Thursday, March 24, 2022

Things To Come: Ukraine First Country To Implement WEF's 'Great Reset' Agenda

Ukraine Just Silently Announced It’s the First Country To Implement the WEF’s ‘Great Reset’ by Setting Up a Social Credit Application Combining Universal Basic Income (UBI), a Digital Identity and a Vaxxine Passport All Within One App



Ukraine just silently announced it’s the first country to implement the WEF’s ‘Great Reset’ by setting up a social credit application combining Universal Basic Income (UBI), a Digital Identity and a Vaccine Passport all within one app.

Similar systems in other countries too.

The Social Credit Score System is silently being implemented around the world.


Ukraine is the champion of digital identity with the Diia App

This had been mentioned for a long time, then precipitated by the COVID crisis, governments want to move towards a digitization of everyday life by bringing together almost all services on the telephone. While the European Union had announced a test to digitize the vaccination record (see official PDF ), wallet and identities in 2018, Ukraine was very quick to react with a Diia application deployed by the government almost two years ago. 

Since then, the platform has continued to evolve. Ukrainians can download Diia and store a whole lot of official information there as mentioned above, with the aim of being able to easily carry out most of the administrative procedures, which range from paying their taxes to renewing their identity papers, including the payment of his fines or the recovery of his social benefits. 

In all, nearly 50 services can be reached from the application and 9 official documents which have the same value as their paper counterparts. Eventually, it will soon be impossible to make an official request. Moreover, with COVID-19, the government has even announced that the payment of benefits will be conditional on the presence of a vaccination certificate. 

What’s more, a program soberly named “cash for vaccines” and launched by Volodimir Zelensky last year, intended “to encourage people to get vaccinated against Covid-19 and to support the sectors of the economy which have suffered the most from the restrictions of quarantine “. From the age of 14, each person with a full vaccination schedule in the application received 1000 hryvnia (about 30 euros). When reality catches up with Orwell… Ukraine therefore posed as the champion of digitalization before the war broke out at the end of February. At the start of 2021, it already claimed more than 4.5 million active users. But taking a closer look at what is currently being done, it turns out that Poland has a mobile application similar to that of Ukraine, which was launched at the end of 2019. This Polish app displays seven digital documents and allows users to identify themselves with a digital ID card in places where a paper passport is not legally required.

In the United Kingdom and the United Arab Emirates, citizens can use electronic passports at airports for check-in and security screening. It’s coming to the US soon thanks to Apple Wallet. 

In China, citizens have access to virtual identity cards integrated into a mobile application. Users can use it to identify themselves when they register in a hotel or to benefit from certain government services, with a points system that allows them to have additional rights in the event of “good behavior”. In Estonia, 70% of the population uses digital ID cards, while 99% of public services are available online. What do you think of this transition to all-digital? Practical or disturbing?


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