đź§µCharlie Kirk Ass*ssination, the UN, Soros, foreign governments and NGO ties.
Almost immediately after Charlie Kirk was ass*ssinated,
The Dignity Index, an Utah nonprofit co-created by Gov. Cox’s team, issued “Hopeful Voices Rise,” processing the ass*ssination alongside a school shooting and urging dignity to prevent violence—implicitly critiquing Kirk’s “hateful” style.
Dignity Index rates political rhetoric on a 1-10 scale for “dignity” vs. contempt, aiming to foster civility. (According to their website).
Guess who was a Dignity Index Coder at Hinkley Institute of Politics?
…Ermiya Fanaeian.
But that’s not all….
It aligns with the language and goals of the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals, SDG 16.
Remember who won an award for 7 for 17 from Utah Global Diplomacy?…
đź§µCharlie Kirk Ass*ssination, the UN, Soros, foreign governments and NGO ties.
Almost immediately after Charlie Kirk was ass*ssinated,
The Dignity Index, an Utah nonprofit co-created by Gov. Cox’s team, issued “Hopeful Voices Rise,” processing the ass*ssination alongside a school shooting and urging dignity to prevent violence—implicitly critiquing Kirk’s “hateful” style.
Dignity Index rates political rhetoric on a 1-10 scale for “dignity” vs. contempt, aiming to foster civility. (According to their website).
Guess who was a Dignity Index Coder at Hinkley Institute of Politics?
…Ermiya Fanaeian.
But that’s not all….
It aligns with the language and goals of the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals, SDG 16.
Remember who won an award for 7 for 17 from Utah Global Diplomacy?
That’s right, Ermiya Fanaeian.
đź§µ đź§µ Censorship of Charlie related to the Dignity Index and NGO led censorship initiatives?
After Charlie Kirk’s death, the Index’s “Hopeful Voices Rise” campaign was criticized with some claiming its rhetoric scoring resembles UN-backed “misinformation” crackdowns.
For example, Kirk’s March 2025 X post about Utah’s water and UN-REDD buffers was flagged by local groups as divisive. (I can’t find this post anywhere. Supposedly it’s archived, but I can’t find it).
Similar rhetoric today might score low on the Index, risking social or institutional penalties like loss of funding or platform access.
Again, UN SDG.
This also aligns with the things that happened under the Biden admin, but began under the Obama administration.
Think censorship around elections, covid, lots of talk from the left about mis/disinformation, the Biden administration even tried to implement a Disinformation Governance Board under the Department of Homeland Security, and Hillary Clinton said she wanted to hold people civilly and in some cases criminally liable for posting mis/disinformation.
đź§µUN Sustainable Development Goals:
1. No Poverty: End poverty in all forms. Funds anti-poverty programs, like Utah’s housing subsidies tied to Daybreak’s master plan, where AECOM designs “equitable” communities.
2. Zero Hunger: End hunger, ensure food security. Supports agricultural data collection (e.g., Cache Valley’s One Health pilots).
3. Good Health and Well-Being: Universal health access, including One Health’s zoonotic tracking in Utah, which Leidos supports with health IT contracts.
4. Quality Education: Inclusive education. Funds equity training in Utah schools, backed by Soros-linked NGOs.
5. Gender Equality: Empower women and girls. Ermiya Fanaeian’s “7 for 17” award from Utah Global Diplomacy tied to this, pushing trans rights.
6. Clean Water and Sanitation: Sustainable water management. Drives Utah’s riparian buffer mandates, enforced by AECOM’s county plans
7. Affordable and Clean Energy: Renewable energy access. Chevron’s $500M hydrogen project in Delta, Utah, aligns here, earning ESG credits
8. Decent Work and Economic Growth: Sustainable jobs. Funds Utah’s workforce training, often tied to corporate ESG compliance, which critics say squeezes out dissenters.
9. Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure: Resilient infrastructure. AECOM’s Daybreak and Leidos’ tech contracts for Utah’s air/water monitoring fit here, seen as globalist overreach.
10. Reduced Inequalities: Address income and social disparities.m, backed by Soros-funded NGOs, align here.
11. Sustainable Cities and Communities: Resilient urban planning. AECOM’s master plans for Salt Lake’s urban sprawl, like Daybreak, embed SDG language.
12. Responsible Consumption and Production: Sustainable resource use. Pushes corporate ESG audits (e.g., Chevron’s carbon offsets).
13. Climate Action: Combat climate change. Chevron’s green bonds and Leidos’ carbon tracking tech align here, with Utah’s buffers as testbed.
14. Life Below Water: Protect oceans and marine ecosystems. Less relevant in Utah but ties to broader conservation easements.
15. Life on Land: Protect terrestrial ecosystems. The big one in Utah—riparian buffers, UN-REDD programs, and AECOM’s county plans lock up land.
16. Peace, Justice, and Strong Institutions: Promote peaceful societies. The Dignity Index’s “civility” push in Utah echoes this, with critics alleging it chills free speech to enforce SDG compliance.
17. Partnerships for the Goals: Global cooperation. Funds Utah Global Diplomacy’s exchanges, which honored Fanaeian and pushed SDG awareness. State department cut off ties post-Kirk’s death.
Charlie Kirk was critical of the UN and the SDGs.