If you want to know the future globalist plans for the United States, Australia is always a reliable country to analyze.
The ‘Land Down Under’ usually finds itself as a testing ground for the globalist agenda.
Digital ID is an aspect of the digital totalitarian slave-state the global elites desire for humanity.
In Australia, a national digital ID may become a reality by mid-2024.
The Albanese government, the federal executive government of Australia, has adopted plans for a universal ID previously planned by the Coalition.
https://twitter.com/BernieSpofforth/status/1684457609485586433
Daily Mail noted that government can utilize digital ID to track people by incorporating all their private information into one place.
Universal digital ID could store an individual’s driver’s license, passport, medical cards, and other information.
Daily Mail reports:
Australians could soon be using a national digital ID that would hold all of your information, acting as a Medicare card, driver’s licence, passport and holding Centrelink details.
A universal ID was first planned by the Coalition and has now been taken up by the Albanese government.
Finance Minister Katy Gallagher said the ID, which would allowing licences and other forms to be verified online by external organisations, could be rolled out within a year.
There has already been backlash towards the proposed ID, but on Wednesday Ms Gallagher told the Australian Financial Review’s Government Services Summit that the program should be up and running by mid-next year.
‘That’s a pretty tight timeframe, so I don’t want to be held to that. But that’s kind of my roadmap,’ she said.
The Finance Minister said many Australian states are already using digital services to access IDs such as driver’s licences and a nationally-regulated service would be an extension of that.
Gallagher reportedly told the Australian Financial Review the technology is mostly ready, and it’s a matter of getting legislation in place.
National digital ID will be sold as convenient to store all your information in one place.
However, it will form the framework of a CCP-style social credit system.
WATCH:
Australia will roll out its first social credit system… under the name of Australia’s National Digital ID System pic.twitter.com/1vASh2T9K7
— Pelham (@Resist_05) February 7, 2023
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This will allow citizens to link credentials such as drivers licences, occupational licences,passports, professional accreditations,academic attainments and government working-with-children safety checks,to their digital identity such as myGovID‼️🤔🙏👇https://t.co/Zv1KXS703C— Sophie still fighting 💥💫🙏 (@mariusknulst) March 8, 2023
From Biometric Update:
Despite the progress, Gallagher also warned that the digital ID will still have to face pushback from certain sections of the public which are wary of the government. Conspiracy theories will need to be fended off with clear communication, she says.
Another obstacle would be integrating other Australian digital ID schemes into an interoperable ecosystem.
“We want to see an economy-wide system, and in a sense, we’ve got that operating now, without regulation. We’ve got some private digital ID providers and then you’ve got myGov,” Gallagher says.
Australia’s myGov app offers access to federal services. Confusingly, the Australian Tax Office also runs an app called myGovID. Mastercard, Australia Post and Australian Payments Plus have also developed identity verification solutions that could hook into a national ID system. In May this year, the state of New South Wales launched a beta version of its own system called NSW Digital ID alongside several pilots.
ADVERTISEMENTThis week, former New South Wales digital government minister Victor Dominello told AFR that a simple and seamless experience in online interaction with the government still has a long way to go, including with the NSW Digital ID. Dominello, who also leads the digital identity think tank Trustworthy Digital Society Hub, said that managing health services in particular is “a mess.”
“I ran out of runway to try to tackle it, but it needs a concerted effort … because if you want real productivity gains, that’s where we need to play,” he says.
The Australian government will also have to contend with resistance from its own ranks. Finance Minister Gallagher has expressed hope that the new digital ID system will have bipartisan support.
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