Monkeypox outbreak to be used to justify spying

Governments around the world may use the monkeypox outbreak
to establish and expand their medical surveillance systems
(https://bit.ly/3tnbgea). Organizations like the World Economic
Forum (WEF) are calling on governments around the world to
do more to prevent future pandemics by supposedly expanding their
ability to predict, detect and prevent diseases. This is meant to be
done through an expansion of global surveillance networks
(https://bit.ly/3MqTNbL).
Writing for the WEF’s website, British health charity Wellcome
Trust Director Dr. Jeremy Farrar argued that there are already
surveillance networks for many diseases and it would be simple
to expand these existing networks to cover other diseases.
“The Global Influenza Surveillance and Response System already
manages the surveillance of new strains of influenza. The Global
Antimicrobial Resistance and Use Surveillance System similarly
collects national data on AMR for selected priority pathogens,”
wrote Farrar.
He also used examples from the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19)
pandemic of surveillance systems supposedly being able to deal with
new outbreaks and the emergence of new variants.
“It was the well-established disease testing and surveillance
networks in South Africa that alerted the world to the dangers
of the omicron variant,” he wrote.
Farrar further proposed that local and country-level surveillance
systems be joined together with other collaborative public health
organizations. The data these different agencies have will be shared
and collated under a global health platform like the World Health
Organization‘s Surveillance Hub in Berlin “to ensure rapid, open
and trusted access to reliable information.”
Dr. Dave Martin, in an interview with Clay Clark on Brighteon.TV‘s
“Thrive Time Show,” noted that it is unforgivable that America’s
leaders are not standing up to these blatant attempts to surveil
Americans.
“We have over 50 percent of the population in America that is
waiting to see real leadership stand up,” he said. “We have shown
time and time and time again that if you stand for the truth, if you
stand for human values, if you stand for the light, people will rally
to the cause.”
“Here’s the bottom line people. This is a moment of cowardice
– supreme cowardice – among most of our elected officials, among
most of our appointed officials,” Martin continued. “And the fact
of the matter is, we are suffering a deficit of moral leadership that
has the ability to say we can articulate what it means to be human,
we value what it means to be human and we will fight for that
humanity at all cost.”
There are now over 700 cases of monkeypox around the world,
including 25 in the United States (https://yhoo.it/3zmvzwk).
There are five cases each in California and New York and two each in
Utah, Illinois and Colorado. Washington State, Virginia,
Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Hawaii and Georgia all have one
case of monkeypox each.
While the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention believes there
may be more cases that have gone under the radar, it also noted that
no deaths have been reported in the outbreak anywhere in the world.
In America, most of the monkeypox cases have recovered without
requiring hospitalization.
Watch the June 2 episode of “Thrive Time Show” as host Clay Clark
talks to Dr. Dave Martin about how the monkeypox outbreak could
be used as a justification to expand the medical tyranny surveillance
state.