t
he United Nations (UN) has made renewed calls for increased online regulation and censorship.
The UN is openly embracing the agenda of fighting so-called “disinformation” and “hate speech” online.
The globalist organization insists that censoring the public and unwelcome information is necessary to protect “free speech.”
The UN recently tried to further advance this agenda by holding an event called “Internet for Trust.”
The United Nations’ primary purpose is to facilitate conflict resolution in the real world and provide peacekeeping and humanitarian assistance in war-torn areas.
However, the unelected and well-funded organization is now increasingly following in the footsteps of other unelected, though less formal elite groups, namely the World Economic Forum (WEF).
Now, we have a new announcement about censorship from one of the UN’s agencies, UNESCO.
UNESCO is supposed to promote world peace and security through international education, arts, and sciences cooperation, and protection of world heritage in the forms of monuments, etc.
Yet, it is now crafting its very own “guidelines” to regulate “hate speech” and “misinformation.”
According to an announcement, UNESCO has found a way to explain how (but not when or why) it started to believe it should have this power to regulate online communications.
