While the international ACTA treaty and United States’ CISPA
legislation are setting the stage to clamp down on the world wide web,
technocrats are working overtime to try to pin down your identity and
make sure all your activities are thoroughly monitored and under
control.
The European Union is now moving to create a mandatory electronic ID system
for all EU citizens that would be implemented across Europe to
standardize business both online and in person, authenticating users via
a common ‘electronic signature.’ A single authenticating ID would guard
access to the Internet, online data and most commerce. It is nothing
short of an attempt to phase in a Mark of the Beast system, and a
prominent Bilderberg attendee is behind the scheme.
Neelie Kroes is the EU’s Digital Agenda Commissioner,
and is introducing legislation she hopes will force “the adoption of
harmonised e-signatures, e-identities and electronic authentication
services (eIAS) across EU member states.”
The extent of such a system would, of course, expand over time,
particularly as many EU nations have resisted the big government
encroachment of ID requirements on civil rights grounds, which even now
smack of the Nazi regime’s draconian “papers please” policies that
empowered their other avenues of tyranny. According to EurActiv.com, Neelie Kroes would later “widen
the scope of the current Directive by including also ancillary
authentication services that complement e-signatures, like electronic
seals, time/date stamps, etc,” as the supra-national body attempts to corral more nations into participation.
This big brother system will be implemented in Europe first and later
pushed in North America and the remainder of the globe, as the world is
nudged step by step towards a total cashless control grid in the name
of ‘safe, verifiable commerce,’ and of course, in the name of
“security.” Nevermind that the plan would invite the hacking of
identities and fast track forgeries. In the case of Europe, special
emphasis is placed in part on “establishing a truly functioning single market” — part of the larger EU goal even now floundering.
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