Don't know about you, but when I was a small kid my mother always warned: "Don't put money in your mouths. It's dirty and you never know where's it's been."
Part of that warning I always figured, since she was an RN, came from that side of her. But now that we're all facing what the power elitists want, a cashless society, my opinions have grown. Apparently, in their view, judging from this lead to a recent Bloomberg piece, it's even dirtier today than it was then.
"Cash had a pretty good run for 4,000 years or so. These days, though, notes and coins increasingly seem declasse; they’re dirty and dangerous, unwieldy and expensive, antiquated and so very analog.”
Now we're going to go out on a limb here. It's territory we don't mind occupying. It turns out dear mom was right. It was just at that early age one of the places then that never occurred to us was a politician's pocket.
To be sure there are some dirty places, rest rooms and kitchen floors, Colorado Boulevard after the annual Rose Parade. A business acquaintance runs a scrap iron business, one of the backbones of the global economy. It's a place with enough dirt and grime and dust that several times a year he gets a visit from the climate change police. They usually want some of that dirty stuff mother warned against. You and I know it as a fee.
So if you don't get hung up on the short term implications of things and focus on the long terms ones, you realize where this is headed and just how dirty it all is.
Yes indeed. Cash is, as they say, “déclassé,” a characteristic of the lower classes. Hmm, what does that mean exactly? Anyone other than the 1% of the population? Maybe they are concerned about us plebeians, who stalk farmer’s markets for non-GMO food and who dare to pay cash to support a local farmer. Or perhaps the Congressional lobbyists have discovered that envelopes with cash are just too blasé.
Remember when those pallets of one hundred dollar bills – to the tune of $12 billion – were sent from the New York Federal Reserve Bank to Iraq? They just lost track of it. This falls under the Bloomberg category of unwieldy and expensive. When digital currency is a way of life, funding illegal wars won’t be so messy. Bloomberg editors also compare cash to being analog in a digital world.
Personally, I like individual freedom and the sound of vinyl records, but hey, I’m old school. This rise of digital currency is just one more step toward one world government and total domination. But hey, don’t worry your pretty little head about it, because the beast had already collected your health records, all transactions, emails, tweets and twitters, phone calls, likes, dislikes, social networks and anything else you’ve willingly yielded.
prophecy.news/2016-05-23-your-dirty-cash-will-soon-be-extinct-for-your-safety-of-course.
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