Conservative leadership candidate Leslyn Lewis rejected ushering in both a national and international digital ID in Canada.
“Travelling across Canada these past few weeks, one of the most common questions I get is about the World Economic Forum (WEF), the Prime Minister’s post-national ambitions, and the threat of digital ID,” writes Lewis.
“Unfortunately, we continue to see the real fears and concerns of Canadians being dismissed as “conspiracy.” But what are we supposed to tell Canadians when the head of the WEF said about Justin Trudeau and our Government “We penetrate the cabinets…? I know that half of his cabinet or more than half are actually young global leaders of the world economic forum.”
Lewis continued, explaining that Canada signed on to the WEF’s pilot project to introduce a Known Traveller Digital Identity (KTDI), which she says is explicitly intended to create a social credit score for Canadian travellers.
“The idea that world travellers can increase “global” trust as they travel around the world and check in and out of hotels etc., might sound like a good idea; however, building up trust points through your activity is literally a credit score. Folks who wanted to pretend that this is anything other than a social credit system need to bend over backwards to pretend they don’t understand how credit scores work,” Lewis continues.
“By signing on to such an ID, we would be allowing a global body to determine what meets the requirement for an “acceptable” or “safe” traveller. This may begin with a travel ID, but the WEF has suggested that this could be expanded to include one’s digital currency, banking info, carbon footprint, health records, driver’s license, etc.”
Lewis is one of six candidates who’ve raised the required $300,000 to get on the ballot for the CPC leadership. CPC members will vote for their next leader on September 10. Currently, their options will be between Lewis, Pierre Poilievre, Roman Baber, Scott Aitchison, Jean Charest, and Patrick Brown.
While polls consistently show Pierre Poilievre in first and Jean Charest in second, campaign rallies tell a different story, with Lewis pulling in significantly more people than Charest.
If you want to read more about digital IDs and why they’re so dangerous, you can do so by clicking here.