Bill Gates calls for nationwide social isolation policy to slow coronavirus spread
Microsoft co-founder and billionaire philanthropist has been warning the public about the threat of a global pandemic since 2015.
Just a reminder:
Gates is NOT a doctor
Gates is NOT an epidemiologist
Gates was NOT elected
Gates is NOT even a lifetime bureaucrats
So why is he the authority?
It's HIS #Plandemic
AND THEN THERE'S THIS:
Coronavirus: Bill Gates predicted pandemic in 2015
Bill Gates warned five years ago that it was coming. In a TED talk in 2015, the Microsoft co-founder and billionaire philanthropist cited lessons learned from Western Africa’s 2014 Ebola virus crisis, and said the U.S. and other countries were not prepared for the future pandemic that was going to hit them. “If anything kills over 10 million people in the next few decades, it’s most likely to be a highly infectious virus rather than a war,” Gates said. “Not missiles, but microbes.”
AND THEN THERE'S THIS:
NOVEMBER 2019: EVENT 201: Bill and Melinda Gates, the CIA, the World Economic Forum, Bloomber / Johns Hopkins, the UN Foundation and more ran a scenario for a Coronavirus Pandemic starting in December 2019
Here's a screenshot of Google's returns on Event 201
Here is the Center for Health Security website on Event 201
And here is a Screenshot of the Center for Health Security website on Event 201:
Here's a video which details the panel discussions at Event 201 on how to maintain control of the message through mass media, internet, and celebrity cooperation:
And why would they do all this?
ID2020: DIGITAL IDENTITY ALLIANCE FOR BIO-ID (INTRODUCED THROUGH VACCINATION)
You can see the quote from the VP Business Development, Microsoft Corporation there at the bottom of the above image.
Click on the images to make them bigger.
And who sponsors ID2020?
ID2020 and partners launch program to provide digital ID with vaccines
The ID2020 Alliance has launched a new digital identity program at its annual summit in New York, in collaboration with the Government of Bangladesh, vaccine alliance Gavi, and new partners in government, academia, and humanitarian relief.
The program to leverage immunization as an opportunity to establish digital identity was unveiled by ID2020 in partnership with the Bangladesh Government’s Access to Information (a2i) Program, the Directorate General of Health Services, and Gavi, according to the announcement.
Digital identity is a computerized record of who a person is, stored in a registry. It is used, in this case, to keep track of who has received vaccination. “We are implementing a forward-looking approach to digital identity that gives individuals control over their own personal information, while still building off existing systems and programs,” says Anir Chowdhury, policy advisor at a2i.
“The Government of Bangladesh recognizes that the design of digital identity systems carries far-reaching implications for individuals’ access to services and livelihoods, and we are eager to pioneer this approach.”
Gavi CEO Seth Berkley says that 89 percent of children and adolescents who do not have identification live in countries where the organization is active. “We are enthusiastic about the potential impact of this program not just in Bangladesh, but as something we can replicate across Gavi-eligible countries, providing a viable route to closing the identity gap,” he says.
A partnership was also formed earlier this year between Gavi, NEC, and Simprints to use biometrics to improve vaccine coverage in developing nations. “Digital ID is being defined and implemented today, and we recognize the importance of swift action to close the identity gap,” comments ID2020 Executive Director Dakota Gruener. “Now is the time for bold commitments to ensure that we respond both quickly and responsibly.
We and our ID2020 Alliance partners, both present and future, are committed to rising to this challenge.” ID2020 also announced new partnerships and provided progress reports on initiatives launched last year. Since last year’s summit, the ID2020 Alliance has been joined by the City of Austin, UC Berkeley’s CITRIS Policy Lab and Care USA.
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