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by Jesse Smith

A recent article by Dr. Joseph Mercola takes a deep dive into ten research studies highlighting the health risks associated with 5G technology. Earlier this year, we published an in-depth report covering these issues and much more. The following is an updated excerpt from that report.

The 5G Agenda is Much Bigger Than Mobile Data Connection Speeds

5G is not just a novel technology designed to help the average Joe download high-definition movies faster or play the latest video games with extremely low latency. Though it will achieve these aims, it is designed for purposes much greater and far more malevolent, like building a 5G technocratic surveillance state.

After extensive research, it can be concluded that the United Nations (UN) along with the central banking establishment are the primary forces behind the push for 5G.

This does not mean they are the only players with vested interests as telecommunications companies, governments, businesses, and consumers all benefit from the technology.

However, for the purpose of completely reshaping the world into a global technocracy, the UN and the central banking cabal sit atop the pinnacle of the 5G pyramid.

The plan to connect the world through technology was conceived at least a century ago and is explored in many works of fiction such as Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World and Philip K. Dick’s The Minority Report, as well as non-fiction works like Zbigniew Brzezinski’s Between Two Ages: America’s Role in the Technetronic Era.

The writers of previous eras could only imagine the technology required to erect a society with global surveillance as a central feature, controlling every aspect of life. Today we are on the fast track to realizing what Huxley, Dick, and Brzezinski could only fantasize about.

The United Nations, Agenda 2030 and 5G

The digital revolution is here whether welcomed or not and the United Nations is at the forefront of this global transformation through Agenda 2030 and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG). For a quick primer on why this is a bad thing, I suggest reading “Decoding the UN Sustainable Development Goals” and/or “17 Goals Toward Enslavement: Exposing The Real Agendas Behind The 2030 Agenda.

The plan to increase global digital interconnectivity was kickstarted during the World Summit on the Information Society  (WSIS). This UN-sponsored, two-phased summit on “information, communication and, in broad terms, the information society took place in 2003 in Geneva and in 2005 in Tunis.”

The WSIS will convene again in May 2024 in Geneva, Switzerland to commemorate its 20th anniversary and push the world further along the path towards global digital inclusivity. Or, in plain words, a global surveillance state.

The WSIS includes public and private sector members from across the globe. There are over 25 distinct branches of the UN leading the charge for global connectivity, but perhaps the most essential is the International Telecommunication Union (ITU).


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Why You Should Know About the International Telecommunication Union

At the front lines of 5G oversight, standards, and development sits the International Telecommunication Union (ITU). Founded in 1865, ITU later became the United Nations specialized agency for information and communication technologies (ICTs). ITU’s global membership includes 193 member states as well as some 900 companies, universities, and international and regional organizations.

From their digital inclusion for all webpage, ITU states its mission as follows:

ITU works in all regions of the world and develops tailored programmes to allow everyone to access and use the Internet, especially by developing infrastructure for technologies and networks, and enhancing the regulatory and market environment. 

ITU’s Connect 2030 Agenda for Global Telecommunication/ICT Development sets out the vision, goals and targets that member states have committed to achieve by 2030 in collaboration with all stakeholders advancing the digital revolution.

The Connect 2030 Agenda specifically focuses on “how technological advances will contribute to accelerate the achievement of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2030.”

One of the primary initiatives of Connect 2030 is the SDG Digital Acceleration Agenda, described fully by the following statement:

Digital technologies are transforming governments, economies, and societies. They have the potential to play a catalytic role in supporting the global community to achieve the 2030 Agenda – the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) adopted by all Member States of the United Nations in 2015. This SDG Digital Acceleration Agenda shaped by ITU and UNDP…highlights the wide-ranging importance of digital technologies and data. From digital skills to governance and regulations, financing, infrastructure, safety and security, content, applications and services. With a range of real-world examples, it shows how game-changing digital solutions can accelerate progress in climate action, education, hunger, poverty and the role of data and digital technologies in achieving at least 70% of the 169 SDG targets. (emphasis added)

Regarding the importance of 5G to the SDGs, the SDG Digital Acceleration Agenda Report further states:

The advent of 5G offers faster and more dynamic connectivity, potentially revolutionizing the digital landscape. With its high speed, low latency, and increased capacity, 5G can enable real- time communication, support the growth of IoT devices, and facilitate seamless data transmission. This connectivity could empower various sectors, including health care, transportation, and agriculture, enabling it to contribute to multiple SDGs (emphasis added).

Regarding its role in the development of 5G, the union affirms: 

ITU plays a leading role in managing the radio spectrum and developing globally applicable standards for IMT-2020. Its activities and the resulting, globally applicable documents, enable the development and implementation of international regulations and standards to ensure that 5G networks are secure, interoperable, and that they operate without causing or receiving harmful interference to or from adjacent services (emphasis added).

5G interoperability is key as digital systems are being designed to work together seamlessly worldwide, no matter what country an individual may reside in. In addition to facilitating the growth of global 5G capabilities, ITU is also involved in supplementary areas of action, including:

  • Artificial Intelligence (AI)
  • Broadband
  • Cybersecurity
  • Digital financial inclusion and digital currency
  • Internet policy and governance
  • Gender equality

ITU also directly supports the UNs climate change scheme by promoting the use of satellite surveillance and monitoring services from space for:

  • Monitoring greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and pollution.
  • Improving climate modeling and prediction of trends.
  • Forecasting weather more accurately and predicting extreme weather events linked to climate change.

To most, ITU is little-known but it is foremost in advancing the digital revolution of society. As the developer and manager of global 5G standards and regulations, as well as its involvement with AI and digital currency, ITU plays a huge role in ensuring no one is left out of the digital prison planet being erected right before our eyes. But despite pushback, they continually offer assurances that the agenda is all for the common good.

The ITU World Radiocommunication Conference Establishes the Agenda for Global Surveillance

Led by ITU, the World Radiocommunication Conference sets the stage for global cooperation on usage of the radio-frequency spectrum and geostationary and non-geostationary satellite orbits. In November 2023, a conference was held in Dubai to discuss the future of space, sea, and land-based radio communications.

There is no doubt that geospatial intelligence (i.e. global surveillance of everything and everyone on the planet) is of extreme importance to the UN and satellite organizations representing almost every country on the planet. A few statements from some of the conference participants reinforce this conclusion:

Radio frequencies, whether on Earth or in space, form the backbone of advanced communications for all of humanity. From education to healthcare, from agriculture to climate monitoring, expanding radiocommunication services and bridging the digital divide is key to reducing inequalities and advancing the Sustainable Development Goals.”
– António Guterres, United Nations Secretary-General

We are at an inflection point in tech history, and radiocommunications are at the top of the global agenda.”
– Doreen Bogdan-Martin, ITU Secretary-General 

Newer innovative technologies will allow us to better monitor our changing planet, and better connect communities and people everywhere: on land, at sea, in the air, and in space.”
– Mario Maniewicz, Director of ITU’s Radiocommunication Bureau 

Again, the emphasis is placed squarely on digital technologies connecting people everywhere to advance the UN SDGs. But is this truly a good thing?


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CODES, the Global Alliance Paving the Way for Digital Sustainability Enslavement

CODES

Established in 2021, CODES is the Coalition for Digital Environmental Sustainability. It was formed in response to the UN Secretary-General’s Our Common Agenda report, which calls “for a new landscape of digital governance and collaboration through a Global Digital Compact.” 

In plain terms, CODES is yet another UN-sponsored alliance serving as “a global hub for policymakers, academics, technology companies, and NGOs to lead and contribute to digital sustainability initiatives.” 

CODES mission involves facilitating “the needed cooperation to leverage digital transformation as a positive and exponential force for progressing environmentally and socially sustainable development…” 

ITU serves as the backbone of CODES. The specific alignment with ITU is documented as follows:

CODES objective of ensuring that digital change is systemically and proactively aligned with sustainable digital transformation complements the ITU goal of harnessing the power of digital technologies to accelerate the achievement of the UN Sustainable Development Goals and step up digital climate action. 

The Action Plan for a Sustainable Planet in the Digital Age is CODES’ effort to identify shifts, strategic priorities, and global impact initiatives to achieve digital transformation in a sustainable manner.

Without a doubt, CODES and all UN subsidiaries are major players in establishing 5G as a global communication standard for the primary purpose of helping nations, companies, and individuals (whether you agree or not) fulfill their commitments to the 17 SDGs. As national sovereignty is continually eroded through global treaties and agreements, a coup has taken place enabling the UN to set the stage for shifting the world’s economy, political systems, and social structures towards sustainability, or what is better termed as global technocracy. 

No discussion of CODES would be complete without delving into the Our Common Agenda report spawning it into existence. Citing the COVID-19 pandemic as an inflection point in history, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres plead with the global community to take further action to right the world’s wrongs by adopting and accelerating 12 key commitments.

The seventh key commitment is to “improve digital cooperation,” for the purpose of expediting a Global Digital Compact, an initiative to ensure no one is left behind in the digital revolution. The terms digital, digitized, digitalization, and digitally are mentioned 59 times throughout the 86-page report.

Apparently still not pleased with worldwide progress towards Agenda 2030, Guterres declared at a UN General Assembly meeting in February 2023:

At the outset, I want to stress that “Our Common Agenda” is aimed at turbocharging the 2030 Agenda and making the Sustainable Development Goals real in the lives of people everywhere (emphasis added).

Since Our Common Agenda’s publication in 2021, several policy briefs focusing on specific commitments have been released. The fifth brief entitled, A Global Digital Compact – An Open, Free and Secure Digital Future for All was released in May 2023. In it, the increasing digital divide along with proposed solutions are addressed to ensure everyone has access to the internet and can be grafted into the digital matrix of UN led technocracy – with no exceptions. When they say leave no one behind, they mean it!

Our Common Agenda Reports

Expanding on the theme of the Global Digital Compact, the report states:

A Global Digital Compact would articulate a shared vision of an open, free, secure and human-centred digital future that rests on the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the 2030 Agenda.

The purpose of the Compact would be to advance multi-stakeholder cooperation in order to achieve this vision. (p. 11)

Further cementing its role in advancing this agenda, the report confirms:

The United Nations is only one actor in this firmament, but it is the only global entity that can convene and facilitate the collaboration needed. (p.11, emphasis added) 

Littered throughout these UN reports and virtually all its communications are buzzwords such as: transparent, people-centered, inclusive, equitable, consensus, accountable, collaborative, multilateral, and democratic. On the surface these terms convey that the world is being shaped in a way that will benefit all. The UN and its partners are framed as the good guys, willing a bright future into existence amidst the chaos, divisiveness, injustice and sense of impending doom we currently experience.

Through the guise of the SDGs and their wonderful sounding promises, including digital inclusion, many believe the UN’s propaganda and feel humanity is heading towards a golden age of peace and prosperity (as long as we don’t destroy the planet first by breathing too much). However, the UNs real intent can be discovered by Our Common Agenda Brief 8, Information Integrity on Digital Platforms.

The document unveils yet another UN led initiative — to police the internet and social media sites – ridding the digital space of any mis- and disinformation. In the introduction, it lays out the case for stronger internet regulation and censorship, asserting:

Digital platforms are crucial tools that have transformed social, cultural and political interactions everywhere… Yet these same platforms have also exposed a darker side of the digital ecosystem. They have enabled the rapid spread of lies and hate, causing real harm on a global scale. Optimism over the potential of social media to connect and engage people has been dampened as mis- and disinformation and hate speech have surged from the margins of digital space into the mainstream. The danger cannot be overstated. Social media-enabled hate speech and disinformation can lead to violence and death. The ability to disseminate large- scale disinformation to undermine scientifically established facts poses an existential risk to humanity and endangers democratic institutions and fundamental human rights… (emphasis added)

Houston, we have a problem! It appears the UN is a little uptight about people questioning the “science” on issues like climate change, COVID-19 and mRNA vaccines. The altruistic pretense goes out the window when one realizes the UN is just after more power; specifically, the power to control what you can say online. Further 5G integration and processing speeds will enable them to control speech, often in real time, if allowed to continue their plans to regulate the internet go unimpeded.

Solving the 5G Technocratic Surveillance Puzzle

5G-6G: Friend or Foe?For a complete picture of how the power of 5G is being harnessed to create a global technocratic surveillance state, become a member or order our 54-page report, 5G-6G Friend or Foe? The real story behind the push for dangerous new technologies. In the report you’ll discover:

  • Why 5G is Essential to the UN’s Agenda 2030 Sustainable Development Goals
  • The World Economic Forum’s Role in Advancing 5G Connectivity
  • Why 5G is Critical to the Fourth Industrial Revolution
  • How the COVID-19 “Pandemic” Paved the Way for 5G and SDG Advancement
  • Why Central Banks Need 5G to Power the Shift to an All-Digital Economy
  • Why 5G Tech is Important to the Military-Industrial Complex
  • How U.S. Legislation is Pushing 5G Forward
  • Why Companies Like SpaceX and Starlink Have Big Plans for 5G
  • Why 6G Development is Crucial for Omnipresent IoT Development
  • How the Public Has Been Misled About 5G Safety
  • Why 5G Threatens Humans, Animals, and the Environment
  • How to Protect Against 5G and EMF Exposure
  • Where to Find Additional Resources on 5G Safety Issues and Activism
What are your thoughts? Please leave a comment below.

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