Leon Hill

4.1K posts

Leon Hill banner
Leon Hill

Leon Hill

@leonhill

🇦🇺/🇦🇷/🇮🇸. Writer, passport collector. 10 citizenships/residencies. Founder, Anticitizen. 100K+ people combined read my newsletters ↴

Join for free → Entrou em Aralık 2022
268 Seguindo5K Seguidores
Tweet fixado
Leon Hill
Leon Hill@leonhill·
Australia 🇦🇺 just passed its Digital Identity Bill into law. I'm Australian, but live in Iceland 🇮🇸: a country that already has an all-encompassing digital ID system. If you're wondering how Australia's new system will play out, I'll tell you here. And also, how Australians who don't want a digital ID can attempt to protect themselves... at least for a short while. In Iceland, the digital ID system is linked to each person's kennitala, or social security number. I sign into everything with my electronic ID (rafræn skilríki) via my phone. Any time I access my bank account, phone services, accounting, tax, insurance, credit score, manage my assets (car/house), power bill, medical record, when I vote, or even want to pull up a store receipt of something I've bought, it's all linked to my digital ID. Everything in one place. Everything. You cannot NOT have a digital ID to live in Iceland. It's impossible. You can't get power turned on, get a phone number, buy or register a car, rent or buy a house, or even buy certain items without having a kennitala or digital ID. You need one. This has its benefits (it makes life more streamlined when you're trying to do something in daily life), but it also means there is no privacy at all in Iceland. Anyone can look up where I live. The license plate of my car. How much tax I paid last year. My phone number. You name it. It's public and available—and all you need is my kennitala to find it all out. But the government has access to more. The Icelandic government and tax office has access to my bank accounts and knows every transaction I make, what I spend, and what I earn. They don't need a warrant, or anything else to access it—it's theirs. They just need probable cause to look at it. Australians, this is what's coming for you. Over the coming years, the government will make it impossible to opt out of the digital ID system. You'll need one for everything. And most importantly, they'll coerce Australians into adopting it by creating laws that link it to the most important thing you need to survive in today's modern world: your bank account. They'll do it on the grounds of anti-money-laundering and financial safety. The gov't will enforce laws onto banks (among the many ID and verification laws already mandated on banks) that if you don't have the digital ID, you won't be able to open, keep, or use a bank account. If your refuse, you'll effectively be locked out of society. Because in today's modern world, you need access to banking services to survive. Banking will be first. Then everything else in society will be linked to your digital ID. Nothing will ever again be private. Just like in Iceland today, the government will know everything. Always. Forever. So, are there ways to opt-out or protect yourself? Yes, and also no. It all comes down to having other options. If you're solely a citizen or resident of Australia and nowhere else, you will have no other options. You will be forced to stay in the ecosystem of Australia. If you have a second passport however, you will have a second nation to fall back on to use its banking, economic, and social system if you don't want to be forced into adopting Australia's. You can still live in Australia, but potentially hold bank accounts in your other nation. If you don't have a second passport, but know you're eligible for one via a parent, grandparent, or other means, I would seriously suggest taking action to claim it as soon as possible. But what if you are stuck? Sure, you could leave Australia. But that's not for everyone. One backup plan that may help you for a while, is becoming an eResident of another country. eResidency (or digital residency) allows you to access the services of another nation (like banking, etc) without living there. The two major eResidency programs offered today exist in the Baltic EU nation of Estonia, and the island nation of Palau. You never have to go to either country to claim eResidency. It's a background check, and a small payment, and you can be then sent a nationally-recognised ID card from that nation, that will allow you to among many other things, set up a bank account. Simply search for "Palau digital residency" or "Estonia eResidency" online if you're interested in either. It's not a perfect solution. It won't completely protect you if your decision will be to stay in Australia long-term. On a long enough timeline—like in Iceland—you will eventually have to get Australia's digital ID. The government will make it impossible for you to live otherwise. But having a backup plan—like a bank account, or money/assets in a location that is harder for the Australian government to access or block you from—might be something you are interested in. And I'm all for having backup plans. But again, the best backup plan will always be a citizenship/passport of at least one more nation, or at the very least, you having a permanent residency permit elsewhere. Somewhere that believed in citizens having freedom and privacy. I hope this helps.
Leon Hill tweet media
English
819
4.7K
9.5K
1.5M
Leon Hill
Leon Hill@leonhill·
@jonatanpallesen European nations need to be able to strip citizenship from savages like this.
English
0
0
1
57
Jonatan Pallesen
Jonatan Pallesen@jonatanpallesen·
This is Mohammed Khalid Mohammed Mohammed. He shot and killed an innocent father he had just met, in front of his son. The family of Mohammed Khalid Mohammed Mohammed immigrated to Sweden, and he was later awarded Swedish citizenship. So he cannot be deported. We should give fewer citizenships to people like Mohammed Khalid Mohammed Mohammed.
Jonatan Pallesen tweet media
English
10
3
124
1.8K
Leon Hill
Leon Hill@leonhill·
I don’t live in Finland. You obviously can’t recognise flags. Secondly, if you believe some Indian immigrant who becomes a citizen is more pure Australian that someone who was born there and spent the first 23 years of their life there, you are an ideologue who has been brainwashed to a level that’s beyond my comprehension.
English
0
0
0
5
Robert Barwick
Robert Barwick@RobbieBarwick·
@leonhill @IntrepidAstrea As you self-describe as an anticitizen and citizenship collector, and live in Finland, I'm going out on a limb to say they are MORE pure Australian than you.
English
1
0
1
12
Robert Barwick
Robert Barwick@RobbieBarwick·
White people don't like being called racist, but this Canadian pig fits the bill. I hate to break it to him, but Australia is a political construct defined by a constitution. Anyone who is a lawful citizen under that constitution is a pure Australian - whatever their colour.
Dr. Ricardo Duchesne@dr_duchesne

Say what you will, but the greatest liberal philosophers of our times -- John Rawls and Jurgen Habermas -- believe that he, the sprinter Gout Gout, is a pure Australian. Trying to understand why they reached this conclusion after decades of research may reveal the secret to the ethnocide of Whites.

English
68
6
158
9.2K
Leon Hill
Leon Hill@leonhill·
I must need to spell this out for you in crayon. I know HE was. I was commenting on this guy’s statement that any citizen is a “pure Australian” which the aren’t. A migrant that’s been in the country who has been granted citizenship isn’t as pure Australian as I am. Do I need to explain that any clearer, you special little flower?
English
1
0
0
18
Leon Hill
Leon Hill@leonhill·
@MAffable33525 @RobbieBarwick I wasn’t referring to him, you delusional invertebrate. I was referring to the guy commenting that any Australian citizen is “pure Australian.” Are you ‘tarded? Maybe I need to draw my answer in crayon for you.
English
0
0
0
15
Yohei from Japan🇯🇵
Yohei from Japan🇯🇵@learning_yohei·
世界の文化に興味を持つ日本人です🇯🇵😄 オーストラリア人に質問があります🇦🇺🙋‍♀️ オーストラリアの首都ってシドニーですよね?🤔 多くの日本人はシドニーって言ってます🇯🇵🤝🇦🇺
Yohei from Japan🇯🇵 tweet media
日本語
733
20
755
65.2K
鈴森はるか 『haruka suzumori』 🇯🇵
🇯🇵 A tourist from New York was captured spray painting graffiti in Shimokitazawa, Tokyo. This type of behavior should get you immediately deported from Japan.
English
5.1K
6.9K
51.7K
2.2M
BowTiedMara
BowTiedMara@BowTiedMara·
📍Av Jorge Newbery, Buenos Ahkbar
BowTiedMara tweet media
59
77
535
9K
Leon Hill
Leon Hill@leonhill·
@4bzhussain What’s funny about this, Mr “Hussein?” I don’t find it very funny that Muslims are the most useless people in British society.
English
0
0
0
12
Leon Hill
Leon Hill@leonhill·
What do Muslims contribute to British 🇬🇧 society? It turns out… not much.
English
1
2
7
140
Cormac
Cormac@cormachayden_·
working from australia is unfair > beach before work > friend cookouts > local food is only option > sun 300 days > no rushing > outdoor functional gyms > top talent > bike everywhere > work life balance somehow business has never grown faster
Cormac tweet mediaCormac tweet media
English
87
40
1.3K
64.3K
Leon Hill
Leon Hill@leonhill·
@NXT4EU Saying Magyar "is stricter on migration" when he hasn't served a single day in office is a little early, don't you think?
English
0
0
0
133
NXT EU
NXT EU@NXT4EU·
The Far-Right shows their true colours. It is not about migration, Magyar is stricter on Migration than Orban. It is about destroying our continent from within. Their plan is clear, they are traitors, and European Patriots will stop them.
NXT EU tweet media
English
102
216
1.5K
35K
Leon Hill
Leon Hill@leonhill·
@FearedBuck I don’t like this streamer dude. But he was right to walk out on the “journalist.” Perfect example of the ‘tarded, left-wing ideologues we have in journalism in Australia.
English
0
0
5
679
FearBuck
FearBuck@FearedBuck·
Clavicular walks out of 60 Minutes interview after being asked if he is an incel and about his relationship with Andrew Tate. Clavicular: “Do I identify as an Incel? I mean, how could you ask me that question as a follow up after you asked me about my relationships to women. I mean, that's quite literally the worst sequence of questions I think I've ever heard.” 60 Minutes: “Let me rephrase then. Looksmaxxing was obviously a term created by the Incel community. How do you feel about being linked to that group.” Clavicular: “I'm not linked to that group in any way. Looksmaxxing is self improvement, right? So it's about potentially even ascending out of that category. So that would be kind of one of the goals is to disassociate from being an incel and overcome that. So that doesn't make sense.” 60 Minutes: “You've been seen with certain people who are from all parts of that world. I mean, just as an example, you've obviously shared company with Andrew Tate and other, dare I say, rather controversial figures. Why do you spend time with people like that?” Clavicular: “I see you want to make this political… I guess you watched the Piers Interview. too bad I didn't have time to look into, you know, anything about potentially, you know who your wife cheated with.” 60 Minutes: “I’m not married Clav.” Clavicular: “So I could teach you about looksmaxxing, and then maybe you could switch that up. Thanks for the time, appreciate the interview.” (youtu.be/CXKCoFz3WRs?si…)
YouTube video
YouTube
English
2.7K
1.1K
45.4K
12.2M
Leon Hill
Leon Hill@leonhill·
@Aliathewhite The silence in between them doing it is my favourite one.
English
0
0
12
751
Pol Atreides
Pol Atreides@Aliathewhite·
Your culture is weird
English
126
63
1.6K
188.4K
Leon Hill
Leon Hill@leonhill·
@realRick_AUS I agree with you on the ones that have been sitting in the hot box. It's like they improve with time, just like a good bottle of red.
English
1
0
1
22
BroBro🇦🇺🏇🏻
BroBro🇦🇺🏇🏻@realRick_AUS·
@leonhill I judge a fish and chip shop off their dimmies. Best ones I’ve had have been battered believe it or not. Or the ones that have been sitting in the hot food box for like 2 hours at a corner store.
English
1
0
2
110
Donovan Nagel
Donovan Nagel@DonovanNagel·
@cormachayden_ Half my earnings go to the tax office so the government can give it to immigrants. Yes, that is unfair.
English
1
0
8
454