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https://vernoncoleman.org/videos/nightmare-your-street

B]Nightmare on your Street[/B]

11th June 2022

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34:54 video runtime

also on Bitchute HERE
https://www.bitchute.com/video/nm49dmnfqqLo/
First published at 00:09 UTC on June 13th, 2022.
Jim Fetzer Vitchute channel


"It’s June 2022 and this is video number 311.

Politicians, journalists, social scientists, masochists and communists talk about social credit as if it were a ‘good thing’.

‘I don’t know what all the fuss is about,’ said one. ‘It won’t be so bad. In fact, if you behave yourself it will be a good thing.’

A TV programme promoting social credit in the US stated that social credit pushes people to become better citizens. ‘You’re not going to be punished if you haven’t done anything wrong,’ they said, ignoring the fact that it is the Government which decides the definition of wrong.

Well, if you are a fan of totalitarianism or communism then I suppose social credit is a good thing.

Social credit is a scheme designed to enable governments to control their citizens. Every new law and rule ties into the social credit system which is now clearly the way in which the Great Reset will be turned into practical reality. It is government policy everywhere to exhaust their citizens with a constant barrage of new rules and regulations (which are backed by force and therefore have the power of law).

Social credit is here and it is growing by the minute.

Take a look at precisely how social credit operates in China.

The social credit system set up in China was officially introduced in 2014 though it was planned many years before that and given official approval back at the beginning of the 21st century when Shanghai introduced a credit system designed to assess eligibility for loans – in much the same way as has been done in the West for many years. What has been happening since 2014 has been happening very quickly.

The idea of the system is that information about every individual will be collected together from all possible sources – schools, workplaces, banks, doctors’ surgeries, hospitals, police, libraries, supermarkets, internet platforms, travel companies, closed circuit television cameras (usually facial recognition software) and so on.

Recognition software can identify people by the way they walk. Smart meters installed in private homes will tell the authorities what time you get up, what time you eat, what you eat, when you go to the loo and when you go to bed. If you get a speeding fine or a parking ticket the details of that offence will be recorded too.

In the Chinese city of Rongcheng there is a comprehensive grading system which obtains information from 142 different government departments – with hundreds of positive and negative factors being used to create a final score.

The information collected is used to compensate and reward those considered to be model citizens and to punish those regarded as transgressors. The social credit system is designed to enable the authorities to name and shame according to behaviour.

There are several systems in different Chinese provinces but social credit ratings are measured with a simple points system with, for example, all citizens starting off with 1,000 points and then losing points whenever they ‘misbehave’. A citizen’s rating will determine whether he or she is rewarded or punished.

The goal of the system is to provide the Government with a general assessment of each individual citizen’s trustworthiness.

‘Good’ citizens who have obeyed instructions and behaved impeccably will be rewarded in many ways – such as by being allowed to travel, use a public library, rent bicycles or borrow money and by being entitled to send their children to better schools, to obtain a better quality of health care or to apply for (and be given) better jobs. Buying green vegetables, sensible clothing and nappies will all boost a citizen’s rating. Buy sensible work shoes with good soles and a long life potential and your rating will rise. Those who praise the Government will see their rating improve. Those who report citizens who have criticised the Government, or any part of it, will be rewarded for their loyalty to the State. If you donate blood, perform charitable works and praise the Government regularly on social media you will be rewarded.

‘Bad’ citizens, who have shown themselves to be rebellious, deceitful or disobedient in any way, will be punished by being named and shamed on the internet and elsewhere and by being denied access to travel, hotels, restaurants, good schools, good hospitals and good jobs. ‘Bad’ citizens may also be banned from entering shopping malls or food stores and may, therefore, be denied access to food.

What else makes you a ‘bad’ citizen?

Well, buying chocolates, alcohol or frivolous clothing will damage your rating as will playing games on the internet. Buy a pair of high heel shoes or inappropriately expensive trainers and you will lose points. If your home is not considered energy compliant you will be punished.

If Chinese citizens write or say something rude about their government, they will lose points. Those who fail to visit their parents regularly are punished as are jaywalkers, those who smoke in non- smoking zones and those who walk a dog without putting it on a lead. Government employees will remove a dog if its leftover food isn’t cleared away. And the former dog owner will be banned from having another animal for five years. Senior citizens can sue their children if they don’t visit regularly. Not sorting your personal waste properly is a sin as is swearing in public. Spying on your friends, relatives and neighbours will be rewarded; so, for example, reporting friends, relatives and neighbours for using bad language will win you brownie points. All internet data (including searches) is used to compile social credit ratings and players who cheat in online video games are punished by having their social credit rating reduced. If you spread rumours on the internet you will be classified as a bad person. If your apologies for your transgressions are considered insincere you will be punished. If you have your PCR tests done regularly then you will be rewarded but if you miss your testing appointments you will lose points. If you have the vaccinations you are told to have then you will be rewarded. But if you choose not to have a particular vaccination then you will lose points. Those who do not pay bills on time will be punished though taxes and utility bills will be paid automatically, with the appropriate sums simply deducted from the citizen’s account. If there is insufficient money in the account the citizen will lose yet more points. Those in debt for whatever reason will end up in a downward spiral.

Ten years or so ago I wrote a column in a large circulation Chinese newspaper. One week I wrote a column criticising vaccination. Within hours of the column appearing I received a note from the editor sacking me from the paper. And within a couple of days after that I received an email from my Chinese publisher telling me that they were no longer allowed to sell my books (several of which had been long-term bestsellers in China). I was also told that neither they nor any other publisher in China would be allowed to publish any of my books.

In 2019, 23 million people in China had been blacklisted from travelling by train or aeroplane because they had low social credit ratings. Many students were prevented from attending schools or universities because their parents had poor scores or because one parent was on a debtor’s list. Employers are able to consult blacklists before hiring new employees or handing our contracts – and are encouraged to do so.

Highly rated taxpayers get their tax returns processed more speedily. Lowly rated individuals have to pay higher insurance premiums.

Once someone is on a blacklist in one area of the country they are likely to be blacklisted in other provinces. And once someone is on a blacklist it usually takes between two to five years to be removed. Citizens on blacklists must prove that they have changed their erring ways.

In China, everyone now lives in a point scoring computer game. Citizens who don’t adapt their lifestyle to suit the requirements of the Government will be severely punished. If a member of a Chinese citizen’s family or partner has low scores then they must avoid them – or their points score will be reduced. Think about that: the system ensures that the friends and relatives of individuals who behave in a way that the State considers unacceptable will lose points from their credit rating.

In short, those who do as they are told will be rewarded and those who disobey will be punished. And, remember, individuals who are regarded as ‘bad’ citizens will be named and shamed on posters, on television and, of course, on the internet.

The aim of all this is that citizens will be encouraged to behave in an ‘acceptable’ fashion and will, therefore, be constantly aware of their behaviour – constantly aware that if they cross a street when not allowed, or park a vehicle where they are not allowed to park, they will lose points on their credit rating.

The Chinese social credit system (upon which the social credit systems being introduced in the rest of the world are based) is built upon a network of computers and requires citizens to carry with them, and to use, smart phones which are equipped with apps connecting them to a central bureaucracy. Smart TVs, computers, iPads, cell phones and so on collect data by recording conversations, movements and user activity. Video games use facial recognition software.

The astonishing thing is that the vast majority of the well-educated classes cannot see what is happening. They aren’t all conspirators, in on the scam, but many have closed their eyes and ears to the truth.

So, what has all this got to do with me, you might well ask. Surely the Chinese system won’t really affect the rest of the world.

Well, in September 2020, when most of the population were still wondering if they dared nip out to the one open local shop to buy a can of beans, and wondering if it would be legal to buy a loaf of bread as well, the UK Government published something called ‘Evidence and Scenarios for Global Data Systems – the Future of Citizens Data Systems’.

The Chinese Government had by then been using its social credit system to prioritise its national economy and to take control of its citizens, and the British Government, not wanting to be left out, but not wanting to terrify a population that had already been systematically and deliberately scared half to death, promised that it would ‘harness data to boost growth and productivity, to improve public services and to inform a new wave of scientific research’.