THE RISING TECHNOCRACY AND THE AWAKENING OF #WETHEPEOPLE IN AUSTRALIA
- Bridget Ninness

- Dec 21, 2025
- 6 min read
Restoring Common Law, Sovereignty and the Spirit of the Constitution
Introduction: The Pulse of a Nation at the Crossroads
Australia stands at a profound historical threshold. Once celebrated as the “lucky country,” its vast lands, natural beauty, and relatively peaceful society masked a deeper constitutional fragility and a growing distance between the governed and their governors. In recent decades, and with an accelerated pace since the turn of the millennium, Australia has undergone a silent transformation from a constitutional monarchy rooted in British common law to an increasingly centralised, bureaucratic, and technocratic system, deeply enmeshed with globalist networks of influence.
This essay explores how the Australian government, under layers of policy, treaty, and digital expansion, has come under the influence of globalist agendas that increasingly bypass the will of its people. At the same time, a sacred resistance is emerging through grassroots movements of awakened Australians invoking the ancient rights of Common Law, reclaiming the true Constitution, and declaring with clarity: We Are Sovereign. This is the rising song of #WeThePeople, a phrase that now carries prophetic weight across the continent.
Part I: The Global Technocracy Unveiled
To understand the threat of technocracy, we must define it. Technocracy is a system of governance where decision-making power is handed over to unelected experts, often under the guise of efficiency, safety, or science. But in practice, it often leads to the erosion of democratic accountability, civil liberties and personal sovereignty.
Technocracy finds fertile soil in times of crisis. The digital age, with its tools of surveillance, data collection, and algorithmic control, has provided unprecedented mechanisms for governments to monitor and shape public behaviour. From central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) to vaccine passports and AI-driven social credit systems, the technocratic model seeks to fuse governance with technology in ways that centralise power and diminish human agency.
In Australia, this global movement found a stronghold during the COVID-19 pandemic. Emergency powers, lockdowns, mandates, and digital tracking systems were implemented with little or no public debate. Dissent was censored, alternative viewpoints suppressed, and those who questioned the mainstream narrative were de-platformed or labelled threats to public health. Many Australians awakened in those years to the realisation that democracy, as they knew it, was not merely asleep. It had been bypassed.
Part II: How Globalist Influence Captured the Australian Government
The encroachment of globalist influence in Australian policy is neither accidental nor recent. It has unfolded over decades, largely through treaties, trade agreements, and international partnerships that slowly shifted sovereignty away from the people and into multinational networks of influence. The United Nations, the World Economic Forum (WEF), the World Health Organisation (WHO), and other supranational entities now influence Australian law through indirect mechanisms; treaties signed without referenda, policy adoption without scrutiny, and 'expert panels' funded by transnational interests.
Key examples include:
Agenda 21 / 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development: These global UN-led initiatives have found their way into local councils and state legislation across Australia under the banner of sustainability. But critics argue they often bypass local consent and impose one-size-fits-all global frameworks on diverse communities.
WHO Treaty Proposals: The WHO’s efforts to create binding international agreements for pandemic responses threaten to place Australia’s health policies under global authority, removing decisions from elected representatives or the Australian people.
The Digital ID and Surveillance State: Through government and private sector partnerships, Australia is building one of the most pervasive digital identity systems in the world, which critics warn could evolve into a social credit-style control grid, similar to China’s surveillance model.
What ties these threads together is the pattern of bypassing the will of the people, often with limited transparency, and in contradiction to Australia’s constitutional heritage.
Part III: The Forgotten Constitution and the Betrayal of Sovereignty
Australia’s true Constitution, enacted in 1901, was born from a federation of independent colonies seeking to form a Commonwealth under the Crown, with Common Law as its moral and judicial foundation. It contains critical safeguards for freedom including trial by jury, separation of powers, parliamentary accountability and the ultimate authority of the people.
However, the Constitution has been strategically obscured from public consciousness. Since the Whitlam dismissal in 1975 and the subsequent Australia Act 1986, layers of corporate governance, legislative amendments, and reinterpretations have distanced the modern state apparatus from its foundational law.
The Australia Act 1986, passed without a referendum, effectively severed the people’s legal recourse to the Crown and the UK Privy Council, despite lingering ambiguity over its legality under Section 128 of the Constitution.
The shift to corporate government structures has led to the incorporation of government departments, local councils and even the Australian Government itself raising deep concerns among constitutional experts about whether Australians are being governed by a legal fiction rather than lawful authority.
Many now argue that Australians are ruled by an administrative façade rather than a sovereign, representative body accountable under Common Law. This realisation is fuelling a powerful movement of people reclaiming the original Constitution and demanding lawful governance.
Part IV: The Grassroots Awakening — #WeThePeople
In response to this silent coup of sovereignty, a sacred resistance is rising. Ordinary people including farmers, elders, parents, truth-seekers, whistleblowers, former military and indigenous leaders are uniting under a single declaration: We are not subjects of a technocratic state. We are sovereign beings under God and Common Law.
The movement known as #WeThePeople, echoing the spiritual tone of other international sovereignty movements, has manifested across the continent in myriad forms:
Common Law Assemblies: Local communities are re-establishing Common Law courts, sheriffs, and charters, declaring independence from unlawful corporate systems and asserting the inalienable rights of the people.
Sovereign Education Campaigns: People are studying the Constitution, Magna Carta, and foundational legal texts, hosting community workshops and producing documentaries to reawaken the national memory of lawful governance.
Grassroots Media: Independent journalists, podcasters, and online platforms are exposing the technocratic agenda, amplifying suppressed voices, and creating networks of uncensored information.
Mass Protests and Peaceful Resistance: From Canberra to rural towns, hundreds of thousands have marched under banners calling for constitutional restoration, medical freedom, and an end to globalist overreach.
Importantly, this is not merely a political or legal movement. It is a spiritual awakening. The Australian people are remembering that freedom is not granted by governments. It is inherent. It is God-given.
Part V: Reclaiming Law, Land, and Legacy
One of the most profound aspects of this awakening is its convergence with indigenous knowledge, spiritual teachings, and the call to remember the Law of the Land. Elders from First Nations communities are now standing side by side with constitutional advocates, recognising that the restoration of true law requires healing the ancient covenants between the land and the people.
Many of the grassroots sovereignty movements emphasise not just legal reformation but a return to spirit-led governance where decisions are made with reverence for the Earth, the ancestors and future generations in accordance with God’s blueprint and Australia being founded as a Christian country.
Australia is uniquely positioned to offer the world a new model of leadership, one that fuses:
The ancient Dreaming and Songlines of its First Peoples;
The sacred principles of Common Law, rooted in Christian moral law;
The democratic vision of a constitutional Commonwealth;
And the resilience of a people willing to stand in truth even when institutions falter.
Part VI: The Path Ahead — A New Covenant of the People
The road to restoration will not be easy. The current system will not relinquish control willingly. Yet, history reminds us that no technocracy, no empire, no totalitarian regime can survive the sustained will of an awakened people.
What is required now is:
Unity across differences: Australians must rise above left/right divides and unite under the shared truth of their sacred rights.
Lawful action with spiritual grounding: Resistance must remain peaceful, lawful, and divinely anchored to avoid falling into reactionary traps.
Creation of parallel structures: Food sovereignty, community councils, local currencies, and independent media must arise to replace corrupted institutions.
A return to the sacred: Churches, temples, sacred sites, and altars must become centres of prayer and action, where heaven and earth are reconciled in the name of freedom.
Conclusion: The Fire of Liberty Rekindled
Australia is not merely undergoing a political reckoning it is undergoing a spiritual rebirth. The technocratic system, with all its power, cannot replicate the divine spark that lives within every awakened soul. It cannot own the Dreaming. It cannot silence a nation that sings again.
We stand now, barefoot upon the land, with fire in our hearts and law in our hands. We remember who we are: a sovereign people under God, bound not by tyranny, but by truth.
The winds are shifting. The veil is lifting. The Constitution is not a relic; it is a seed.
And the people, #WeThePeople, are ready to plant it again in sacred soil.
In Christ
Lady Saffire BoVardia





























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