
MEXICO CITY, April 6, 2025. As if from the pages of science fiction horror novel, the U.S. government is now demanding that Mexico collect, register and share “biometric data”–meaning DNA, fingerprints, facial recognition data, etc.–with the U.S. government.
U.S. Secretary of “Homeland Security” Kristi Noem met with Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo for hours on April 1. Noem presented the Mexican president with a list of demands.
According to Gateway Hispanic,
“The meeting, which lasted nearly two hours instead of the scheduled 30 minutes, included key figures from the Mexican cabinet, such as Foreign Minister Juan Ramón de la Fuente, Interior Minister Rosa Icela Rodríguez, and Security Secretary Omar García Harfuch.”
At the top of the list was a demand that the Mexican government “share biometric data” of all Mexicans with the U.S. government! This would improve the ability of the U.S. government to track and monitor Mexican immigrants–just as the U.S. government increasingly tracks and monitors U.S. citizens through means such as the “Real ID” program.
The ironic hero of the story is Mexican president Sheinbaum, Mexico’s first Jewish president, widely regarded as a far-left socialist. (Even Mexico’s Jewish community has distanced itself from Sheinbaum due to Sheinbaum’s neo-Marxist politics.)
In her April 1 morning press conference, Sheinbaum was blunt: she did not sign any agreement to share biometric data with the United States. The reason? Mexico does not have a national registry of this type. “We don’t have those biometric data to begin with.” Sheinbaum explained.
“Real ID” and other government programs to create digital ID documents, cards and passports are part of the agenda of the globalist World Economic Forum.
The World Economic Forum (WEF) has been pressuring governments to create ID passports containing biometric data. See here. The WEF’s Reimagining Digital ID (2023) report “provides tools, frameworks and recommendations for government officials, regulators and executives.” “Public
sector participants can contribute by exploring the development of enabling regulation, setting
requirements for interoperability and portability, and fostering collaboration among key stakeholders.”
Indeed, the U.S. government’s demand is literally taken from a chapter in WEF’s document: “Addressing the ID gap will require extensive effort and collaboration on the part of governments, international organizations and other stakeholders to provide access to official ID.”