy. Oh, got him. Oh, got her, dude. Oh, no. So just so you guys know, do not jaywalk in China. You will be

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

China's all-seeing skynet now has more than 700 million CCTV cameras (half of the world total), and it's real-time spying on all of its 1.4 billion citizens to give them a personal social credit score, based on how they behave. Social Credit System means Ultimate Control!! https://t.co/1qFKr0RnTw

Video Transcript AI Summary
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.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Everywhere she goes, Ohyung Haw Yu 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. And in 1 version now being tested, a person's reputation is scored on a scale of 350 to 950. And Howey, with a good score of 752, 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, the lot of camera keep the safety is 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 1, 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 entries 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 Hui Jun lost a court case and didn't pay. Now he's on a government blacklist. 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 MacKiepreyar, NBC News, Beijing.
Saved - June 19, 2024 at 2:59 PM

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

CHINA's Social Credit System. Buying a crate of alcohol loses you points for being irresponsible, playing video games loses points for being an idle citizen. Everything is controlled by the Chinese government’s view of a perfect citizen!! https://t.co/j2KLBFFLTs

Video Transcript AI Summary
A woman in Nanjing follows social ranking rules to maintain a good social credit score. Her purchases, like nappies, reflect positively on her. Only 18,000 out of 8,000,000 people are model citizens in this city. Good scores bring discounts on public services, while low scores lead to loss of rights. Those with a score of 0 are blacklisted, like journalist Liu Hu who uncovered corruption. Being blacklisted means no bank loans, starting a business, or buying an apartment.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: She lives in Nanjing, a testing ground for social ranking. Married with a child, she has a job in a retirement home, no debts, and she wouldn't dream of jaywalking. Speaker 1: As a good citizen, I respect the rules of the road. If I didn't, I'd lose points on Speaker 0: my social credit. In theory, everything can be taken into account in the social score, even the most innocuous errands like supermarket shopping. When Shao Wen Wang makes an electronic payment, her purchases tell the state a lot about her. Buying cigarettes would count against her. On the other hand, nappies show she's an attentive mother. Beer could indicate alcoholism. She'd be better off buying water. In this pilot city of 8,000,000 people, there are only 18,000 model citizens. For Xiaowen Wang, there are perks to be had such as paying half price for the bus. Speaker 1: I get discounts for all public services even at museums. And the library is free for me, thanks to my school. Speaker 0: A good score brings benefits, but people with low scores lose rights. The cinema names and shames people considered untrustworthy, plastering their details, even their addresses across big screens. It's a matter of principle. Those people have to be condemned. Speaker 1: Those people aren't honest, so they have to pay the price. It's only right to pay your debts. You have to blacklist those that don't. Speaker 0: The supreme court has created a blacklist for so called bad citizens, Those whose ratings have dropped to 0. On it are companies, but also 23,000,000 people to date. Among them is his journalist, Liu Hu. He got a little too close to uncovering corruption among high profile party members. After being sued for defamation by the subject of a story he'd written, he was blacklisted. He only realized when he tried to buy a train ticket and was told he was banned from traveling. Speaker 2: That tells me I'm still on the blacklist. Speaker 0: Punished because he's been branded untrustworthy by the state. Speaker 1: Once you're blacklisted, you can no longer get a bank loan. Start a business, buy an apartment

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

In China, citizens lose their social credit scores because of their criminal records, academic frauds, unvaccination. If they don't pay mortgages/taxes on time and participate anti-government activities, they lose more points Buying a lot of alcohol results to lose points too. https://t.co/8i1GVRkXOi

Video Transcript AI Summary
Dandan's score is influenced by her criminal, academic, and medical records, state security assessments, and shopping habits. Purchasing alcohol may lower her score, while buying nappies could raise it. Late mortgage or tax payments result in significant score decreases. Shopping choices impact her score in real-time.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Dandan's criminal, academic, and medical records will feed into her score as well as state security assessments. Her shopping habits will be another measure. Her score could even change in real time depending on what she puts in her trolley. Buy a lot of alcohol suggests dependence. Lose a couple of points. Buy a pack of nappies, gain a few, suggests responsibility. Late on mortgage payments or your tax return lose a lot more.
Saved - April 18, 2024 at 9:38 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
China's Hukou system is being upgraded with a QR code called citizen code. This code is required for renting apartments and is checked by police weekly. A green QR code is needed for public transportation, stores, and work, requiring regular Covid testing. Some view the Hukou system as a two-tier population control system.

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

China's Hukou internal passport system is getting a QR code upgrade. EVERY Chinese citizen will be assigned a QR code, called citizen code. You need this code to rent an apartment. And every week police will go from door-to-door to check if tenants have this code. https://t.co/VoydtexfqS

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

This is what life has become in China🇨🇳 since Wuhan initial Covid outbreak A green QR code is needed to access public transportation, stores or to go to work. That means your Covid test can't be older than 48 hours. Keeping it current cost each person 💵50 a month in testing fees https://t.co/lY8P0NlncH

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

China hukou system is a slave system, is two tier population control system to ensure lower tier workers slaves away for upper tier forever.

Saved - February 15, 2024 at 5:39 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
The first post discusses how being blacklisted by China's social credit system prevents individuals from online shopping, as real names and digital wallets are required. The second post mentions that a minimum social credit score of 650 is now needed for purchasing food in a supermarket with facial recognition payment. Lastly, it highlights that if one's social credit score is extremely low, their children may be prohibited from attending high school.

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

Once you are blacklisted by social credit system, you can no longer do online shopping in China. Because all online shopping sites require real name to login in, and you need to make payments with digital wallets Alipay and WeChat. https://t.co/tEck1ryZ3C

Video Transcript AI Summary
Leo Hu, a journalist, was banned from flying and faced restrictions on buying property and sending his child to private school because he was deemed untrustworthy. China has implemented a social credit score system for all citizens, which fluctuates based on behavior. Engaging in community service and purchasing Chinese products can raise the score, while fraud, tax evasion, and smoking in nonsmoking areas can lower it. China's extensive surveillance camera network enables tracking and identification of individuals. The CEO of SenseTime, an AI company, acknowledges the potential for abuse and lack of transparency in the scoring system. Concerns arise regarding the government's use of the system to punish disloyalty without due process.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Leo Hu recently tried to book a flight, he was told he was banned from flying because he's on the list of untrustworthy people. Leo was a journalist who was ordered by a court to apologize for a series of tweets he wrote and was then told his apology was and sincere. I can't buy property. My child can't go to private school, he says. You feel you're being controlled by the list all the time. And the list is now getting longer as every Chinese citizen is being assigned a social credit score, a fluctuating rating based on a range of behaviors. It's believed that community service and buying Chinese made products can raise your score. Fraud, tax evasion, And smoking in nonsmoking areas can drop it. China's growing network of surveillance cameras makes all of this possible. It can recognize more than 4,000 vehicles. Because Shu Li is the CEO of SenseTime. Different One of China's most successful artificial intelligence companies. It has created smart cameras for the government that can help catch criminals but also track average citizens. You can tell whether it is an adult, a child, male or female. Ken DeWoskin has studied China's economic and political culture for more than 3 decades. He says how the new scoring system truly works, is kept secret, and could be easily abused by the government. How far into people's daily mundane activities does this go? Speaker 1: Well, I think I think that the government and the people running the plan would like to go as deeply as possible to determine how to allocate benefits and also how to, impact and shape their behavior. Speaker 0: The fear, Here, of course, is that the government may use this social credit scoring system to punish people that it deems not sufficiently loyal to Party and trying to clear your name or fight your score is nearly impossible because there is no due process. Ben Tracey, CBS News, Beijing.

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

China updates Social Credit System to incorporate Central Bank Digital Currency Now minimum Social Credit Score of 650 needed for buying food in this supermarket with facial recognition payment. It's all fun and games until your social credit score doesn't permit you buy food https://t.co/rvS4khL5l7

Video Transcript AI Summary
I tried making payments in a Chinese supermarket without money, card, or phone. I scanned my face and the payment was done in seconds. What do you think? Is this amazing technology or just weird and unnecessary? Let me know in the comments.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: I heard if you don't have money, you don't have card, you don't have a phone, you can still make payments in the supermarkets in China. Let's give it a try. Try. So today, I went to the supermarket. I bought several stuffs, and, yeah, let's see what comes out. After I click go to payment, it gives me an option to scan my face. And just in a second, the payment's done. What do you guys think? Do Do you think it's amazing technologies or do you think it's sort of weird and unnecessary? Please comment and let me know.

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

China's Social Credit Scoring System If your social credit score gets so low that you get 𝘽𝙡𝙖𝙘𝙠𝙡𝙞𝙨𝙩𝙚𝙙 by Chinese government, your children can be barred from attending high school. https://t.co/KztB9CNunb

Video Transcript AI Summary
In a world where everything is recorded, your actions determine your score. The government rates you based on what you do, like buying things or where you go. If your actions are deemed beneficial, your score goes up. But if you criticize the government, buy alcohol, or play games, your score goes down. A low score means you can't travel, your kids can't apply to good schools, and you can lose your job. Worst of all, you'll be publicly shamed. This dystopian reality is happening today.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Imagine a world where everything you do, from meeting your friends to using a public toilet, is recorded. Based on your actions ranging from what you buy to where you go, you are given a score similar to the way you rate an Uber drive. If the government believes what you do is socially beneficial, the score will increase. And if not, the score will decrease. If you critique the government, buy alcohol, or play games, your score decreases. And when your score is low, you won't be allowed to travel, your children would be barred from applying to high school, you would be fired from your job, and the best part, you would be publicly shamed. This dystopian future is a reality of today's.
Saved - November 28, 2023 at 7:36 PM

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

Remember in China, you are being watched the whole time. 4 am in Shanghai. A Nigerian man got busted for selling drugs to a foreign woman in the street...later he was executed. https://t.co/aEeFXtvo5Q

Video Transcript AI Summary
At 4 am, two foreigners were caught engaging in suspicious activity on the streets of Shanghai. The duty officer at the surveillance room alerted other officers, who prepared to apprehend them. As the foreigners gathered and conversed, a black man threw something from his hand, which the woman caught. She suddenly broke free and ran away. The police calmly followed on electric bikes until the woman was cornered at a bus stop and restrained. Meanwhile, another police team pursued the black man and eventually caught him in a small garden. During the arrest, a woman threw something under a car, which turned out to be 14 knives and poisonous substances. The black man, identified as a Nigerian without a passport, had sold the woman drugs worth 1,000 yuan. The suspect, Lanzhiying, was arrested for drug trafficking, and the foreign woman received administrative punishment. The police officer explained their common methods of capturing suspects through surveillance.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: 凌 晨 四 点 两 名 外 国 人 在 上 海 街 头 进 行 特 殊 交 易 这 一 幕 恰 好 被 派 出 所 监 控 室 的 值 班 明 警 发 现 便 通 着 其 他 警 员 准 备 抓 人 跟 外 沿 路 名 外 国 人 开 始 凑 在 一 起 攀 谈 只 见 黑 人 男 子 把 什 么 撒 了 女 人 手 中 被 赶 来 的 用 电 动 车 结 女 此 突 然 挣 脱 束 缚 迈 着 大 长 腿 也 马 路 疯 狂 逃 船 民 警 不 慌 不 忙 骑 电 动 车 跟 在 他 身 后 等 女 子 卡 不 动 停 在 公 交 站 民 警 上 前 将 其 按 岛 制 服 与 此 同 时 另 一 路 赵 顾 小 组 也 对 黑 人 男 子 展 开 三 路 高 抄 最 终 嫌 疑 人 在 路 边 的 小 花 园 内 被 民 警 扑 道 这 在 民 景 准 备 收 队 时 红 一 女 子 把 手 里 的 东 西 扔 到 了 汽 车 下 面 民 警 检 起 后 发 现 1 4 刀 有 毒 药 品 要 明 检 一 人 被 先 后 押 节 会 派 出 所 希 问 得 知 黑 人 男 子 是 米 日 利 亚 人 没 有 护 照 属 于 非 法 入 境 而 他 卖 给 女 人 的 药 品 四 代 就 价 值 的 1 0 0 0 块 最 终 蓝 紫 英 涉 嫌 卖 药 被 踢 转 逮 捕 外 籍 女 子 也 被 派 出 所 予 以 行 政 处 罚 面 对 镜 头 民 警 讲 述 了 他 通 过 监 控 抓 捕 嫌 疑 人 的 常 用 方 法 可 以 说 屡 不 爽 上 上 虑

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

China - Welcome to SkyNet (they really called it that) It's an interlinked system of facial recognition surveillance cameras to crack down anyone considered as an enemy of the State. Now China has 850,000,000 surveillance cameras, half of the world total. 1/2 https://t.co/VrXYmt7m9I

Video Transcript AI Summary
China is investing in tech companies to create a surveillance network using citizens' official ID cards. One company, MEGVY, received a large investment and named its technology Skynet. Despite the negative connotations from the movie Terminator, Skynet in China is seen as a positive system. MEGVY's facial recognition technology can track faces in public and cross-check them against a criminal database. Over 3,000 fugitives have been caught in just one year using this system. In the future, MEGVY envisions a society where everyone has social points, similar to a black mirror episode, where actions like spitting gum on the sidewalk can affect one's social standing.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Can collect about its 1,400,000,000 citizens. Everyone over the age of 16 is required to have an official state issued ID card that the government now wants to use to centralize all that information. And China is investing heavily in tech companies to help transform that government data into a virtually omniscient surveillance network. One of those companies is MEGVY. It recently received a capital investment of nearly half a $1,000,000,000. Part of which is from a state run VC fund. But the name chosen for its premier piece of technology is a bit of a town. Skynet, what is that? Speaker 1: The Terminator is the the favorite film of our founder. So play they use the same name, But they want to put something good into this system. Speaker 0: So okay. In the Terminator, Skynet is evil, rains down death from the sky. But in China, Skynet is good. Speaker 1: Yeah. That's a difference. Speaker 0: So how do you think your facial recognition technology will change China? Speaker 1: Everything happened in the, in the public can be record. We can know exactly what happened in every second, in every corner of the City. That is, a video stream in a subway station by our smart camera, so we can capture every face In real time, still like some criminal person is out there. There is a a red box. So there is a warning to the police station that there is a criminal person, so I need to locate them. Speaker 0: So when it looks out onto a crowd, it's tracking all these faces, and it's cross checking those faces against what? Speaker 1: Criminal database. Speaker 0: And how many fugitives have been apprehended through this system? Speaker 1: Over 3,000 cases in in nationwide. Wow. Yeah. Just 1 1 year? Speaker 0: In 1 year? Yeah. 1 year. Wow. So what you're working on now already seems like sci fi. A what do you think the future will look like in, like, 5 years? Speaker 1: Have you seen a film just like a black mural? You just stand there and your face there is a point. So maybe that is the future. Speaker 0: But that's like a horror show. Speaker 1: Yeah. But I think that is maybe the kind of the future. Every people have their social points, I think. Speaker 0: If you, like, spit gum on the sidewalk, it will be Yeah. Speaker 1: You have a point
Saved - May 25, 2023 at 10:33 PM

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

After your country approves its very own CBDC know this Every dollar you have Every doctor you visit Every meal you eat Every trip you take Every Purchase - market, pharmacy, coffee, clothes, books, websites EVERYTHING Will be tracked, in real time, by the gov't FOREVER https://t.co/Fz74JpfZa4

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

China's CBDC is linked to your digital ID. The government can control exactly how do you spend your money. Imagine you want to buy a coke, but the machine disapproves: ''Oh, you want a coke? Sorry — you’ve already hit your carbon limit for the month. Drink water instead!” https://t.co/oniI60msgt

Video Transcript AI Summary
Technologists have made their way into various aspects of our lives, even in something as simple as getting a drink of water. This machine allows you to choose your beverage without the need for a phone or cash. Just press the button and use facial recognition to receive your bottle of water. It's incredibly convenient and the speaker is amazed by this innovative technology, as it's the first time they've seen a machine that doesn't require any payment devices.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: So guys, the technologists are everywhere. So let's get some water with this machine. For example, we get some what would you like to drink? Let's get some water simply. You press this one, No phone. No cash required. Simply press can your face and get your bottle of water. It's coming. Thank you. That's So convenient. The 1st time I see such a machine without any devices to pay. Wow.

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

In China, CBDC is linked to your Digital ID. If you jaywalking, the facial recognition system will immediately display your face on a public board of shame, before automatically deducting your fine from your digital wallet. Authority will downgrade your social credit score too. https://t.co/WP37m7QhQS

@TulsiGabbard - Tulsi Gabbard 🌺

Biden Admin aims to implement a central bank digital currency (CBDC) to bring about a cashless society, allowing them to track everything we purchase & control our money. Gov's “FedNow” system is needed first step to achieve their dream of cashless society. This needs to be…

Video Transcript AI Summary
In Europe, cash payments above €1,000 are considered on the gray market and can result in fines or jail time. Tulsi Gabbard, former presidential candidate and House representative, expresses concern about the potential implementation of central bank digital currency in the US. She believes it would enable government surveillance and control over citizens' purchases, leading to restrictions and account freezes. Gabbard highlights how Democrats like Elizabeth Warren have pressured credit card companies to monitor firearm purchases, which could be reported as suspicious activity. She emphasizes that surrendering economic autonomy means sacrificing freedom. Gabbard doubts that people fully grasp the implications of this government control, as it is often presented as a measure against terrorism or crime.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Now we have in Europe this threshold above €1,000, you cannot pay cash. If you do, you're on the gray market. So you take your risk. You get caught, you are fined or you go in jail. Speaker 1: So you go to jail for spending your own money if they don't control it. That's coming here. Tulsi Gabbard has spoken out against it. She, of course, ran for president, served in the House from Hawaii, and joins us now. Congressman, thanks so much for coming on. Thanks, Tucker. This is so dystopian. You'd hate to think you could ever come here. You think it might? Speaker 2: Well, yeah. I mean, this is just the latest effort by Those in power in our country who are intent on undermining and taking away our own freedoms and liberties. This this central bank digital currency is about Government sanctioned surveillance and control. It's about them being able to keep track of every single thing that we purchase, whether it's Stick of gum or an automobile or anything in between. And so if they have all this information and data, which they will in this system, Then where does that lead? It gives them the power to decide, okay, well, hey, we don't want to allow you to purchase certain things or we may deem it necessary To to freeze your overall account. This power and and what they can do with it, it's not something we have to imagine. We've already seen How Democrats in Congress, Elizabeth Warren and others are pressuring credit card companies to code and keep track of any purchase that's made at a store that sells firearms. Why? So that these private companies can then say, hey, this person is purchasing. I don't know what they're what they deem is kind of the threshold, but there's They will then report that as suspicious activity to law enforcement and then expect law enforcement to take action and go after the purchases, legal Legal purchases that a private person made. So this all comes back to to how you open this. Once we give up our economic autonomy, We no longer have freedom. Once we allow someone else to control our wallet, they then control our freedom. Speaker 1: Do you think people understand what this means? It'll be sold as always as an effort to push back against terrorism or international Finance seers or crime or whatever, but do do people understand on a gut level what what could be coming? Speaker 2: I I don't think they do. And and it's understandable because If you listen to what the government is telling us, like with all of these other things, whether it's the Patriot Act or the Restrict Act, they're doing the very same thing with this, saying, hey, this is for your own good. This is for your convenience, to make it easier for you to conduct transactions, when in fact they are giving themselves all of the power, Taking it away from us, undermining our God given rights and freedoms in the Constitution, because they want to be able to control us. They want to be able to control We the People. Speaker 1: So nicely put. Toni Gabbard joining us tonight. Thank you so much for that. Thanks, Tucker.

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

This is palm reading payment system for Beijing subway

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reSee.it AI Summary
In the conversation, @AndersonAfDMdEP expresses concerns about the implementation of 15-minute ghettos, emphasizing that it is not about convenience or environmental impact. @songpinganq responds by sharing a video highlighting the negative impact of digital ID and COVID vaccine passports in China.

@AndersonAfDMdEP - Christine Anderson

About these 15-minute ghettos: - It's not about making your lives easier! - It's not about your convenience! - It's not about reducing your carbon foot print! - It's not about saving the planet! It's about setting up the requirements to be able to lock you down in your assigned… Show more

@songpinganq - Songpinganq

@AndersonAfDMdEP https://t.co/kmnX4sFPy4 This is what Digital ID did to Chinese people last 3 years. The QR code COVID vaccine passport turned their life into a living hell!

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