They are on the same side! Against the people! (As just one example, why would Russia attack Ukraine when they could simply shut down the gas and have a much much bigger impact on its "enemies" but i disgress - the real (globalist) cause was to destroy middle classes in EU, and that it achieved spectacularly, while also helping advance the "tighten the belts EU proles, fight evil Putin, set your thermostat to 15C in winter and give up your gas car, otherwise you are helping evil Putin, LOL)
“Digital public infrastructure” is a friendly space lizard euphemism for “you will be cattle-tagged and you will like it.” Probably you’ve read about the joys of DPI while browsing the websites of the United Nations, the World Economic Forum, the Rockefeller Foundation, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and other benevolent reservoirs of international altruism dedicated to creating a safe, convenient, equitable, inclusive, and extremely sustainable world.
Here’s how the United Nations Development Program
describes DPI:
Digital public infrastructure (DPI) is a shared means to many ends. It is a critical enabler of digital transformation and is helping to improve public service delivery at scale. Designed and implemented well, it can help countries achieve their national priorities and accelerate the Sustainable Development Goals.
Governments, donors, the private sector and civil society alike have an opportunity to shape it—join us!
Now for the Rockefeller Foundation’s
definition:
DPI is a digital approach that enables essential society-wide functions to promote economic and social growth for everyone—not just those who can afford access.
Its immediate uses are many, including emergency payments to climate refugees via cell phones, immediate telehealth and records access, a digital ID that speeds access to social benefits, and more.
Here’s how the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
explains this wholesome digital initiative:
When COVID-19 accelerated digital transformation globally, it highlighted the difference between strong and weak digital infrastructure. Countries have a narrow window to ensure they have digital networks that safely and efficiently deliver economic opportunities and social services to all residents. This is digital public infrastructure.
And last but not least, the World Economic Forum’s
hot take on DPI:
Digital Public Infrastructure is crucial in addressing important global challenges such as climate change and the need for responsive and effective public finance. […]
An infrastructure-first approach using DPIs holds the promise for us to imagine an inclusive digital future that harnesses the power of society, governments and businesses, while being innovative, contextually relevant and scalable to serve people and our planet.
DPIs in identification and payments have shortened the adoption and inclusion curve significantly.
If we remove the extraneous word salad from the above blockquotes, the driving philosophy behind DPI can be summarized as:
Cattle-tags aren’t just safe and convenient, they’re a human right.
I am pointing this out because Vladimir Putin
announced at November’s G20 summit that “the development of digital public infrastructure” was a “priority” for the Russian Federation.
![](https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/w_1456,c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F5bef8154-c606-4ada-b08e-4029bca8fd6b_1052x465.png)
source:
Kremlin.ru
Of course, it’s important to remember that Moscow’s unapologetic promotion of DPI is very good and anti-globalist, while the Rockefeller Foundation’s policy papers
detailing how DPI will make the world more “equitable” are very bad and evil. It’s obvious that Moscow is rushing to implement DPI projects in Russia in order to prevent the globalists from implementing DPI projects in Russia. The exact same strategy is being used by Moscow to fight the bad clot-shots and bad CBDCs with
good clot-shots and good CBDCs.
But back to DPI.
The excellent Russian academic and economist Valentin Katasonov recently published an article about this new global “infrastructure” project and why DPI will likely be 2024’s Acronym of the Year. (You might remember Mr. Katasonov’s
astute commentary on the digital ruble.) His latest op-ed on DPI was published by at least three Russian-language outlets (
Zavtra, a right-wing conservative alt media site,
Katyusha.org, our patriotic Orthodox pals, and
Business Gazeta, which is Russia’s most red-pilled business news site).
The article is below. Happy reading.