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A phone that doubles as your passport, paycheck, and permission slip sounds efficient—until the switch sits in someone else’s hands. We take a clear-eyed look at digital ID: what it is, how it’s rolling out across the US, UK, and EU, why China’s fused ID–social credit model matters, and where convenience crosses into control. Along the way, we parse the difference between real security gains—less fraud, faster onboarding, reusable credentials—and the deeper risks that come with centralizing identity, payments, and access to daily life.
I walk through what mandatory systems can mean for work, travel, healthcare, and speech, and why “turnkey totalitarianism” isn’t about a conspiracy but about integration choices made in code and law. We revisit India’s experience to understand failure modes at scale, and we examine how emerging frameworks pair digital IDs with CBDCs, data logging, and algorithmic decision-making. From a prophetic vantage point, I draw a careful line: this isn’t the mark of the beast, but it could be the scaffolding that makes future coercion possible at global speed. History repeats in larger patterns; technology just accelerates them.
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By Russ Scalzo4.3
1818 ratings
Send us a text
A phone that doubles as your passport, paycheck, and permission slip sounds efficient—until the switch sits in someone else’s hands. We take a clear-eyed look at digital ID: what it is, how it’s rolling out across the US, UK, and EU, why China’s fused ID–social credit model matters, and where convenience crosses into control. Along the way, we parse the difference between real security gains—less fraud, faster onboarding, reusable credentials—and the deeper risks that come with centralizing identity, payments, and access to daily life.
I walk through what mandatory systems can mean for work, travel, healthcare, and speech, and why “turnkey totalitarianism” isn’t about a conspiracy but about integration choices made in code and law. We revisit India’s experience to understand failure modes at scale, and we examine how emerging frameworks pair digital IDs with CBDCs, data logging, and algorithmic decision-making. From a prophetic vantage point, I draw a careful line: this isn’t the mark of the beast, but it could be the scaffolding that makes future coercion possible at global speed. History repeats in larger patterns; technology just accelerates them.
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