In the Western world, citizens are afraid of big and sudden changes that are certainly not all for the benefit of the citizen
Last week, the British government secretly introduced an amendment that would give it the right to inspect the bank accounts of any citizen claiming a state pension at any time, without cause.
Many believe that complete control over citizens has already begun after the issuance of the digital identity and electronic currency, with which citizens will be pawns in the hands of the relevant government.
British ministers last week rushed to introduce an amendment to the House of Commons, allowing it to examine the bank account of all those claiming a state pension.
Their only reason was that it might come in handy someday.
The only change that could make it useful is a means test for state pensions.
Citizens in Britain, as well as in Europe, certainly question the passage of similar laws, which have been passed by law for some time, without having full knowledge of the purposes for which they are to be used.
Electronic financial file for every citizen
It is widely known that private banks have thousands of data on every citizen, especially in Greece after the adoption of a law prohibiting the use of cash for purchases worth more than 500 euros, to combat alleged tax evasion.
This group of laws passed in unrelated bills addresses specific directives from the International Monetary Fund and the European Union and relates to financial oversight of citizens.
The main system that will help governments in this plan will be artificial intelligence.
State authorities will be able to develop artificial intelligence-based biometrics that can identify and classify citizens based on their sensitive characteristics, such as gender, ethnicity, race, religion and political preferences, as well as emotion recognition and policy prevention systems.
This matter was discussed in the European Union, and an amendment was decided that was put to a vote and is thousands of pages long.
EU law is a product safety regulation that imposes a tiered set of rules that companies must follow before offering their services to consumers anywhere in the bloc’s single market.
It has a pyramid-like structure, and divides AI products into four main categories according to the potential risk they pose to citizens’ security and basic rights: minimal, limited, high, and unacceptable.
All of this, combined with the privatization of water, digital identities, control of meters, and the digitization of data for every citizen, leads with mathematical precision to a world that Orwell predicted as far back as 1984.
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