The United Nations has a new program designed to censor those who dissent from the official narrative of the rulers of the planet. The digital army will “detect disinformation” on the internet and counter it with the facts the U.N. and other masters desperately need you to believe.
The young participants of the “peacekeeping” program will form a digital army capable of detecting “false information” (information the U.N. doesn’t like) and images taken out of context and countering them with “real facts.” Not only will the U.N. be policing online speech, but they will enlist kids to do it.
“From a smartphone, I will produce videos to echo good information.” Blessing Kasasi, aged 15, is a women’s and children’s rights activist. She participated in training in Kinshasa supported by MONUSCO (Mission de l’Organisation des Nations Unies pour la stabilisation en République démocratique du Congo)/Organization Stabilization Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo) on the production of digital content with the help of a smartphone. “There is no point in taking an image broadcast for just purposes, diverting it from its context and manipulating it in order to harm,” said Himlish Nketani Nsiala, a law student at the Catholic University of Congo who also participated in this training.