Story at a glance:

The United Nations’ (U.N.) Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) are not about sustainability. They’re tools to facilitate the implementation of a one world government.
The term the globalist alliance uses to describe its network is a “global public-private partnership,” or G3P. The G3P is composed of most of the world’s governments, intergovernmental organizations, global corporations, major philanthropic foundations, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) and civil society groups. Collectively, they are the “stakeholders” that are implementing the SDGs.
While No. 16 SDG (SDG16) claims to advance “peaceful and inclusive societies” and “justice for all,” this goal is really about consolidating authority, exploiting threats to advance regime hegemony, and implementing a centrally controlled global system of digital identity (digital ID).
A digital identity is not merely a form of identification. Your “identity” is who you are, and your digital identity will keep a permanent record of your choices and behaviors, 24/7. Universal adoption of digital identity will enable the G3P global governance regime to establish a behavioral-based system of reward and punishment.
The COVID-19 pandemic was used to redefine human rights and to get people used to the idea that the rights of individuals are conditional and can be ignored or suspended “for the greater good.” The U.N. Charter establishes a global governance regime that stands against freedom, justice and peace, and all of the U.N. SDGs need to be understood within this context.

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