Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates has announced his “radical” new plans to pour tens of billions of dollars into schemes that seek to take control of Africa’s “vaccines,” food supply, and digital ID programs.
During a speech at the African Union headquarters in Addis Ababa on Monday, Gates outlined a sweeping plan to expand his influence over Africa’s healthcare, agriculture, and digital systems.
This from slaynews.com.
However, his “radical idea” for the future of the African people is raising fresh concerns over top-down control and globalist overreach.
It comes as Gates continues to stoke outrage over his investments in vaccine development, GMO food advocacy, feeding humans with insects and lab-grown fake “meat” products, and experimental technologies like using sewage for drinking water.
The multibillionaire announced his intentions to vaccinate “every African child,” roll out AI-based healthcare, and integrate biometric and digital ID systems across the continent.
We were a founder of a group called GAVI … and we made sure the cost of the rotavirus vaccine went down from $30 to under $2.
He also revealed a long-term financial pledge:
My wealth will be given away over the next 20 years.
Further:
The majority of that funding will be spent on helping you address challenges here in Africa.
In tandem with Gates’s announcements, African nations are increasingly implementing biometric ID systems and digital health infrastructure, raising alarms about civil liberties.
These systems, often backed by entities like the World Bank and World Economic Forum (WEF), could be used to track vaccine compliance and centralize control over access to public services.
Gates said:
We want to make sure AI is not mostly in the rich countries.
Further:
In fact, you could say if equity were served, it should roll out here first.
While justifying his plans, Gates said he was inspired by an 1889 essay from Andrew Carnegie called The Gospel of Wealth.
The essay provided Gates with the impetus and motivation to continue his work until he dies.
Gates wrote:
It makes the case that the wealthy have a responsibility to return their resources to society, a radical idea at the time that laid the groundwork for philanthropy as we know it today.
Further:
In the essay’s most famous line, Carnegie argues that ‘the man who dies thus rich dies disgraced.
And:
I have spent a lot of time thinking about that quote lately.
He explained:
People will say a lot of things about me when I die, but I am determined that ‘he died rich’ will not be one of them.
There are too many urgent problems to solve for me to hold onto resources that could be used to help people.
Gates emphasized that AI, vaccines, and centralized data systems will be tools of social transformation, particularly for education and agriculture.
He previously invested in AI-generated “solutions” for food supply and endorsed controversial practices like using insects for protein and sewage for drinking water.
Strikingly, Gates said his foundation will shut down on December 31, 2045—a date many critics have noted aligns with long-term global governance and population agendas.
Gates concluded:
There’s nothing more important.
While Gates frames his initiative as philanthropic, critics warn:
[I]t is a technocratic push that could undermine
national sovereignty and impose foreign control
over African lives, food, and health.
Gates’s shift to Africa comes amid a growing pushback against his schemes in the United States.
As Slay News reported:
Montana recently became the latest state to crack down on the lab-grown fake “meat” products championed by Gates.
Several U.S. states are now pushing back against Gates’s “lab-grown meat” products amid growing concerns about the risks they pose to public health.
Currently, there are no federal regulations governing fake “meat” products destined for the American food supply. However, some states are now cracking down on the controversial “foods.”