Monitoring the
Public After CoronavirusBy Philip
Giraldi
April 24, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -
It is too early to say when
or even whether the siege initiated by the coronavirus
will end, but many Americans and Europeans are
speculating over what kind of countries will emerge on
the other side. National Security Agency (NSA)
whistleblower Edward Snowden, who exposed illegal spying
on American citizens,
recently predicted that
there would be a “slide into a less liberal and less
free world,” that the surveillance systems being created
to monitor the spread of the disease would become an
“architecture of oppression.” To be sure he has a point
in that governments have historically used crises to
expand their powers. After the crisis is over, the
emergency power granted to manage the activity of the
people tends to be retained.
Much
depends on the lessons learned from what is being done
to contain the virus currently. If testing and “keep
your distance” does not succeed in checking the spread
of the disease and restoring a version of what once was
normal life, harsher and more permanent measures might
prevail. Alexander Dugin
foresees a
“military-medical” dictatorship developing.
The rapid
spread of the virus has also spawned some unusual
conspiracy theories. One claims that the virus was
actually
developed in the United States,
stolen from a lab by Chinese scientists and then
released in China before being allowed to propagate
worldwide as part of a communist conspiracy to destroy
the economy and political system in the U.S. Another has
cast Bill Gates as the villain,
claiming that he had a
hand in the appearance of the virus as part of a
nefarious plot to take over global health care. The
megalomaniacal Gates certainly is to blame for using his
wealth and status to promote a universal “health”
surveillance system for the post-coronavirus world, but
that he might have been behind the appearance of the
virus itself is certainly a bit of a stretch. Still
other theories connect the appearance of coronavirus
to 5G telecommunications technology.