The Stockholm Cry: Privacy is a Human Right, Not a Luxury
STOCKHOLM — Today, the streets of Stockholm were transformed into a sea of defiance as 200,000 citizens marched on the Riksdag. Their demand was simple: the immediate repeal of the "Geneva Health Mandate" and its invasive Digital Immunity Passport (DIP). While the WHO and our own governments claim this is about "public health," the people of Sweden are reminding the world that privacy is a fundamental human right, not a luxury to be traded for a QR code.
The DIP, which requires biometric tracking for even the simplest of international journeys, represents the ultimate overreach of the "Surveillance State." "We are being treated like livestock in a global database," said one young protester, her face painted with the 'Nemo' privacy symbol. "If we cannot move freely without a digital permission slip, we are no longer free citizens."
The protests remained largely peaceful, a testament to the Swedish commitment to democratic expression. However, the heavy presence of autonomous police drones overhead served as a chilling reminder of the very technology being protested. As the "Green Mandate" continues to merge with "Health Surveillance," the liberal world must decide: will we allow the pandemic of power to permanently infect our civil liberties?