Public Outrage Explodes in the UK as Millions of Citizens Reject Bill Gates’ Digital ID Plan

Public Outrage Explodes in the UK as Millions of Citizens Reject Bill Gates’ Digital ID Plan

The British government’s push for mandatory digital ID cards – straight out of the World Economic Forum and Bill Gates’ globalist playbook – has sparked massive outrage.

According to Bill Gates, citizens of Western countries must submit to the digital ID system, otherwise they risk being excluded from society. “If someone can’t prove who they are, can they even take advantage of all the opportunities society has to offer?” Gates wrote on his blog Gates Notes, reports Baxter Dmitry .

A petition to stop the plan in the UK has reached over a million signatures in just 24 hours and continues to grow as angry citizens denounce the plan as a blueprint for digital authoritarian control.

The petition had been slightly circulating since mid-summer, slowly passing 100,000 signatures—until the government cautiously launched its identity checks on Thursday evening. Ministers called it “modern security measures,” but critics saw it for what it was: war-style identity documents, digitized and centralized in a government database.

On Friday morning, the prime minister made the formal announcement, and outrage erupted. The petition exploded to over a million signatures in just 24 hours, a clear signal of public rejection of the globalist plan for digital surveillance.

Breitbart reports :

At the time of publication, the petition had about 1.2 million supporters. The campaign is hosted on the British government’s official petition website, where any case can be submitted to the public.

According to the state’s own rules, the government is obligated to provide a written response to petitioners once they have collected 10,000 signatures. Once a petition reaches 100,000 signatures, it can be “considered” for debate in parliament.

In reality, petitions that don’t align with the government’s intentions are generally ignored. Unlike in countries that practice direct democracy, such as Switzerland, there’s no mechanism by which public petitions can actually force change.

Nevertheless, the petition is a potentially useful barometer of public opinion on the issue of identity documents.

As things stand, the opposition comes from a surprisingly broad cross-section of British political life, from Nigel Farage’s Reform UK to the Conservatives, the Liberal Democrats and even rebels within the ruling Labor Party.

https://www.frontnieuws.com/publieke-verontwaardiging-explodeert-in-het-verenigd-koninkrijk-nu-miljoenen-burgers-het-plan-voor-digitale-identiteitskaarten-van-bill-gates-afwijzen