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The Perils of a Cashless Society

It has become clear that the powers that shouldn’t be are steadily and gradually moving us towards a cashless society. Here is what this means for humanity and how we can fight back.

Why Cash is Being Eliminated

Unlike paper money, which can be easily produced and printed in large quantities; precious metals are scarce and can only be procured through complex and intensive mining operations. Once the metal is mined, it has to be processed, struck and minted. Therefore, the usage of precious metals kept inflation under control and made it far more difficult to overspend and waste money.

Some ancient kings and emperors tried to get around this by clipping coins or mixing in base metals, but this had limited effectiveness and eventually the citizens would see through the ruse and revolt. When paper money was originally introduced, it was typically used as a representation of a specific amount of precious metals that were secured in a vault, and caught on because paper was lighter in weight and easier to carry around than coins. Over time the paper money became independent of the metal and would eventually supplant it entirely.

Cash Still Provides Privacy

Although cash is not as good as precious metals since it is susceptible to inflation, it still provides privacy. For example, if you purchase a Rolex watch from someone using cash, the government doesn’t know about this transaction, and cannot tax it. If that same purchase is made over the web electronically, the government will know about and can tax it. This is the real reason they want to eliminate cash. Cash still provides a degree of privacy and freedom. Once everything goes fully electronic, the government will then have complete control. This is something we must not allow.

Nigerians Reject Central Bank Digital Currency

The Illuminati typically operates incrementally, gradually getting people acclimated to their agenda. They know that getting rid of cash will be deeply unpopular with people around the world so they are starting off with smaller countries such as Nigeria before expanding worldwide. As I’ve said many times, they usually test things on Black people first before trying it on the rest of the world, so it is no surprise that they would try rolling out Central Bank Digital Currencies in Africa.

South Koreans Also Reject Cashless Transactions

Nigeria is a developing nation, and most people in developing nations are distrustful of government and friendly towards cash. But I have a friend who lives and works in South Korea. In a recent conversation I had with him, he revealed to me that despite South Korea being one of East Asia’s most technologically advanced economies, the people there are hostile to cashless transactions, so much so that many street merchants provide discounts as high as 20 percent for those that pay in cash.

So even in South Korea, a highly developed nation, there is a resistance to cashless transactions. People instinctively recognize that going cashless will lead to a tremendous loss of freedom and privacy.

The Cashless Society is a Pipe Dream

Despite all the hype surrounding cashless transactions and CBDCs, the South Koreans and especially the Nigerians have demonstrated that the powers that be can only institute a cashless society if we let them. If enough people reject their program, there is nothing they can do.

There are some who believe the Illuminati will trigger a global financial crisis in order to attempt to usher in a cashless system, but I believe this will be difficult to accomplish. If they launch as massive cyber-attack that suddenly make it impossible for people to access their money, as some believe, then this will just reinforce why it is so important to use cash and precious metals.

As far as the nations and regions of the world such as the UK which are steadily and stupidly phasing out cash, the people living there will learn the hard and painful way when a natural or man made disaster occurs that knocks out power for an extended period of time and makes access to electronic payment systems impossible. Or, when they are standing in a long line during Christmas, only to get to the checkout to be told their card or smartphone doesn’t work, or when you post something on social media critical of the government and then they block your ability to make or receive payments. Nothing good will come out of a cashless society, of that you can be sure.

One response to “The Perils of a Cashless Society”

  1. zoritoler imol Avatar

    Enjoyed studying this, very good stuff, regards.

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