Friday, October 30, 2020

Things To Come: Digital Certificates For Travel To Provide Proof Of Medical Requirements


In order to travel, you’ll soon be forced to carry a digital certificate that provides proof of medical checkups, screenings, DNA swabs, vaccinations





On October 21st, leaders from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) joined government authorities and academics from over three dozen countries at the Heathrow Airport in London.

There, the world authorities watched a select group of people subject their bodies to medical requirements in order to board United flight 15 to Newark, New Jersey. The authorities were there to celebrate and endorse a new technology called Common Pass. This medical passport is a digital certificate that will soon be required for air travel, public transit and large stadium gatherings.


At first, the digital certificate will be used to verify that each individual has surrendered their body to unreliable covid-19 nasal probes or DNA swabs. If an individual is not cleared “covid-19 negative” from a doctor, they are not allowed to travel. The Common Pass will force individuals to submit their body sovereignty, consent and health privacy to a doctor to fulfill all the requirements for travel, which may include various health screenings and vaccinations that are required for entry into each country, state or province — as if vaccination is some foolproof, holy stamp of immunity.

Common Pass requires each traveler to submit to DNA swabs, lab testing and vaccination. These medical procedures create an electronic medical record on the app and place the individual in a national and local registry. The individual’s personal health record is recorded in the app, which forces everyone to abide by health screening entry rules and a registry of trusted lab and vaccination sites. The Common Pass compliance engine will then either clear an individual to travel or deny them their liberty.








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