
From Dr. Robert Malone: The real question is not whether someone can flip a switch and stop your car. It is whether you still meaningfully control the terms under which you are allowed to drive it.
… and from the Fyrgen in the UK …
Things seem to be changing on the Digital ID front whilst we’re all distracted by Iran and fuel prices.
Reluctantly, due to work, I tried to create a new gmail address today. It’s no longer possible to do without a phone, because Google demands that you verify identity using a smartphone.
Whilst trying to find a loophole, I saw this help article (screenshot, above).
I also heard today that UK Parliament has voted in favour of restricted Internet access for under-16s (https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c5y7d2zx63jo). Of course, the real reason is to require people of all ages to show proof of age/identity before accessing the Internet, which will quickly become a requirement.

The brutal truth is that almost none of the millions of people who ‘say no to digital ID’ will actually avoid digital ID. It’s already here, and if in a month’s time we all have to prove our identity to access the Internet, who will say ‘no’?
I wouldn’t be able to say ‘no’, because as things stand, I rely partially on the Internet to feed my family. if you’re able to say ‘no’, more power to you. May you stand forever.
We should have been figuring out years ago how to make money offline, how to manage money offline, how to shop offline, how to socialise offline, how to be entertained offline.
It’s never too late to figure that stuff out, but it becomes harder to escape once we’ve already surrendered to it and bought ourselves the convenience of compliance.
The time is close at hand that one will have to decide whether to abandon the internet and newer cars. Freedom isn’t free …

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