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UN campaign aims to enroll 50 countries in DIGITAL ID initiative by 2028
By Ava Grace | November 25, 2025
• The UN's "50-in-5" campaign, backed by the Gates Foundation, aims to implement digital public infrastructure (DPI) in 50 countries by 2028, including digital IDs, payment systems and data-sharing platforms – framed as progress but criticized as a tool for centralized control.
• Digital IDs centralize biometric data (fingerprints, facial scans) and track personal activities, raising fears of mass surveillance, social credit systems and loss of privacy under the guise of "convenience" and "financial inclusion."
• Countries like India, Ethiopia, Vietnam and Thailand are making digital IDs mandatory for banking, education, travel and even internet access (e.g., Papua New Guinea's "SevisPass"), freezing accounts or restricting services for non-compliance.
• Tech giants like Apple are integrating digital IDs into corporate ecosystems (e.g., U.S. passports in Apple Wallet), while governments and international bodies fast-track adoption with minimal public debate – mirroring pandemic-era tactics of rapid, top-down implementation.
• Critics warn this system will replace inherent rights with revocable digital privileges, enabling asset seizure, censorship and lockdowns under the pretext of "emergencies" – solidifying a global architecture of control.
In a move critics are calling an unprecedented consolidation of digital power, a United Nations initiative backed by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is accelerating plans to enroll 50 nations in a global digital identity system by 2028.
Dubbed the "50-in-5" campaign, the effort has already secured commitments from at least 30 countries since its launch in late 2023 – signaling a rapid, top-down transformation of how citizens across the world will prove who they are. This push runs parallel to the European Union's own mandate for a digital wallet for all member states by 2025. However, it has raised alarm among civil liberties advocates who see the fingerprints of a new global architecture for potential surveillance and control.
Digital ID systems are electronic versions of physical identification documents, stored on a smartphone. Proponents argue they streamline access to services and foster financial inclusion.
But the core technology allows for the centralized collection of vast amounts of personal data, including biometrics like fingerprints and facial scans. This creates a comprehensive digital footprint of an individual's activities, a feature that fuels the fears of those who distrust the intentions of global elites and centralized institutions.
The rollout is a present-day reality unfolding at a breakneck pace. A common pattern is emerging: What begins as a voluntary convenience is fast becoming a mandatory requirement for participation in modern society.
In India, the Aadhaar digital ID is now indispensable for over a billion citizens, required for actions from opening a bank account to enrolling a child in school. Similarly, Ethiopia is aggressively rolling out its "Fayda" ID for all 90 million citizens by 2027, making it compulsory for accessing bank accounts and public services.
The coercion is even more stark in nations like Vietnam and Thailand. Vietnam has frozen at least 86 million bank accounts for non-compliance with its VNeID system, which will soon be required for domestic flights. Thailand has frozen millions of accounts and will soon mandate its ThaiID for all passengers on public transport.
In countries without a history of robust national ID systems, digital identification is being introduced post-haste. Nigeria's "NIN" and Kenya's "Maisha Namba" are prime examples. Reports indicate that Nigeria has subtly reduced the amount of physical cash in circulation to pressure its population into obtaining the digital ID to use card-based payments.
Global push for Digital IDs mirrors COVID lockstep tactics
Even in stable democracies, the process is facing scrutiny. Switzerland's state e-ID was approved by a razor-thin referendum margin of 50.4% with voter turnout at only 50%. The country's electoral commission is now investigating allegations of improper influence.
The infrastructure for this digital future is not solely a government project. Tech giant Apple has launched a Digital ID feature for its Wallet app in the United States, allowing users to create an identity using their U.S. passport data. This move integrates a core function of citizenship into a corporate-controlled ecosystem.
For many observers, the playbook feels familiar. The rapid, globally synchronized push for digital ID mirrors the "lockstep" methodology witnessed during the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. Critics argue that the same actors and institutions are now using the same tactics, leveraging a message of security and convenience to bypass thorough public debate.
Please go to News Target to continue reading.
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Editor's note: This is all part of our digital experience coming at us including "programmable money." You either comply or get locked out. Programmable money depends on digital IDs because the ID system provides the verified identity needed to track, authorize, and control how, when, and where the money can be used. By linking programmable money to digital IDs, authorities gain the technical ability to monitor and restrict individual financial behavior, creating a system that many critics warn is ripe for abuse and resembles a blueprint for soft, administrative tyranny:
Dubbed the "50-in-5" campaign, the effort has already secured commitments from at least 30 countries since its launch in late 2023 – signaling a rapid, top-down transformation of how citizens across the world will prove who they are. This push runs parallel to the European Union's own mandate for a digital wallet for all member states by 2025. However, it has raised alarm among civil liberties advocates who see the fingerprints of a new global architecture for potential surveillance and control.
Digital ID systems are electronic versions of physical identification documents, stored on a smartphone. Proponents argue they streamline access to services and foster financial inclusion.
But the core technology allows for the centralized collection of vast amounts of personal data, including biometrics like fingerprints and facial scans. This creates a comprehensive digital footprint of an individual's activities, a feature that fuels the fears of those who distrust the intentions of global elites and centralized institutions.
The rollout is a present-day reality unfolding at a breakneck pace. A common pattern is emerging: What begins as a voluntary convenience is fast becoming a mandatory requirement for participation in modern society.
In India, the Aadhaar digital ID is now indispensable for over a billion citizens, required for actions from opening a bank account to enrolling a child in school. Similarly, Ethiopia is aggressively rolling out its "Fayda" ID for all 90 million citizens by 2027, making it compulsory for accessing bank accounts and public services.
The coercion is even more stark in nations like Vietnam and Thailand. Vietnam has frozen at least 86 million bank accounts for non-compliance with its VNeID system, which will soon be required for domestic flights. Thailand has frozen millions of accounts and will soon mandate its ThaiID for all passengers on public transport.
In countries without a history of robust national ID systems, digital identification is being introduced post-haste. Nigeria's "NIN" and Kenya's "Maisha Namba" are prime examples. Reports indicate that Nigeria has subtly reduced the amount of physical cash in circulation to pressure its population into obtaining the digital ID to use card-based payments.
Global push for Digital IDs mirrors COVID lockstep tactics
Even in stable democracies, the process is facing scrutiny. Switzerland's state e-ID was approved by a razor-thin referendum margin of 50.4% with voter turnout at only 50%. The country's electoral commission is now investigating allegations of improper influence.
The infrastructure for this digital future is not solely a government project. Tech giant Apple has launched a Digital ID feature for its Wallet app in the United States, allowing users to create an identity using their U.S. passport data. This move integrates a core function of citizenship into a corporate-controlled ecosystem.
For many observers, the playbook feels familiar. The rapid, globally synchronized push for digital ID mirrors the "lockstep" methodology witnessed during the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. Critics argue that the same actors and institutions are now using the same tactics, leveraging a message of security and convenience to bypass thorough public debate.
Please go to News Target to continue reading.
________
Editor's note: This is all part of our digital experience coming at us including "programmable money." You either comply or get locked out. Programmable money depends on digital IDs because the ID system provides the verified identity needed to track, authorize, and control how, when, and where the money can be used. By linking programmable money to digital IDs, authorities gain the technical ability to monitor and restrict individual financial behavior, creating a system that many critics warn is ripe for abuse and resembles a blueprint for soft, administrative tyranny:
Stop the NWO, Defund the UN Now: "Pact For the Future" Is the WHO Pandemic Treaty Disguise
By Forbidden Knowledge | November 30, 2025
TRANSCRIPT
Dr Sherri Tenpenny: Hey everyone, this is Dr Sherry Tenpenny and I want to do a quick update about a document that got passed by the United Nations this weekend called the Pact of the Future document. It's two parts, one on science and technology and one about the youth and future generations. It is quite egregious and it was done by a procedure called the silence procedure which makes it a pact and if no one objected it is automatically adopted and put into the record as being completely adopted.
This is the World Health Organization's end-run, since they were not able to get the World Health Organization treaty passed they decided to take it to the General Assembly and it is even more egregious than what the World Health Organization was wanting to get passed. Let me just read you something really quickly about what is inside of this pact that is now being accepted by 193 nations around the world and equally open armed accepted by our current administration. Everyone, it says that this is the power structure fully digital and maximized for the control of the masses.
Everyone will be expected to have a biometric digital ID that marks them not just as citizens of an individual country but as a global citizen. So anytime you hear global citizen or anytime you hear sustainability think that this is an egregious thing that's happening at the level of the World Health Organization and the United Nations. Anyone that has a dissonant opinion will be labeled as misinformation disinformation or malinformation and memory hold.
Perpetrators for unapproved information will be fact checked and punished by the system which will be operated and enforced by artificial intelligence. Punishments will include being locked out of one's bank account, being unable to make certain purchases, unable to get on an airplane, on a subway, drive on public roads. This is the future according to the world's self-appointed overlords at the United Nations.
These are unelected bureaucrats that are making decisions about our country, our sovereignty around the world. Nothing could be more important at this point in time than to get prepared. Have water, food, digital access, flashlights, a way to communicate with family and friends.
Now is really the time to get involved and get prepared because this is what's coming. Our Congress is sitting on its hands. There was a press conference on the 17th about this and no further action has been taken.
So it's up to us to mobilize and to go forward particularly with your local sheriffs to get your constitutional sheriffs to say this isn't going to be allowed in my county. Thank you very much. Take action.
We've been talking about the onset of one world order, one world government, one world religion, one world money for a long time. Well it's no longer coming. It's here.
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Editor's note: Many Japanese people distrust the My Number digital-ID system because of repeated data-handling errors, privacy concerns, and low confidence in the government's digital competence. Real incidents where My Number cards were linked to the wrong individuals, along with fears of excessive surveillance and centralization of personal data, have reinforced skepticism. Cultural norms favoring privacy, the complexity of the system, and a sense that it is intrusive or unnecessary further deepen resistance. As a result, the current status is adoption remains cautious and public trust low:
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