The pandemic has been exploited by many global corporations. From big Pharma getting in on the act scamming governments into believing that mRNA technology could provide a viable vaccine, to manufacturers centralising production even more. In my last post I talked about how the shipping companies scrapped their less efficient container ships and are now working towards fleets of the largest ships in order to maximise profits.
Back in the 1918/19 Spanish Flu pandemic, production was local, so it was easy to walk back into work and start making stuff again. There wasn't the huge aftershock we are experiencing now. Maybe there were shortages of labour, but nothing new generations coming up couldn't replace within a relatively short time.
During this pandemic the whole world shut down. Products made in Malaysia or Taiwan had to wait for their governments to open up and then take weeks or months to restart full production from scratch.
The globalists see this as an inconvenience. Their logic is to push for more world government and governance. The WHO "treaty" is just one aspect of this. The globalists want to make sure that what they see as local authorities and we see as sovereign countries and governments are swept away and cannot provide the inconvenience they did previously.
The globalists are trying to reduce the global human workforce to robots, or slaves, or serfs. Whatever your terminology, there is a push to suppress the worker, to reduce them to a mere item. An appliance.
And this is where the next workers war will be fought: the fight will be against the globalists who want to reduce workers to drones, making most profit for minimal outlay, or the pragmatists who realise that the future envisioned by the globalists for their children is a hellish nightmare.
Even the originally safe artistic types are not safe as the spectre of AI is encroaching into their territory. It's no wonder the elites are slavering over AI, as it answers many of the "problems" of one of the last bastions of high-paying jobs.
It won't be long before a complete photo-realistic movie is made by AI. Already AI is making great strides into the still photographic arena. Just recently a photographer won a competition with a wholly AI-generated picture. And a movie is nothing but a series of pictures presented at several frames a second. This is no animated art. This is photo-realistic.
AI is also generating speech. Realistic sounding speech, making people's voices say anything, with the correct intonation, pacing, etc. Almost, but not quite there. But it's getting so good that if you hadn't been told it was generated by AI then you might not know.
The cues are currently subtle. Photographic AI seems to have an issue with fingers, vocal AI seems to be a bit off in some portions of speech, especially where it doesn't have enough samples of a person speaking a certain word. A word that someone hasn't spoken before and wholly generated by AI may sound a bit off.
But both of these will get better as they learn more and more. Photographic AI will learn better rules about fingers and vocal AI will study intonation and pacing on similar words to better generate a convincing-sounding word never before spoken by the person it is impersonating.
The workers of the world need to get savvy and understand what's coming down the pipeline.