Monday 25th of November 2024

... and you thought covid lockdowns were a one-off.....

Tucker Carlson: So you’re saying that an international health organization could just end the First Amendment in the United States?

Bret Weinstein: Yes. And in fact as much as this sounds, I know that it sounds preposterous, the ability to do it is currently under discussion at the international level, and it’s almost impossible to exaggerate how troubling what is being discussed is.

 

Weinstein To Carlson: W.H.O. Intends To End Free Speech In America

 

in fact, I think it is fair to say that we are in the middle of a coup that we are actually facing the elimination of our national and our personal sovereignty and that is the purpose of what is being constructed, that it has been written in such a way you are, your eyes are supposed to glaze over as you attempt to sort out what is it what is under discussion.

And if you do that, then come May of this year, your nation is almost certain to sign on to an agreement that, in some utterly vaguely described future circumstance, a public health emergency, which the director general of the World Health Organization has total liberty to define in any way that he sees fit. In other words, nothing prevents climate change from being declared a public health emergency that would trigger the provisions of these modifications.

And in the case that some emergency or some pretense of an emergency shows up, the provisions that would kick in are, beyond jaw dropping.

Tucker Carlson: Before you get into it, and I just want to thank you, by the way, for taking the time to go through this proposal, because you’re absolutely right. It’s impenetrable, it’s designed to be, to cloak what they’re saying rather than eliminate it. What’s it called?

Weinstein: The funny thing is actually, I was looking this morning to find out what the current name is and the names have actually been shifted slightly, clearly a feature. And it’s unclear to me how much that’s just simply designed to confuse somebody who tries to sort it out and how much that’s designed to, for example, game the search engine technology that might allow you to track the changes because to the extent that the name has shifted.

So, I call it the World Health Organization Pandemic Preparedness Plan, right? And what is under discussion are some modifications to global public health regulations and modifications to an existing treaty. But all of this makes it sound minor and procedural. What has been proposed are and again, the number of things included here is incredible. It’s hard even for those of us who have been focused on this to track all of the important things under discussion and to deduce the meaning of some of the more subtle provisions. But, they the World Health Organization and its signatory nations will, be allowed to define a public health emergency, on any basis that having declared one, they will be entitled to mandate remedies, the remedies that are named include, vaccines, gene therapy technology is literally named in the set of things that the World Health Organization is going to reserve the right to mandate.

That it will be in a position to require these things of citizens, that it will be in a position to dictate our ability to travel. In other words, passports that would be predicated on one having accepted these technologies are clearly being described. It would have the ability to forbid the use of other medications.

So, this looks like they’re preparing for a rerun where they can just simply take ivermectin, hydroxychloroquine off the table. They also have reserved the  here as well. The right to dictate that’s that of course, misinformation is how they’re going to describe it.

Tucker Carlson: In fact, I want to ask you to pause and play a soundbite from Tedros, in which he alludes to this, and I want to get your assessment. Here it is.

Tedros: We continue to see misinformation on social media and in mainstream media about the pandemic accord that countries are now negotiating. The claim that the accord will cede power to WHO is quite simply false. It’s fake news. Countries will decide. What the accord says and countries alone and countries will implement the accord in line with their own national laws. No country will cede any sovereignty to WHO. If any politician, business person or anyone at all is confused about what the pandemic accord is and isn’t, we would be more than happy to discuss it.

Tucker Carlson: So, he’s going to be more than happy to discuss and explain the misinformation…

Weinstein: Yeah, that is comforting. On the one hand, I must say, I have not seen that, and it is tremendously good news, actually. What it means is that once again, we have managed to raise awareness of something in time that there is conceivably a better outcome still available to us.

Tucker Carlson: They’re spooked enough to bother to lie about it.

Weinstein: You couldn’t have said it more accurately, yes. Those were clearly lies, and of course his saying that into a camera, Is supposed to convince you nobody could possibly lie so directly. So there must be some truth in what he’s saying, which is of course nonsense.

And anybody who goes back through, Matt Orfila’s compendium of various things that people have said into cameras over the course of COVID that they then swear they didn’t say months later knows that these folks are very comfortable at saying totally false things into a camera. It doesn’t cause them to think twice or sweat or anything.

But it’s great that we have managed to raise enough awareness that Tedros is actually addressing our spreading of what it actually is, malinformation. You’re aware of this this extension?

Tucker Carlson: So I was, I’m so old that I was. Still stuck in the truth or falsehood binary? Where what mattered was whether it was true or not?

Weinstein: No, the malinformation is actually exactly what you need to know about to see how antiquated that notion is because this was actually the Department of Homeland Security actually issued a memo in which it defined three kinds of, I kid you not, terrorism, misdisc, and malinformation.

Misinformation are errors. Disinformation are intentional errors, lies, and malinformation. are things that are based in truth, but cause you to distrust authority.

Tucker Carlson: So malinformation is what you commit when you catch them lying.

Weinstein: Yes exactly. Yeah it is, discussing the lies of your, government is malinformation and therefore a kind of terrorism, which I should point out as funny as that is, and as obviously Orwellian as that is, it’s also terrifying because if you have cracked the history of the spreading tyranny from the beginning of the war on terror.

You know that terrorism is not a normal English word the way it once was. Terrorism is now a legal designation that causes all of your rights to evaporate. So at the point that the Department of Homeland Security says that you are guilty of a kind of terrorism for saying true things that cause you to distrust your government, they are also telling you something about what rights they have to silence you.

They are not normal rights. These things are all, terrifying, and I do think the COVID pandemic caused us to become aware of a lot of structures that had been built around us. Something that former NSA officer William Binney once described as the turnkey totalitarian state.

The totalitarian state is erected around you, but it’s not activated. And then, once it’s built, the key gets turned. And we are now seeing, I believe, something that even outstrips William Binney’s description because it’s the turnkey totalitarian planet, right? The World Health Organization is above the level of nations, and it is going to be in a position If these provisions pass to dictate to nations how they are to treat their own citizens, to override their constitutions, despite what Tedros has told you, so that is frightening.

It’s not inherently about health. What I think has happened is the fact of a possible pandemic causes a loophole in the mind. It’s not a loophole in our governance documents. Our constitution doesn’t describe exemptions from your rights during time of a pandemic emergency. Your rights simply are what they are and they’re not supposed to go anywhere just because there’s a disease spreading. But nonetheless people’s willingness to accept the erosion of their rights because of a public health emergency, has allowed this tyranny to continue. to use it as a Trojan horse. Yes. And I think that’s also, it’s something people need to become aware of.

There are a number of features of our environment that are, basically they are blind spots that we can’t see past. Vaccine was one, and I know, I wasn’t an enthusiast about vaccines. I still believe deeply in the elegance of vaccines as they should exist. But I’m now very alarmed at how they are produced, and I’m even more alarmed at what has been called a vaccine that doesn’t meet the definition, right?

That because many of us believe that vaccines were an extremely elegant, low harm, high efficacy method of preventing disease. When they called this mRNA technology a vaccine, many of us gave it more credibility than we should have. If they had called it a gene transfection technology, we would have thought, wait, what?

Public health functions the same way. If you think about it, public health, step back a second. Your relationship with your doctor, your personal health, ought to be very important to you. But there are ways in which things that happen at a population level affect your personal health and your doctor’s not in a position to do anything about it.

https://www.activistpost.com/2024/01/weinstein-to-carlson-w-h-o-intends-to-end-free-speech-in-america.html

obligations?....

What could happen if countries that join or participate in any new accord do not meet their obligations?

 

It would be up to Member States to decide if and what compliance mechanisms would be included in the new accord on pandemic preparedness and response. It is a general principle of international law that once an international law instrument is in force, it would be binding on the parties to it, and would have to be performed by those parties in “good faith.”

https://www.who.int/news-room/questions-and-answers/item/pandemic-prevention--preparedness-and-response-accord

 

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FREE JULIAN ASSANGE NOW, PLEASE.............................

end of cash.....

By Stavroula Pabst / Original to ScheerPost

Nigeria faced a months-long cash crunch earlier this year when a scarcity of paper notes led to days-long ATM linesdecimated access to basic goods and services, and protests and riots in major cities by a population demanding that cash access be restored. In addition to record levels of inflation — Nigeria recorded a 17-year inflation high of almost 22 percent in March — and a boosted mistrust of the banking system among Nigerians, the lack of physical monies, causing a widespread inability to pay for necessities, even led to deaths at hospitals

The culprit behind the cash crisis? Nigeria’s botched Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) roll-out. 

Launched in late 2021, Nigeria’s CBDC, the eNaira, rolled out amidst a sudden global push toward researching and implementing CBDCs, which are a digital version of a country’s fiat currency, facilitated by its central bank. Indeed, the Atlantic Council sums up the world’s rapid CBDC uptake on its CBDC Tracker, highlighting that while only 35 countries were considering a CBDC in 2020, 130 countries — representing over 98 percent of the world’s GDP — are doing so now, with 64 countries in an “advanced phase of exploration (development, pilot, or launch).” According to the Tracker, the United States is now in the “development” phase of CBDC exploration.

Despite governments’ acute interest in CBDCs, the extreme eNaira push took place after a prolonged lack of both interest and trust among Nigerians in the digital currency. Notwithstanding the government’s efforts to sweeten the deal, including access restriction removals allowing eNaira use without a bank account, and discounts for those using the CBDC to pay for taxi rides, only .5 percent of Nigerians had used the CBDC by October 2022. Further, the eNaira platform had only recorded 1.4 million transactions as of early May 2023 in a country of over 210 million people.

Rather than heed citizens’ cash preferences, the country’s digital limitations and its largely informal economy, the Nigerian government doubled downon its eNaira roll-out in late 2022, attempting to simultaneously switch out old Naira notes for new ones while removing excess monies from circulation, also capping cash withdrawal limits to promote CBDC uptake. The liquidity mop-up soon made day-to-day financial transactions all but impossible as government policies stunted access to physical money.

For now, Nigeria’s cash crisis has subsided thanks to the government’s softening up on its efforts, distributing paper banknotes and, after extending the deadline for old Naira notes’ end of circulation to the end of 2023, confirming the notes would remain legal tender ad infinitum

But, a critical question remains: why such efforts to force a digital currency on a largely unwilling population? To answer this question, I investigate herein today’s elite-led drive toward CBDCs across the globe, exploring how they’ve been tested or implemented in Nigeria and elsewhere.

While advocates say CBDCs allow for cheap transactions, are secure, convenient, stable and can even promote “financial inclusion,” we shall see that such arguments cannot explain the political and corporate elite’s’ near-universal drive toward CBDCs. Paving the way for a financial system where governments are granted significant oversight over centralized financial transaction records and histories, and therefore, substantial information about one’s daily life, CBDCs’ true significance instead lies within their unprecedented potential for mass surveillance and monitoring and, if made programmable and interoperable between countries, even economic and social control internationally. 

In other words, CBDCs facilitate a financial infrastructure perfect for an elite power-grab.

Tracking the CBDC Craze: What and Why

From the preparation-stage digital euro to the operational Digital Bahamian Sand Dollar, research, pilot projects and launches of Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) are taking the world by storm as governments look to move past cash. Countries like Canada, the United Kingdom and the United States have asked for the public’s feedback on possible CBDCs while other countries research, develop, and pilot various projects, including Russia’s digital ruble and Brazil’s digital real pilot involving VISA, Microsoft and other corporate giants

In ongoing pilots internationally, CBDCs have been tested in a variety of use-cases, especially for crossborder payments, wholesale use (i.e. larger transactions, especially between banks and other financial institutions), and retail, day-to-day use. Different CBDC designs are also up for consideration: for example, “account-based” CBDCs, where accounts are linked to personal identities, could be used to buy consumer goods (i.e. groceries) with a digital wallet or app on one’s mobile phone. “Token-based” CBDCs, which could operate more like cash and perhaps even offline, have also been considered. 

The trend toward centralized digital currencies is clear; arguments for adopting CBDCs are less so. While CBDC advocates often bring up CBDCs’ convenience, cheaper transaction costs and ability to enhance financial transparency, such arguments do little to frame CBDCs as a catch-all solution to the financial system’s problems, which could instead be addressed through other legislative means. Economists concur: remaining “skeptical that a Federal Reserve CBDC would solve any major problem confronting the U.S. payment system,” Christopher J. Waller, member of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, opined that CBDCs were a “solution in search of a problem.” 

Other advocates push CBDCs’stability, supposing that government-facilitated digital currencies are an alternative for Bitcoin and cryptocurrency enthusiasts tired of volatility. Yet, as Thomas Fazi writes for UnHerd, people invest in Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies “precisely becausethey are decentralized systems beyond the control of governments, and because they hope their value will rise over time,” and thus are unlikely to want involvement with highly centralized systems like CBDCs.

In other cases, Central Banks, like Canada’s, argue that CBDCs may help their respective currencies maintain dominance as cryptocurrencies and other cash alternatives flood the market. But this talking point is debated: while the Treasury and Bank of England judged a retail CBDC necessary “to anchor the value and robustness of all monies circulating in the [UK],” The Economist disagrees, opining that “it is hard to see why creating [CBDCs] would be the simplest way to prevent monetary fragmentation.”

As they would give governments direct or near-direct access to financial transaction histories, CBDCs’ potential for monitoring and surveillance are clear. And yet, CBDC advocates rarely address privacy concerns or other possible problems: in this respect, Duke University’s FinReg blog highlights a striking gap in the existing literature on CBDCs, elucidating that while scholarship and other relevant writing focuses on CBDCs’ technical design and macroeconomic implications, “[m]issing in these discussions is CBDC’s potential to infringe on citizens’ privacy.”

Despite the glaring literature gap, CBDCs’ potential for abuse is a real and imminent threat to both civilians’ livelihoods and whatever democratic structures and processes still exist internationally. To elucidate CBDCs’ surveillance and control prospects, among other severe ethical issues CBDCs bring to the table, we return to Nigeria’s recent cash debacle — and the forces behind it.

Nigeria’s Recent Cash Crunch as a CBDC Crash Course 

The eNaira’s stated objective is to enable “households and businesses to make fast, efficient, and reliable payments, while benefiting from a resilient, innovative, inclusive, and competitive payment system.” Such goals seem humble enough; a second look at Nigeria’s botched eNaira effort, however, ultimately showcases the myriad questionable elite-backed efforts and goals baked into the CBDC’s development and release. Indeed, under the guise of “modernity” and “financial inclusion,” the eNaira roll-out crystallizes and signals precedents for a CBDC infrastructure prime for data collection and connectivity with other crossborder governance initiatives and projects, like digital ID — all while striving toward the increasingly visible elite goal of a cashless society. 

For example, the eNaira’s website says that, instead of replacing cash, the eNaira “will complement cash as a less costly, more efficient, generally accepted, safe, and trusted means of payment.” But the website’s words conflict with consistent political and financial elite language that instead suggests CBDCs could help facilitate or otherwise direct society toward a cashless economy. On the anniversary of the eNaira’s launch, for example, Nigeria Central Bank Governor Godwin Emefiele said that the country’s aim was toward a “100 per cent cashless economy.” The statement was well in line with the likes of the cashless society-minded World Economic Forum (WEF), which, in 2017, published an article elucidating that the “gradual obsolescence of paper currency” was a “characteristic of a well-designed CBDC.”

Such cashless prospects, of course, suggest that, if CBDCs are successfully implemented, civilians who prefer cash’s anonymity or are otherwise worried about CBDCs’ privacy issues may eventually be unable to opt out of such a system, even if they can do so at first.

Another concern is digital currencies’ possible, if not likely, entwinement with controversial digital ID schemes, which have gained ground internationally despite fears that digital ID could facilitate additional barriers to society and employment, pose surveillance and privacy risks, or could otherwise be weaponized against minority groups. Despite CBDC hiccups, Nigeria has had significant success advancing its own digital ID infrastructure, with about 100 million Nigerians registering for a digital ID by late May 2023.

Critically, Nigeria has clear intentions to connect digital ID with its CBDC, which, by centralizing much of one’s personal information and financial records in one place, could make the monitoring and surveillance of civilians an even simpler prospect for governments. In fact, a Bank for International Settlements report stated that Nigeria’s eNaira would not be anonymous under any circumstances, even for “lower-tier [digital] wallets” holding less money. The same report suggested such systems were also brought about to help facilitate “financial inclusion,” elucidating that “[u]niversal access to eNaira is a key goal of the [Central Bank of Nigeria] CBN, and new forms of digital identification are being issued to the unbanked to help with access.”

But, Nigeria’s “financial inclusion” argument for CBDCs is not unique; rather, groups like the World Economic Forum and the International Monetary Fund twist the term to depict CBDCs as a benign endeavor beneficial to marginalized groups’ financial needs. The phrases “inclusion” and “unbanking the unbanked,” are pushed despite the populations’ mixed and negative attitudes toward government-facilitated digital currencies.

“The fact that [the eNaira] was government-led caused trust in it to be significantly low,” a Lagos-based researcher told Rest of World. “People don’t trust the government to hand over their financial transaction information directly to them.” And other CBDC announcements and proposals have received substantial backlash: when the U.S. Federal Reserve solicited public comments on a prospective CBDC, for example, commenters flooded the request with concerns about financial stability, privacy and freedom.

Ultimately, Nigeria’s disastrous CBDC roll-out, and the many elite-backed tools and goals baked into its launch, is a prime manifestation of the political class’ drive for technocratic oblivion. And the eNaira’s chaotic launch, eventually spurring a cash shortage that devastated CBDC-resistant Nigerians, only demonstrates the wicked lengths the powerful will go to accomplish their goals.

CBDCs’ Grave Dangers to Civil Liberties

Despite the eNaira’s rocky roll-out, the efforts behind the Nigerian CBDC, such as strides toward going cashless and CBDC compatibility with digital ID schemes, reveal intentions to develop and expand the CBDC in ways that perpetuate, rather than address, common concerns about CBDCs’ potential for abuse. And yet, Nigeria’s problematic roll-out is not unique; rather, CBDCs pose significant ethical problems everywhere.

Of CBDCs’ potential hazards, programmability, roughly defined as the ability to build-in or establish terms and limits on a digital currency’s use, is perhaps the most dangerous because it offers unlimited possibilities for CBDC facilitators (i.e., governments and their third-party collaborators) to limit or block access to money as desired, or to otherwise manipulate civilians’ finances to nudge or force certain behaviors. 
Discussing programmability, International Monetary Fund (IMF) Deputy Managing Director Bo Li alluded to CBDCs’ use as a policy-implementing instrument — with significant power over individuals’ daily lives — at an October 2022 high-level roundtable on CBDC:

CBDC can allow government agencies and private sector players to program — to create smart contracts — to allow targeted policy functions. For example, welfare payment; for example, consumption coupons; for example, food stamps…By programming a CBDC, money can be precisely targeted for what people can own and what [people can do.]

Facilitating finance- and policy-related decisions with the push of a few buttons, further, programmability could make bypassing traditional policymaking processes a simple endeavor for governments. Considering QR-code based COVID-19 vaccination passports functionally banned people from society in recent years, it’s not hard to imagine governments similarly weaponizing CBDC programmability to financially “punish” civilians for unwanted behaviors in the future — likely without needing to consult the public or other governing bodies about the decision.

Critically, nations’ own CBDC projects likely will not stand alone; rather, prospects for crossborder and international CBDC projects are being explored. The Atlantic Council’s CBDC tracker lists the myriad of ongoing crossborder CBDC projects, such as Project SelaProject Icebreaker and Project Jura, which have been testing crossborder payment methods for a variety of countries’ CBDCs, thereby further expanding CBDCs’ prospective reach.

Meanwhile, efforts toward “interoperability,” which Bank for International Settlements (BIS) defines as “[t]he technical or legal compatibility that enables a system or mechanism to be used in conjunction with other systems or mechanisms,” which “allows participants in different systems to conduct, clear and settle payments or financial transactions across systems,” could even facilitate or pave the way toward a more centralized, or perhaps even singular, CBDC system worldwide. 

In fact, IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva confirmed in June 2023 that the IMF is  “working on the concept of a global CBDC platform” for cross-border transactions, explaining at a conference attended by representatives of African central banks that “CBDCs should not be fragmented national propositions … To have more efficient and fairer transactions we need systems that connect countries: we need interoperability.” 

Within the context of CBDCs’ almost unilateral consideration or adoption among the worlds’ powers, such possibilities for CBDC interoperability, and, therefore, the further centralization of payment methods and the relevant data they would use, collect, or track internationally, should frighten anyone concerned about CBDCs’ prospects for surveillance and control.

Importantly, the global CBDC push occurs within the context of growing elite financial abuses, such as the de-banking of political dissidents, like the 2022 Canadian Trucker Convoy protestors and European journalists including Alina Lipp, and a multitude of dissident publications’ and journalists’ PayPal suspensions and GoFundMe donation freezes, already occurring without a CBDC. Such abuses should only signal that those pushing CBDCs cannot be given the benefit of the doubt. 

Perhaps most damning, the political and corporate elites have even admitted to CBDCs’s propensity for political control. Fooling European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde into a prank phone call, an impersonator of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky posited that “the problem [with CBDCs] is [people] don’t want to be controlled,” prompting an oblivious Lagarde to admit that through CBDCs, “there will be control, you’re right. You’re completely right.” 

Lagarde’s subsequent qualification during the phone call that CBDCs could only provide a “limited amount of control” can only be described as ludicrous, considering the bevy of issues CBDCs pose to society at large.

Towards a Global Financial Control System?

Efforts to depict CBDCs as inclusive, convenient, secure and even inevitable ultimately do little to hide their potential for surveillance and even perhaps social control wherever implemented. In this respect, CBDCs’ near universal consideration signals significant threats to civil liberties and (what’s left of) democratic policymaking processes and structures internationally. 

At the time of writing, the rapid pace of CBDC exploration signals that a kind of “race” among nation-states to develop and roll-out digital currencies has begun, thus making it all the more likely CBDCs will become mainstream without critical public debate about their possible ethical ramifications. After all, failing to establish a digital currency when rival or hostile nations already have their own could jeopardize a country’s financial future in ways currently difficult to predict.

At the same time, the international drive toward CBDCs must force a fundamental reconsideration of today’s geopolitical fault lines. Many posit the growing BRICS bloc of countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa, and as of August, also Saudi Arabia, Iran, Ethiopia, Egypt and the United Arab Emirates) can directly challenge the West in a bid for multipolarity, where non-western countries will have a greater ability to act on their own accord on the global stage. The BRICS’ own embrace of CBDCs, however, instead suggests that the international political and corporate elite agree about a vital issue concerning the globe’s financial, political and social trajectory. Even as a U.S.-Russia proxy war rages in Ukraine and Israel besieges and ethnically cleanses Gaza, both situations where genuine geopolitical hostilities may expand into larger regional wars or even a world war, the apparent CBDC consensus signals universal strides toward a technocratic dystopia are also a key elite priority: in such efforts, CBDCs are the lynchpin.

Fortunately, there is good news: many people do not want CBDCs, or otherwise remain keen on keeping physical cash, perhaps blocking CBDCs’ capture of the financial system. Some U.S. states, including North Carolina and Florida, are considering or have preemptively banned or restricted CBDCs’ use. Prioritizing cash’s longevity, meanwhile, Swiss civilians gathered enough signatures earlier this year to force a future referendumwhich, if successful, will enshrine the availability of cash in the Swiss Government’s constitution. 

Meanwhile, the world’s first operational CBDC, the Digital Bahamian Sand Dollar, appears to be quite unpopular among Bahamians, with few merchants accepting the CBDC as payment years after its 2020 launch. According to the IMF, the Sand Dollar only represented .1 percent of [The Bahamas’] currency in circulation as of 2022, with the Bahamas’ infrastructure providing “limited avenues” for the Sand Dollar’s use.

The powerful can work around the clock to create and implement CBDCs; they will only be successful if the population accepts and uses them.

 

Editor’s NotePlease continue the support of our independent journalism by making a tax-deductible donation through our new fiscal sponsor, Community Partners. 

https://scheerpost.com/2024/01/10/central-bank-digital-currencies-cbdcs-near-universal-roll-out-signals-international-power-grab/

 

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https://yourdemocracy.net/drupal/node/45958

 

your life or your milk?.....

Last week, in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, state troopers and investigators executed a search warrant on the farm of Amos Miller. Miller has been producing fresh unadulterated dairy products and grass-fed beef for 40 years. He does not sell to the public. Rather, he sells only to folks who join his club because they want pure raw dairy products, not pasteurized and not chemically treated, as the state commands.

The members of Miller’s club believe that they own their own bodies and that they — and not the government — can decide what they should ingest. Miller has never been successfully sued or credibly charged with harming anyone. He remains without the products the state stole from him, and he remains uncharged with any wrongdoing. The state has prohibited his club members from acquiring the products for which they have already paid.

Here is the backstory.

Not far from where Miller’s farm now stands, in the spring of 1776, revolution was in the air. Congress was meeting in Philadelphia, and it was impatient. Bloody skirmishes between colonial militias and British troops were upsetting the countryside. More British troops were on their way. Congress sensed it needed to do something. It wanted to vote for secession from Great Britain, and it needed a compelling document setting forth the reasons for doing so.

Historians have estimated from reading letters, pamphlets, sermons, essays, newspaper editorials and speeches from that era that only about one-third of the colonists favored using force to secede. But that one-third whipped the winds of change.

At hand was the decision to revolt and to make a compelling argument in its support. In the late spring of the year of revolution, Congress appointed a committee of five to compose a document stating the reasons for leaving the mother country. A young member of the committee named Thomas Jefferson was assigned the task of drafting the document. He wrote four drafts, the final of which the committee presented to Congress.

Congress adopted the Declaration of Independence on July 2, 1776. It was dated July 4 and not fully signed until later that summer. The vote was unanimous. The word went forth to the 13 colonies that they were now free and independent.

The word also went forth to the king — whom the British people believed was divinely chosen to rule over them — who interpreted the Declaration as an act of treason and an invitation to war.

The Declaration’s essence is that all persons have natural rights that no government can take away by legislation or command. Those rights can be used freely to pursue and defend life, liberty and happiness. Those rights can also be used to consent or not to consent to a government. And the only legitimate role of government, the Declaration states, is to protect the rights of those who consented.

This theory of the consent of the governed, which Jefferson crafted, was the most radical theory of government at the time. No king, no ruler, no edicts crushing personal freedom — just a popular government born in the consent of the governed and limited to protecting their rights. The government would not come about, of course, until the bloody war was completed.

The colonists were not trying to kill the king — as the French would soon do — they just wanted him gone.

But the real revolution was a revolution of minds — the idea that the government was not legitimate unless consented to and limited; that individual personal freedom, not government power, is the default position. All of this was stirred up by the radicals, articulated by Jefferson, embraced by Congress, achieved by blood and reluctantly accepted by the king.

By 1783, they were free. The revolutionary spirit of maximum individual liberty and minimum government embraced and personified the new America.

Where did it go?

Today, in Amos Miller’s America, we have government — at the local, state and federal levels — that claims authority to right any wrong, regulate any behavior, tax any event and transfer any wealth so long as it can find public support.

What once was a government that needed the consent of the governed not only to exist but also to do anything is now one that requires of us its permission to do nearly everything. What once were liberties guaranteed are now liberties mocked.

This is an inversion from what the revolutionary generation left us.

How is it that men and women take oaths to uphold the liberties that the founders risked all to achieve and then enter office and ignore them? If I can legally refuse health care, why can’t I legally take the chance of exercising my rights to drink whatever milk product I want to drink? Is there not among the freedoms Jefferson wrote about the freedom to take chances?

Are laws written to preserve liberty or to enforce order? Is the concept of the consent of the governed real, or is it make-believe? Does liberty expand in each generation, or does it shrink? Does the government really believe that our liberties are natural and it lacks legitimacy without our individual consent? Has any living person actually consented to the government we now have, or is the belief that we have consented to the government merely a myth?

Just as the colonists were sick and tired of taxes imposed upon them by London aristocrats, aren’t we sick and tired of police state regulations imposed upon us by nanny staters telling us how to live? A police state is one where the laws do not protect liberty from the government, but protect the government from liberty.

Amos Miller is a successful businessman who delivers products his clients seek. He is also a metaphor for government out of control and out of its mind.

Isn’t government the negation of liberty? Does it have our consent, or doesn’t it? Are our liberties natural to our existence, or aren’t they? Is freedom real, or is it make-believe?

To learn more about Judge Andrew Napolitano, visit https://JudgeNap.com.

 

https://ronpaulinstitute.org/milk-and-the-police-state/

 

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bio-warfare......

 

Russian military operations in Ukraine allowed to reveal a lot of dirty secrets of the Kiev regime and their patrons in Washington. On January 15, the Russian Ministry of Defense held another briefing, headed by the head of the troops of radiation, chemical and biological protection of the Russian Armed Forces. The Russian military revealed that representatives of the US Department of Defense conducted a series of experiments with smallpox viruses prohibited by the World Health Assembly. 

The US military is conducting research on the smallpox virus in order to assess the use of the monkey pox virus as a potential damaging biological agent. They are also looking for agent-based simulators of smallpox viruses. Two strains of this pathogen are used in the course of aerobic studies.

The experiments were launched despite the ban by the World Health Assembly. Only two organizations are allowed to conduct such research. They include the Vector State Scientific Center in Russia, and the Center for Disease Control in the US. Despite the ban, the experiments were carried out by representatives of the Institute of Infectious Diseases, which is part of the US Army.

According to the Russian military, the United States Defense Department has also studied other orthopoxviruses that pose great danger to human life and health.

Washington is violating international requirements for biological safety and continues dangerous experiments aimed to provoke global epidemics or regional catastrophies.

MORE ON THE TOPIC:

https://www.theinteldrop.org/2024/01/15/us-military-conducting-dangerous-experiments-with-prohibited-viruses/

 

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