Canada, the friendly land of maple syrup and apologies, has apparently decided not only to "support" Agenda 2030, but to turbocharge it: digital muzzle included. The new bill in Ottawa sounds like a control panel for a sophisticated throttling of democracy: digital ID + "threat" clause + ministerial authority without judges = game over for annoying opinions. All in the name of "security," of course. And sustainability. And emotions.

The trick is old but effective: Take vague terminology—"protection of telecommunications infrastructure," "threat," "disinformation"—and slap them into a law that gives the Minister of Industry the authority to cut off citizens' internet and telephone connections. No court, no transparency, not even the right to discuss the cutoff. A brave new world where the off switch is no longer on your router, but in the ministry.

Anyone who thinks this is a Canadian industrial accident hasn't understood the PR. The whole thing is being sold as a "modern compliance tool": Digital ID as the key to participation, a ticket to government agencies, banks, energy, and mobility. If you lose your ID—or lose grace—you lose access. But don't worry, the WEF calls it "interoperable" and "user-friendly." All that's missing is the slogan: "Freedom, but with a login, please."

The best thing about the draft is the vague definition. "Any threat" can be anything: botnets, hackers—or your unpopular comment on the minister's podcast. Opposition? "Threat indicator." Criticism? "Systemic risk." And suddenly, the citizen becomes a digital shadow who no longer pays bills, checks accounts, or receives two-factor authentication. Anyone who is taken offline disappears—not just from discourse, but from everyday life. Gulag 2.0, this time without barbed wire, but with terms and conditions.

Of course, this is exportable. Australia is testing mandatory identity for search engines and social media, the UK is tweaking "online safety," the US is recycling the age-old mantra of the "secure document" with Real ID, while senators pretend to be surprised that centralization ultimately centralizes. Spoiler alert: Yes, it does.

To prevent this all from seeming too authoritarian, the communication delivers the familiar flavor profile: "protection against hate," "critical infrastructure," "resilience." It sounds warm, but reeks of a kill switch. And because people love transparency, blocking orders can remain secret. It's a perfect circle: nobody knows anything, everyone is afraid, and anyone who talks about it only confirms that they're "conspicuous."

Conclusion: Canada demonstrates how to combine Agenda 2030, Digital ID, and censorship policy into a manageable power machine. The prototype is complete: controlling access, curating opinion, de-indexing dissent. The message to the West is: "Security is available in exchange for signing in – and silence." Anyone who thinks that's normal will love the beta version. Anyone who doesn't should hurry – before the discussion is only loaded with official approval.

Delete first. Democracy later – Freedom? Only with a password!
Delete first. Democracy later – Freedom? Only with a password!

ADVERTISEMENT: Are you looking for the easiest way to buy Bitcoin and store it yourself? The Relai app is Europe's most successful Bitcoin app. Here you can buy Bitcoin in just a few steps and you can also set up savings plans. Nobody has access to your Bitcoin except you. Relai is now reducing the fee to 1%, with the referral code REL105548 you can save another 10%. (no financial advice). Disclaimer due to EU Mica regulation: Relai's services are recommended exclusively for residents of Switzerland and Italy.

Psst, follow us inconspicuously!

Support us!

 
"Dravens Tales from the Crypt" has been enchanting for over 15 years with a tasteless mixture of humor, serious journalism - for current events and unbalanced reporting in the press politics - and zombies, garnished with lots of art, entertainment and punk rock. Draven has turned his hobby into a popular brand that cannot be classified.

My blog was never designed to spread news, let alone get political, but with current affairs I just can't help but capture information here that is otherwise censored on all other channels. I am aware that the design page may not seem "serious" to many in this regard, but I will not change this to please the "mainstream". Anyone who is open to non-state-compliant information sees the content and not the packaging. I've tried enough to provide people with information over the last 2 years, but quickly noticed that it never matters how it's "packaged", but what the other person's attitude towards it is. I don't want to put honey on anyone's mouth to meet expectations in any way, so I'll keep this design because hopefully at some point I'll be able to stop making these political statements, because it's not my goal to go on like this forever ;) I leave it up to everyone how they deal with it. However, you are welcome to simply copy and distribute the content, my blog has always been under the WTFPL license.

It's hard for me to describe what I'm actually doing here, DravensTales has become a culture blog, music blog, shock blog, tech blog, horror blog, fun blog, a blog about found items on the internet, internet bizarre, trash blog, art blog, water heater, zeitgeist blog over the years , Scrap blog and grab bag blog called. Everything that is right ... - and yet not. The main focus of the blog is contemporary art, in the broadest sense of the word.

To ensure the operation of the site, you are welcome to Make a donation by credit card, Paypal, Google Pay, Apple Pay or direct debit/bank account. Many thanks to all readers and supporters of this blog!
 


We are being censored!

Our content is now fully censored. The major search engines were asked to remove our articles from their results. Stay with us Telegram in touch, donate to support our independence or subscribe to our newsletter.

Newsletter

No thanks!