|

An Ethical Perspective on the WHO Power Grab

Share this article

Similar Posts

  • The Dangers of Artificial General Intelligence

    Share this article

    OpenAI’s ChatGPT is the most rapidly adopted tech platform in history, acquiring more than 1 million users in the first five days. Less than two months after its public release, it had more than 100 million users
    ChatGPT uses machine learning to generate human-like responses in everyday language to…

  • The Digital ID Threat Is Real: Don’t Fall for Empty Promises and Trojan Horse Reforms

    Share this article

    At Solari, our focus is on working to protect financial transaction freedom and expose the central bankers’ dangerous agenda of complete financial transaction control. Digital IDs—which, in combination with other digital systems, can “be used to monitor our whereabouts, limit our freedom of movement and control our access to money, goods and services”—are a linchpin of the control agenda, and one that the bankers and their technocratic allies are eager to bring to fruition

  • CHANGE Interpretation:  Control of Communicable Disease – 42 USC 264 

    Share this article

    Change statute interpretation: 

    Regulations to control of communicable disease – 42 USC 264 

    42 USC 264(a) promulgation and enforcement by the Surgeon General provides: 

    The Surgeon General, with the approval of the Administrator (Secretary), is authorized to make and enforce such regulations as in his judgment are necessary to prevent the introduction, transmission, or spread of communicable diseases from foreign countries into the states or possessions,

  • The Killing of Common Sense 

    Share this article

    Covid was a killer. The evidence is clear. SARS-CoV-2 was a scientifically devised virus designed to kill. Its victims were many. The science in question here, though, is social science. And the intended victim was common sense. Covid expanded our daily vocabulary. “Distancing,” “tracking,” and “masking” – above the nose – all became common parlance…