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Bill Gates Pushes Cashless Society
Scheme would allow government to confiscate money at will
by Kit Daniels | Infowars.com | January 22, 2015

Bill Gates is now promoting “digital currency” in third-world countries, which will make the poor even more dependent on central banks while also turning them into guinea pigs for the development of a “cashless society” in the U.S. and Europe.

Gates outlined his plan for a cashless society in a letter published Thursday in which he proposed the poor have better access to mobile phones so they can store their financial ****** digitally instead of keeping **** currency at home.

“The key to this will be mobile phones,” he wrote. “Already, in the developing countries with the right regulatory framework, people are storing money digitally on their phones and using their phones to make purchases, as if they were debit cards.”

“By 2030, two billion people who don’t have a bank account today will be storing money and making payment with their phones.”

But this will only enslave the poor into an electronic monetary system they don’t control, allowing central banks and the government unparalleled ability to confiscate money at will through taxes and “bail-ins.”

For example, after Cyprus’s largest bank was sunk from exposure to debt-crippled Greece, the Cypriot government looted people’s bank accounts in 2013 as part of a “bail-in” program with the International Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank.

“If you can do this once, you can do it again,” financial ******* Lars Seier Christensen wrote, who called the “bail-in” full-***** socialism. “If you can confiscate 10% of a bank customer’s money, you can confiscate 25, 50 or even 100%.”

A third-world government wouldn’t even need to wait for an economic crisis to loot digital bank accounts, however, with the cashless scheme Gates proposes, officials could simply impose a tax and confiscate money automatically.

And there’s no reason to believe this scheme will only be limited to the third-world; the United Kingdom has already tested digital-only payments earlier this year.

“While the whole idea is being marketed as an inevitable consequence of the decline in cash payments and the rise of credit cards and contact-less payment technology, many in the privacy community see the elimination of cash as another means of abolishing anonymity,” Paul Joseph Watson wrote. “Alternatives to cash that could still provide anonymity, such as crypto-currencies like Bitcoin, are slowly being adopted by more stores and chains, but at nowhere near the rate required to provide a viable competitor to the likes of Google Wallet and Paypal.”

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40 Answers

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Then comes the day when a solar storm or an EMP bomb wipes away the records! Cards are undoubtedly convenient, but cash (or gold!) is material wealth in your pocket. If you're afraid of robbery, stay alert and buy a Walther PPK!
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Not that it really matters for me as thanks to the politicians screwing the economy I don't really have much cash these days anyway.
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yeah because they dont want you to have gold, now they dont want you to have any commodity.

can anyone say 1930 comming at you.
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'They' don't want you to have any medium of exchange which 'they' don't control. If that's what you meant, then yeah.
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exactly what i mean, also in 1913 leading to the great depression was big push on banks place your money in banks so when the depression hit everyone ran to the banks to withdraw their money and the banks didnt have it so everyone was broke.

Cant find the graph but, imagine a circle and at the top a link breaks, the money kept going but because of the broken link the money circulated to the *** of the circle and guess who was at the top? one of wilsons greatest plans.
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Your wording of choices is faulty. Cash is not inconvenient however, competing currencies must be allowed. That means gold and silver---and CRIMINALIZING Bitcoin, which is another Pilgrims Society conspiracy to steal from millions.
Bill Gates = "**** 666"
His polio vaccine "charity" has caused almost 50,000 paralysis deaths. Proof? Here it is
http://nsnbc.me/2013/05/08/bi...
Gates is a member of the Order of the British Empire. He takes orders from the British Royal family. As soon as his fortune was pledged to Crown objectives, the U.S. Justice Department took the heat off Microsoft. Gates is a FLUNKY for his SUPERIORS in London. Bill Gates Prince Charles
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No thanks!
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Actually, I want the free choice to have privacy and convenience in the right balance at the right time. Keep cash and keep non-cash payment systems. As for smart phones, it is odd to hear that the poor can afford them when I choose not to spend my money on one.
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Who is going to supply all those poor folks (who have no money) cell phones and cell phone services so they can bank digitally? Probably the U.S. taxpayer! Just so Bill can test his digital financial slavery pilot program on the poor. SHAME ON YOU BILL GATES.
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And I want to OWN MY MONEY.
If all you have is an "account", you really have nothing.
It could be frozen with a couple of keystrokes, or taken away with a couple more.
Fark YOU Bill The Gates! NWO ******.
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You will have to pry my cash from my cold dead hands.
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Bill Gates works for his daddy Lucifer....how about a nice vaccine to go with your iPhone 9?
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Then comes the day when a solar storm or an EMP bomb wipes away the records! Cards are undoubtedly convenient, but cash (or gold!) is material wealth in your pocket. If you're afraid of robbery, stay alert and buy a Walther PPK!
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That's OVER and ABOVE what the government could do to you if you became an enemy of the state.

. . .Oh, and picture all your bank accounts being frozen until you paid that parking ticket, your taxes, ***** support, an overdue book fee at the local library, etc.
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yikes
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Or someone else's ***** support that got attached to your account.
Once the bureaucrats get your money they don't car if you owe or not.
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"picture all your bank accounts being frozen until you paid that parking ticket, your taxes, ***** support, an overdue book fee at the local library, etc."
They wouldn't freeze them, they would just empty them.
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Freeze, empty. . .tomato, tomoto. :-)
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"Your terms are acceptable."

terms acceptable

:-)
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I actually want both. I enjoy the convenience of being able to just carry my debit card and the security, at least from pickpockets, that having my money in the bank represents. But I like the privacy that cash gives. Even if you are not worried about the government, how are you supposed to keep that necklace you bought for your wife's birthday secret if the charge to the jeweler is going to show on your bank statement before you give it to her.
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we'll be wearing our credit chips under our skin when these people get their way
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The day we let computers and card take over the economy is gonna be a sad day I think. With just a few strokes of a keyboard, there goes your lifesavings. Its still possible now, with money being in the banks, but at least there's a chance you can survive if you save enough cash on your own. But get rid of cash, and good luck with that.
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Indeed, and the most convenient location will be in the palm of our hands or in our foreheads.
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serendipity? or irony? **** to tell :)
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More like prophecy.
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The concept of electronic money is a little scary for me. Digital money can disappear more easily than cash.

A few years ago there was an issue between Amazon and the publishers of Harry Potter (digital version). They came to an agreement that anyone who purchased the digital text could no longer use it and it was removed from Kindle devices. Everyone got a refund, but the point is how easily an entity can access digital information and move it around--even without permission (because you signed the user agreement, a binding contract that doesn't normally come into play except for cases like this)
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Unfortunately it will happen one day it's called the mark of the beast, and no purchasing will be done without it. I plan to be gone when all that takes place though.
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One rich idiot to help other rich idiots ruin us all!
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Change the word 'ruin' to the word 'own' and you'll have it. :-)
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What happens when the digital currency gets hacked into. If they can hack governments they certainly can hack this stupid idea.
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BAD news. It's bad enough that carrying any amount of cash will get it stolen by the police because it "could" be part of a crime. Maybe it's time to replace my incadescent bulb stash with cash.
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When physical FRN's or other means of physical discharge of debt are no longer allowed (mark of the beast computer chip [rfid]), I might have to quit participating in the Devil's system.
The whole Gates bloodline can go to Rot.
Europe has been using cell-phones for buying stuff since last decade, including vending machines.
If you think that all this electronic "money" is safe on the 'smart' phone, then you don't know hackers.
All corporation gov't's are illegitimate.
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Convenience is good but some transactions I'd prefer to keep private. Hey, what I do with my money is nobody's business but my own.

If I CHOOSE to make my expenditures public, like when I use a credit card, that's up to me. If I choose not to, that's what cash is for sometimes.
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Although a govt crackdown in this form does create some interesting opportunities for black market activities.
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What convenience? The people at the store swiping plastic or going paperless take twice the time to finish a transaction as a cash paying customer. Also, with the ease hackers regularly violate store and banking databases you think I want all my eggs in that basket? No thanks. I don't like the idea that a single virus or hacker can delete my entire life savings with a single stroke on a keyboard.
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Cashless society my ***. We can't even discontinue product of the American penny without the doom sayers crawling out preaching the *** of democracy as we know it.
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Yeah, and what's a penny cost now? About 2 cents isn't it?
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It's coming sooner than we think.
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I am suspicious of any control by the government. Yes, I like my debit card but I still prefer to use cash.
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Tremendously. Not only would it force people to do business with an industry whether they wish to or not, there are other dangers to a cashless society as well. Government would instantly have access to your funds, and blocking or confiscating your money. This would literally leave one in dire straights. There are also the usual problems that some choose to chance for convenience and others do not, such as hackers, being stranded without cash during a power outage, etc. Then there's the fact that once the fusion centers are effectively operating as designed, everything you spend money on will be available to a plethora of agencies with a simple check on the computer. (Does NOT matter whether people have something to hide or not, it is simply a matter of PRIVACY.) The bail-in concept is also a great concern.
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