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Typical gov way of slyly getting public consent. Criminal really.

Ppl need to research not blindly answer what may come back to bite them in the rear.

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I think I'd have to write to their office, AGAIN. And try to phone. Here in Canada, they hide.

But they know you called!!

I'd have to say I didn't understand their question.

Or wasn't able to fill it in. Need help.

I never 'understand' corruption.

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deletedApr 24, 2023Liked by Peter Halligan
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100%. The sheeple just don't get it that this is all part of the NWO Mind control & Mind Conditioning psyop. Do what you're told, when you're told. Now.

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author

Interesting. A cashless Orkney. No ATM's. Quite the "living experiment". I wonder if a bank could start up that promoted cash these days. There is a huge effort to switch to telephone banking - which is all digital and regulated by the central bank already. JP Morgan uses its retail brand name "Chase" and only allows telephone banking - so in that sense, banking is already digital and represents currency held in the system. Alll bills are pretty much paid on line and debit/credit cards are the usual method of payment in shops, bars, petrol stations, restaurants, holidays, f/x, theatres etc. - so transactions are probably close to 95% of all transactions already - leaving small purchase items - where the digiital transaction cost exceeds or is a large part of, the actual item being bought.

I suspect the major users are people that give presents of cash at birthdays and Christmas.

the big difference between the existing digital currency economy is the record keeping by the central bank - which is, in turn, an arm of government.

even banknotes already have unique digits - though belong to the "bearer" and are not known to the central bank.

a simple digital currency switch - probably inevitable - is track and trace of bank note serial numbers at point of sale - at which point there will be no difference between CBDC abd bank notes.

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