
The globalist machine is tightening its grip, spraying poisonous chemicals in Britain’s skies and plotting digital shackles to enslave the masses.
Ben Habib, the fearless founder of Advance UK, is sounding the alarm, exposing the UK government’s secret geoengineering agenda and vowing to smash the technocratic prison threatening the nation’s soul.
“You can’t have CBDCs [Central Bank Digital Currencies] in a world of freedom,” Habib declared in a recent interview. “Net zero, social credit scores, geoengineering—these are anti-democratic, delivering the British people into penury.”
Advance UK, launched June 30, 2025, is Habib’s battleaxe against the globalist elite. A former Brexit Party MEP, he’s rallying Britons to restore “hardcore democracy” and crush supranational schemes like those of the World Economic Forum and European Union.
His party’s four pillars—nation-state, freedom of speech, democracy, and equality under the law—are a blueprint to dismantle the technocratic stranglehold. But it’s his bombshell claim about geoengineering that’s set to shake the awake.
Habib revealed the UK government recently admitted to geoengineering, a once-taboo topic now confirmed as a reality.
“They’re proud of it, ramping it up,” he said, echoing former CIA Director John Brennan’s boasts about stratospheric aerosol injections.
This isn’t fringe conspiracy—it’s a weaponized reality, with Florida and other U.S. states banning similar programs.
Habib ties this to a broader technocratic assault: digital currencies to track every transaction, social credit scores to control behavior, and net zero policies driving Britain into economic ruin.
“We have some of the highest energy prices in the world,” he warned. “Net zero is against the majority’s interest.”
The solution? Rip out the anti-democratic roots. Habib calls for ejecting supranational entities and restoring Britain’s pre-1997 constitutional framework, when democracy, not technocrats, ruled.
“If you reestablish democracy, these things can’t happen,” he insisted, slamming policies that thrive on division and state overreach. Multiculturalism, he argues, fuels discord, paving the way for ID cards and assisted dying laws—tentacles of a state that creates problems to justify control.
Advance UK, backed by Habib’s £100,000 pledge and a goal of 30,000 members, is building a fortress of resistance. Its unique “college” of 100 independent voices will hold the party accountable, ensuring it never bows to globalist pressure.
For Americans battling their own technocratic overlords, Habib’s fight is a beacon.
“We need to govern for the people,” he urged, a call to arms for a world under siege.
The UK’s skies are being weaponized, its freedoms choked by digital chains. Habib’s Advance UK is ready to fight back—will America help its sister nation?