Tens of thousands of Japanese citizens have taken to the streets in huge rallies to protest threats to the nation’s sovereignty from globalist outside forces.
Protesters are demonstrating to pressure the Japanese government to reject the World Health Organization’s (WHO) “Global Pandemic Treaty.”
As Slay News has reported, the Pandemic Treaty will grant the WHO, and its parent agency the United Nations, with sweeping global powers that override the laws of individual nations.
Under the treaty, the WHO will be able to enforce global lockdowns and other measures in the event of an “emergency” such as a pandemic or “climate change.”
After declaring an “emergency,” the WHO would have the power to roll out vaccine mandates, “climate lockdowns,” food rationing, travel recitations, mass censorship, and more.
It will essentially empower the UN to act as a single global government.
All 193 UN member states – which includes Japan, the United States, and most other Western nations – are expected to sign the treaty next month.
Not only is the United States planning to sign the treaty, but it was Democrat President Joe Biden who urged the WHO to move forward with the plan in 2022.
While the power grab from the WHO and the UN has faced little pushback from the corporate media-trusting public, citizens in Japan, meanwhile, are outraged that their government is planning to sign the treaty.
Protests erupted over the weekend as the people of Japan voiced their concerns over “infectious disease,” “climate change,” and “public health” becoming potent tools for an unprecedented push toward a totalitarian surveillance society.
From the bustling streets of Ikebukuro to the gatherings at Higashi-Ikebukuro Central Park, the sheer scale of participation speaks volumes.
Organizers estimate that a monumental 100,000 protesters joined the rallies.
They demanded answers on crucial issues, such as the huge spikes in excess deaths and the lack of transparency on the adverse effects following vaccinations.
Japanese sound like smart folk..
ReplyDeleteYes, but 100 thousand does not represent an entire population. Unless people start to push back with a majority they will continue to moving towards a freedom less society ran by a few overlords.
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