Starmer announces mandatory digital ID across the UK, many people protest and refuse to comply

Digital ID is essential for the implementation of a programmable CBDC, merging with the social credit system and eventually for the implementation of a cashless world. If everyone does not have their own ID, it will be impossible to implement a universally programmable digital currency.

I consider this topic to be the most important one at the moment, but politicians do not even address it as a marginal issue in the campaign. This is understandable, of course, because the majority of the sleeping masses have no idea what such an ID really means.

However, for example, in the UK, where Starmer, under the strong influence of former Prime Minister Tony Blair, has already declared ID mandatory, a huge wave of resistance has risen and more and more people are waking up and starting to realize what the real goals of the ID implementation are.

Every adult in the UK will soon be expected to carry a government-issued digital ID card. Not by choice. By law.

They call it the “Brit Card.” Prime Minister Keir Starmer officially announced the plan yesterday. No referendum. No vote for the average Briton. Because any reasonable person would reject the direct transfer of more power to bureaucrats and would not give up their freedom for a litany of promises.

The official version may sound reasonable to the uninitiated. To fight illegal immigration, to make it easier to verify one’s eligibility for work, to protect the borders. No one who has seen record numbers of migrants arrive under Starmer can believe this.

And no one who has long felt that the country has a judicial double standard: strictness for domestic workers, but a gloved hand when dealing with intruders.

If you look beneath Starmer’s superficial excuses, a different picture emerges. This card will not exist in isolation. It will be linked to everything. With workplaces, homes. NHS records (health card), National Insurance numbers and driving licences.

All of this is wrapped up in one “convenient” app that the government has total control over. Think about what that entails. Every transaction is monitored. Every move is tracked. Every interaction is recorded. They will know where you work, where you live, when you travel.

They will know whether you are buying medicine, booking a holiday or simply trying to rent a flat. And no, this is not just speculation – the plan is to create a centralised digital ID that will become the key to accessing essential aspects of everyday life, from work and housing to healthcare and other vital services.

The Brit Card will indicate whether you are “entitled to work or rent a flat.” As if these basic human activities were privileges granted by the state, not natural freedoms enjoyed for centuries.

Starmer’s Britain is taking China as its model in this regard. And China is showing us where it is going. Their social credit system began with fine words and fair promises: fight fraud, build trust, create a better society.

Citizens are now having fines deducted from their accounts in real time for, for example, crossing the road at a crossing. They are banned from trains for posting wrong opinions online. Their children are being excluded from school because their parents scored too low.

Many can’t even book a flight to escape the madness. Why? Their social credit is in tatters. And this has only been possible thanks to digital identity, which has allowed the state to link behaviour to identity.

In short, what starts as a “convenient” way of determining who has the “right to work or rent” can very quickly develop into a full-blown dystopian nightmare.

Privacy groups are sounding the alarm. Big Brother Watch calls it “dystopian.” Liberty warns that ID creates human rights problems. These are not radical organizations, but groups defending basic freedoms.

But who is listening? Certainly not the British government, which is busy testing its new central bank digital currency – the “digital pound.” Not the system that has locked people away for years. Not the authorities who have branded peaceful protesters extremists. The pattern is clear.

Cash is under attack. If we allow it to disappear completely, soon every purchase will be digital, traceable and programmable. The authorities will know everything about everyone, all the time.

They will have the power to freeze your funds with a keystroke, set an expiration date for your money, decide what you can buy and when. But as with social credit systems, CBDCs are only possible with a digital ID in place, which is the only way to link financial transactions to identity.

Starmer and his spineless minions promise that the app will be “free.” Nothing is free when the price is freedom. They promise it is safe. Tell that to the millions of people whose data is hacked every year. They promise it is necessary. Necessary for whom?

The ID will not just be your name and address. It will be your face, your fingerprints, your iris, your movements, your habits – a living map of your entire life. Once collected, it can be weaponized, traded or betrayed.

It is the equivalent of creating countless digital doppelgangers of every citizen, ghosts scattered across servers around the world, each ready to be copied, sold or used against you.

This is how freedom dies: with apps on your phones. Not with dramatic speeches about tyranny, but with calm words about efficiency and security.

The EU already has digital IDs (they are already issued in most member states, and will be issued in all EU countries from 2026, but not yet mandatory). China has everything digital. Why shouldn’t Britain?

Two-thirds of Britons are worried about data security. They have legitimate concerns. Every database is compromised eventually. Every system is hacked. The government is overstepping its powers. But worrying is no longer enough. The time for polite protests on a Saturday afternoon – and then going back to work as usual – is over.

The time for silent acceptance is over. Britain stands at a crossroads and every Briton must choose: either commit to peaceful non-compliance – rejecting digital ID under any circumstances, however inconvenient – ​​or passively surrender to a totalitarian spy state wrapped in a Union Jack.

The Reality of the Brit Card (refusing to sell meat, a plane ticket…):

 

To understand why the UK is the first in Europe to introduce mandatory ID, here is an important explanation:

Alex Phillips explains that every Labour minister and every former and current Labour prime minister is part of a group called the Fabian Society.

You can read more about this society, whose emblem is a wolf in sheep’s clothing, here or here. So Labour did not come to power by chance.

Starmer declared digital ID mandatory:

And some experiences from China, where ID linked to the social credit system has been in operation for some time:

WeChat is a Chinese application for digital ID. It is also a Chinese digital wallet and a Chinese vaccination passport. If you are not vaccinated or criticize the Chinese government, you are immediately banned from spending your own digital money.

For example, even to buy water from a vending machine you need an ID, which also includes a facial scan. So when shopping, you just need to scan your face. (1st video).

And if you missed a Covid test in the “Covid era”, WeChat immediately sent a notification to the guards when you were scanned. Then the guards came to arrest you and the test was performed on you.

Former MP Andrew Bridgen warns that signing up for a digital ID means you will never be able to say no to the government again.

They sell themselves as convenience and security, but it is about control and their desperate attempt to implement a dystopian Agenda 2030.

“We will be like prisoners on the loose, where we are tagged and they will know exactly where we are and what we are doing at all times. Future generations will never know the freedom we had.”

ID will be the final blow to free speech.

From the BritCard report: “Digital identity can help address some of the most difficult challenges facing government, such as… harmful online content.”

What does this mean? Will a license be required to use the internet? A state-controlled digital ID could become a prerequisite for logging in at all.

No ID, no access. Every comment will be linked to your ID. No more online anonymity.

Every post, tweet or like could be permanently linked to your state-issued identity.

If you know that the government can easily see and track your speech, will you still feel free to criticize ministers, politicians, powerful corporations?

Labels like “disinformation,” “hate speech,” “harmful content,” and “fake news” are vague and politically flexible.

Access control?
Platforms could be forced to ban accounts that don’t verify with a digital ID, essentially blocking anyone who refuses to comply.

Sneaky surveillance?

Once your ID is linked to your speech, it can be compared to your bank account, travel records, or even employment status.

State-controlled, mandatory digital IDs are a threat to all hard-won rights – we must say NO.

The announcement of mandatory ID leads to many calls for disobedience, such as the one below:

Digital IDs are not just unnecessary; they pave the way for mass surveillance and a social credit system. Many of us have been sounding the alarm since 2020, and now we are seeing these fears become reality.

We must take action to reject these measures.

Engage in mass campaigns on social media, conduct grassroots awareness, contact your MP, and sign petitions.

Do everything in your power to resist before it is too late. If these IDs are implemented, remember: MASS NON-COMPLIANCE IS THE ONLY WAY!

Next year, eID will be valid in all EU countries, as well as a digital vaccination card. The declared “voluntariness” will probably soon be similar to the “voluntariness” of the so-called “EU Covid passports.” Therefore, it is necessary to do maximum education here too. The sleeping masses have no idea what is coming. In the end, any excuse will suffice (pandemic, migration control,…) and “voluntariness” will turn into an obligation….
error: Content is protected !!