Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates is calling on the leaders of sovereign nations to surrender the authorities of their countries to the World Health Organization’s (WHO) “global health emergency corps.”
Gates argues that the WHO should be viewed as a “fire department for pandemics” that seizes control of nations on a global level during health emergencies.
Speaking in a New York Times op-ed published Sunday, Gates voiced his support for the WHO’s Global Pandemic Treaty.
The WHO’s treaty will essentially establish an unelected global regime that will override local laws with global protocols if the United Nations agency declares a health emergency.
The organization argues that a single governing body is essential for handling future pandemics.
By creating a single global authority, the WHO would be able to order once-sovereign nations to roll out vaccination and mask mandates, vaccine passports, widespread lockdowns, and other totalitarian pandemic measures, all under international law for the sake of public health.
Democrat President Joe Biden has already confirmed that he plans to approve and sign the amendments and is pushing to do so without congressional approval.
In a recent press release, the Biden admin publicly affirmed the U.S. federal government’s commitment to the agreement.
Gates insists that the Covid pandemic has made the Who’s treaty essential.
“We can’t afford to get caught flat-footed again,” Gates wrote in the essay.
Three years since on the WHO first described COVID-19 as a pandemic, Gates said it “marked the culmination of a collective failure to prepare for pandemics, despite many warnings.”
The Microsoft co-founder has been outspoken on disease outbreaks for many years, delivering a TED talk in 2015 urging that a pandemic is “the greatest risk of global catastrophe.”
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation says it donated more than $2 billion to the global COVID-19 response since January 2020.
Last May, Gates published the book “How to Prevent the Next Pandemic.”
“I worry that we’re making the same mistakes again,” Gates said in his NY Times essay.
“The world hasn’t done as much to get ready for the next pandemic as I’d hoped.”
But he added he was “optimistic” about the global health emergency corps.
In a January report, the WHO said: “All countries should be able to call on a national professional network of trusted and trained national experts … in order to prevent and be operationally ready to rapidly detect and respond to new health threats.”
“The Global Health Emergency Corps will represent massive progress toward a pandemic-free future,” Gates wrote in the Times.
“The question is whether we have the foresight to invest in that future now before it’s too late.”
Bill Gates? Did he even run for office in our Government? Good or bad, is he an official in USA Government? Influence over Biden, does he? Sad, hope they both don't get anymore foothold in anything concerning the welfare of USA's Citizens; Both are creepy in thought processes about obsession with WHO a Global Organization, not USA Organization, IMO!
ReplyDeleteWorld Organizations is what USA's problems are stemming from, in my opinion. High Hopes our next new President realizes this, steers America back on course!