QR Codes Hold the Key to Digital Enslavement
Updated
The COVID-19 pandemic, with its deadly lockdowns, hospital protocols, and mRNA jabs, has sparked an awakening in many that cannot be ignored. The connection between current global events like the pandemic, the war in Ukraine, the Great Reset, QR codes, the planned Fourth Industrial Revolution merging humans with technology, and other clandestine developments brings into full view the serious battle before us. With the future of humanity at stake, it’s crucial to understand the global elite’s plan for complete economic control, total digitization, and global depopulation that was once dismissed as a conspiracy. This understanding is vital to shaping a different future.
In a recent interview, Peter Koenig, a former Senior Economist at the World Bank and the World Health Organization (WHO), drew attention to the hardly noticeable but warp-speed-advancing digitization of literally everything. Essentially, this underhanded scheme implements what the World Economic Forum’s (WEF) Klaus Schwab states in his “Fourth Industrial Revolution”—”A dystopian world, where humans are enslaved by digital means, transhumanism, self-driving cars, total control through QR-codes, and—the final straw—by a fully digitized monetary system.”
In a July 11 conversation with Dr. Ana Mihalcea, Koenig shared that the progression of digital ID and digital currency is advancing rapidly, with little to no mainstream media reporting about it. He noted that digital money is now intentionally evolving much faster than digital ID thanks to the intense rejection of digital ID in the European Union following its heavily propagated campaign to promote it. Explaining the switch from the often-rejected digital ID to digital money, Koenig remarked:
“Once money is fully digitized, with or without the infamous so-called Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC), a formal digital ID is just a question of converting each one of our QR codes into an ID. And bingo. The money is controlled, and so are we.
Yes, we all have a QR code. During COVID, whether vaccinated or not, each time we were compelled to take a PCR test, we were given a QR code. This personal QR code is automatically linked to all other QR codes we use… in restaurants, [when] purchasing goods, [with] airline tickets/boarding passes … Just about anything is QR coded nowadays.”Â
With QR codes much more consequential than just a quick, easy, and paperless way to, for example, view a restaurant menu, Koenig explained that they’re tied to everything, but more on that in a minute. Thus, in the transition to restrain us, a CBDC would be unnecessary if all banks went along with digitization. Indeed, if the respective governments tell banks they must digitize, they will have no choice but to do so if they don’t want to be sidelined or fully closed. Once that happens, cash can be abandoned entirely. Several countries have been picked to do a test run on a cashless society, with several banks in Switzerland agreeing to get the ball rolling.
Having dealt firsthand with the looming tyranny, Koenig shared that his bank account was blocked when he refused to change his bank transactions to using a QR code. “For over three weeks, I had no access to it, he said, adding, “Only when I agreed, thinking of changing banks afterward, they gave me access to my account again.” He switched banks but has no idea how long it will take until that bank insists on QR codes.
How are QR codes (short for Quick Response Code) connected to digital control? Koenig explained that QR codes and associated technologies enable extensive surveillance and power over people through several mechanisms that streamline data collection, tracking, and analysis. Think about it: QR codes are linked to personal information stored in unlimited databases. When individuals use QR codes for activities such as payments, logging into services, or accessing locations, their personal data and actions are logged and centralized. Thus, by scanning QR codes for various day-to-day transactions, the data on individual behaviors, preferences, and movements can be aggregated. This data is then used to build detailed profiles of individuals and groups.
That’s not all. QR codes also track individual locations and monitor movements. QR codes are increasingly used for entry and exit when logging in to buildings, public transportation, and events, meaning they can track an individual’s location in real time. This level of tracking is incredibly potent when combined with mobile device tracking capabilities. Moreover, when QR codes are used to check various locations (like restaurants, workplaces, public events, etc.), authorities or organizations can monitor where individuals have been and who they might have interacted with.
And, of course, QR codes were used for contact tracing during the disastrous global health crisis that was the COVID-19 pandemic. Every time someone scanned a QR code to check in at a location, they enabled health authorities to track and trace potential disease exposure and spread. When combined with facial recognition technologies, QR codes further enhance the ability to track and trace them in public spaces and use the information to create social credit systems, as seen in communist China, where individual behavior (such as following government rules and regulations) can be monitored and scored.
Indeed, Koening describes the QR code as the most dangerous thing that can happen to society. A precursor to Klaus Schwab’s dreaded chip implant, QR codes in Internet of Things (IoT) devices allow the collection of data from numerous connected devices, further enhancing surveillance capabilities by linking a person’s digital and physical activities. With its centralized databases, the surveillance infrastructure created by such connections enables comprehensive monitoring and data mining. Even more frightening, it allows for instant warnings and responses from the trackers. Think about it—authorities can set up real-time alerts for specific behaviors or movements, allowing immediate responses to perceived threats or deviations from expected patterns.
In a nutshell, Koenig shared that the QR code can accumulate unlimited amounts of personal information and will eventually know you better than you know yourself. He suggests moving away from banks that have been pre-selected to digitize money using the QR code. Refuse to view a menu from a QR code, and so on. According to Koenig, what is needed are aware people who know the danger of digitization and of the threat of total enslavement by AI. Clearly, the QR code is central to the plan.
Stay away to the extent possible from QR codes,” Koenig warned, adding that there is little doubt that a “you will own nothing and be happy” transhumanized being is the ultimate end goal of these villains. The timing is crucial, according to Koenig. The longer it takes Us, the People, to become conscious of these facts and act accordingly, the more damage their attempts to digitize the world and us humans can do. Ultimately, it is up to We, the People, to stop it. And with faith and determination, we can. Indeed, with awareness and intentional action, Koenig is hopeful their takeover will fail. He shared:
“It is my strong belief they will not succeed for a simple reason. Anything digital, including AI, is based on linear information, on linear inputs, maybe millions of them, but still linear.Â
Human beings are living beings, and living beings are not linear or digital, they are dynamic, adjusting to circumstances, often spontaneously, unpredictably. That is also why making economic projections—I’m talking as an economist—usually does not work. Since they are all based on linear inputs.
If we Humans are convinced and aware that we belong to the creation of LIFE—which is analogue and has nothing to do with digital linearism, they will not succeed. I am convinced of it.”