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A woman in Queensland was shocked when she went to her bank to withdraw cash but was told they didn't have any. Taryn Compton needed money to pay a tradie, but the ANZ ATM didn't have her EFTPOS card. When she asked the teller for cash, she was told the bank no longer carries cash. Taryn found it crazy and was confused about what the bank had if there was no cash available. The bank explained they don't carry cash anymore, leaving Taryn without her money.

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ANZ bank has confirmed that some branches no longer handle cash at the counter, directing customers to smart ATMs instead. The number of ATMs has decreased from 14,000 in 2017 to around 6,000 last year. Cash is no longer as popular, with people finding it more convenient to go cashless. Australia's cash supply is shrinking for the first time since the introduction of dollars and cents in the 1960s. The country is becoming more reliant on digital payment methods, a trend that has been developing for a while.

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We must not allow the elimination of cash. If we rely solely on central bank digital currencies, the computer will anticipate our actions and prevent us from doing certain things. For instance, if there is a restriction on traveling beyond 5 miles from home and you attempt to buy water 6 miles away, you will be denied. There are numerous reasons why it is important to keep cash.

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Losing cash and relying solely on central bank digital currencies would give authorities the power to predict and control our actions. They could prevent us from doing things like buying a bottle of water if it goes against their rules, such as not leaving our house beyond a certain distance. This is why it's important to keep cash. It's concerning that politicians think they have the right to access all our information.

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We've lived under a system where bankers manage monetary policy and elected officials handle fiscal policy. If we centralize control over both, we risk losing personal freedom. This could lead to a digital monetary system where authorities dictate how and where we can spend our money. For example, during the pandemic, restrictions could limit our spending to certain areas or items. It's crucial to preserve cash and checks to maintain an analog system. Experiences from disasters, like the cyclone in New Zealand, highlight the importance of cash for transactions when digital systems fail. Countries like Norway are recognizing this need and are reversing the trend toward a cashless society. Without cash, people face significant challenges during emergencies.

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You know my country was the first where they made cash illegal. 2016, digitalization was forced from the country. 08:00 in the evening announced midnight cash was illegal, the big notes. And 70% of the economy crashed. This digitalization is now going all over the world and there's a war on cash. They call it war on cash. Because cash is merely a medium of exchange. It has no value in itself. It's just a promise. You read the dollar note it says I promise to pay the bearer. But an element of that great reset is you will own nothing. And you might have also followed that while all this has been happening the founder of the World Economic Forum did a book called The Great Reset on how to deal with the COVID crisis.

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In this video, the speaker discusses the shift towards a cashless society and the implementation of a social credit system. They mention that their country was the first to make cash illegal in 2016, leading to a significant economic downturn. The speaker explains that digitalization is spreading worldwide, with a focus on eliminating cash. They highlight the potential dangers of this shift, such as the control of finances by big tech and the creation of a social credit system similar to China's. The speaker also mentions the concept of "The Great Reset" and expresses concern about the idea of individuals owning nothing. They emphasize the importance of awakening to these issues.

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They will impose digital ID on everyone, but it's not necessary. They want control, so decline it. They also plan to introduce central bank digital currencies, which will track your purchases. They claim cash will still be available, but they will find a way to remove it. Use cash whenever possible and avoid businesses that don't accept it. If you don't resist these measures, it could lead to a dangerous future. They want to take control and potentially harm people. It's important to consider this alternative perspective and protect your freedom and property.

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We are heading towards a future where freedom is at risk. By 2030, Britain may restrict travel and eliminate private transportation, requiring digital IDs and electronic money for all transactions. This level of control has been building for decades, and we must resist now to prevent becoming slaves to a cashless society.

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In China, the government controls citizens' spending through a social credit system linked to bank accounts. Programmable money is being tested in countries like Sweden and Canada. This technology could soon track and limit individual carbon usage, with penalties for exceeding limits including fines automatically deducted from bank accounts.

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Banks are increasingly restricting withdrawals and deposits. A friend attempted to withdraw $20 but was told he needed to explain its purpose. When he went to withdraw $20,000, the bank required proof of where the money was going. Additionally, attempts to invest in Bitcoin were limited to just $5 a month. This reflects a broader trend towards a cashless society, which could lead to increased control over personal finances. It's essential to diversify your funds across multiple banks, as relying on bank insurance can be risky. Political views can also affect banking access, as seen with Nigel Farage's experience of being debanked. Ultimately, it's crucial to take control of your finances and decentralize your money.

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Introducing the electronic euro, switching to this currency can help by reducing the use of cash. In Europe, cash payments above €1,000 are considered illegal and can result in fines or jail time. However, the digital euro will have some level of control. For small amounts like €300 or €400, there may be a mechanism with zero control, but this could be risky. In the past, terrorist attacks in France were funded through small anonymous credit cards that could be recharged without revealing the user's identity.

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Digital money offers significant benefits, including programmability and the ability to set expiry dates for central bank currency. In my book, I discuss the potential for a world where the government can restrict the use of central bank money for certain purchases it deems undesirable. This could lead to a better or darker future, depending on one's perspective.

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Digital money offers significant benefits, including programmability and the ability to set expiry dates for central bank currency. In my book, I explore the potential for a world where the government can restrict the use of central bank money for certain purchases it deems less desirable. This could lead to a better or darker future, depending on one's perspective.

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There is a push towards digitalization for safety and convenience, but we must unite against losing freedoms. Central bank digital currencies are advancing globally. Localism is key - use cash, support local farmers, and keep money circulating within communities to empower local economies. Embrace localism over globalism for a more nuanced debate. By taking control of our local economy, we retain power and autonomy.

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Jamaica is accelerating its path to becoming a fully digital society, with upcoming announcements in the coming weeks and days. The country has established the national identification system and put in place a digital currency, while directing ministries to digitalize their operations. Most ministries are moving from paper-based to digital systems. The military is transitioning, and the society is moving very quickly to become digital. Banking consumers are noticing rapid digitalization as banks advance in that direction. Artificial intelligence is now a factor in the ecosystem. Very soon, the position of a human being exchanging cash will disappear from the banking system, and interfacing with machines will become the norm. The speaker emphasizes that this is not meant to be a scary thought, but something to embrace.

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A big bank has confirmed that some branches no longer handle cash over the counter, directing customers to smart ATMs instead. The number of ATMs has decreased by more than half since 2017. In a conversation, one person asks for change but is told that cash is no longer used. The other person agrees, stating that not having cash is more convenient. This marks another step towards a cashless society.

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The speaker describes the current situation as “Peri’s tyrannical” state, saying that moving around and living will require a digital ID with only “two clicks left,” and that cashless systems—specifically central bank digital currencies—will be the only way to buy and sell. They argue that at that point people have “lost” their freedom. They connect this trajectory to the “breadcrumbs” leading to 2030, claiming that anyone can look up the United Nations’ 2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). They assert that by 2030, Britain will have no commercial passenger aircraft leaving the country, people “won’t be able to leave,” and there will be no ships leaving the country. They also claim that people will not own private transport, will have a digital ID to do everything, and will be limited to electronic money for transactions. They conclude that this amounts to slavery, and call for people to “say no right now, stop.” They further state that what is happening is “really fantastic” but that it “go[es] back decades,” emphasizing that there has been a “very long run up” toward the level of control they believe will occur if cash is eliminated. They frame the argument around preventing cash from being “wiped out of existence” and resisting the coming control.

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Catherine Austin Fitz discusses what she says is an ongoing effort to implement a digital control grid tied to “digital ID” and “programmable money,” which she describes as ending “currency” and enabling centralized enforcement of complex rules through surveillance. She says she expected a “reset” based on her earlier work—specifically a Solari Report piece describing central banking resets occurring every 80 to 120 years and converting money into programmable form—and that COVID functioned as the mechanism to drive that reset. Fitz explains that “there was a flu” every year and says the timing aligned with a coming reset rather than a disease. She references prior public attempts to build toward a global pandemic, including livestock slaughters in the UK in 2006, and earlier mentions of swine flu (2008) and other outbreaks such as MERS and SARS, describing them as attempts that were “failed” and learned from before COVID. She also describes skepticism about firearms as a factor in earlier pushback, claiming fear of people using guns against vaccination mandates stopped attempts. She says her Solari Report content spread rapidly around Planet Lockdown, noting that her interview about “State of Our Currency” and how a reset works “rocketed” and was initially not taken down. She claims the result was a dramatic consolidation of economic and political power and says it took “many people years” to realize what she calls a “ruse.” On politics and public participation, Fitz describes a “deal” between politicians and populations: “You give me a check and the story of I am good…Everybody knows it’s not true, but they pretend,” framing public repetition of narratives as “repeaters,” supported by “neuro warfare.” In her view, repeated messaging and brainwashing keep people defending official narratives in exchange for personal benefits. She addresses vaccines and describes multiple possibilities: she states vaccines could be part of an “Internet of bodies,” involving “particles” that make people easier to “manipulate” and enabling remote control, which she also frames as “loading an operating system into our body.” She also says another possibility is depopulation, describing symptoms as potentially including sterilization, lower IQ, neurological damage, and reduced life expectancy. She adds that she cannot identify which goal is real and suggests that large efforts may “stack functions.” She further describes defense and military funding secrecy and “laundering” claims, then asserts she views COVID-era vaccine efforts as poisoning military personnel and driving out “the best and the brightest.” Fitz links UK and US changes such as facial recognition, surveillance spending, QR codes, and other infrastructure buildout to the requirements of digital ID and programmable money. She distinguishes programmable money as requiring “extraordinary hardware and telecommunications infrastructure” and states that surveillance plus digital ID plus programmable money would allow systems that can “turn off” services such as cars, electricity, bank accounts, or money limits tied to location. She says stablecoin legislation and an act she names as the “Genius Act” could be followed by further digital-asset governance, describing a move of bond markets and global stock to distributed ledgers. She states she thinks the ability to “really lock everybody down” is about “a year or two away,” while citing governance, legal, financial, and practical hardware/software barriers. When asked about physical cash being phased out, Fitz says she is “not a prophet” and argues that people can protect cash through local and state actions, saying that if electricity or disasters interrupt digital systems, cash becomes necessary. She claims cash is “enjoying a resurgence” and argues that analog systems can slow total digitization; she says if “10% of the population” does what she describes, centralizers would be “backed up hugely.” For youth engagement, Fitz recommends helping people understand where digital ID leads, referencing a video she mentions about a “Brit card” and examples where losing access affects health care, buses, and travel. She also points to Solari “financial transaction freedom” videos where she says bankers describe centralized rule-setting and enforcement, presenting these as ways to make people reject the trajectory even if it requires reduced convenience. She describes her own organizational experience as evidence that digital convenience is overstated: she says her team spends time dealing with impostors, hacking prevention, system breakdowns, website hacking, email blocks, and censorship. Fitz argues that the push for digital systems is not confined to centralized institutions alone, but also relies on the incentives of many actors profiting from apps and tools aligned with centralized control. She also describes the political dynamic of “third rail” issues that elected officials will not touch, comparing presidential politics to channels that vent frustration while ensuring the “third rail” remains untouched. She uses the metaphor of “dog kings,” describing a puppet-king approach to occupied populations through making people pretend the dog is king, and says she believes a series of “dog kings” are being used, including in relation to Trump. Regarding Gaza, Gaza-linked priorities, and what she calls depopulation, Fitz asserts that efforts to stop poisoning and harm to children failing demonstrates to her that depopulation is the agenda. She describes her view of RFK Jr. as sincere in children’s health efforts but says his team’s choices later included areas outside his expertise, including crypto promotion and other proposals. She claims his confirmation hearings demonstrated “hopeless” Washington commitment to poisoning and sterilizing, globally and within the US. In her final “positive” message, Fitz promotes a Solari Report PDF titled “Coming Clean,” comparing centralizers to a tapeworm that injects cravings for what benefits it. She frames solutions as “detoxing” by stopping flows she associates with the tapeworm and removing it from one’s wallet, bank accounts, investments, and information patterns through practical sequencing. She also recommends reading “A New Science of Heaven” by Doctor Robert Temple, which she says is about plasma and that plasma makes up most of the universe, which she says leads to an “alive and intelligent” universe and optimism that centralized psychopaths cannot control everything. The host closes by repeating a message: “Say no to digital ID,” calling it a linchpin of the agenda. Fitz responds with “Amen.”

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Australia is reportedly shifting towards becoming cash-free, with over $1 billion in notes disappearing from circulation in the last year. This follows the Commonwealth Bank's trial of cashless branches in Sydney. Economists claim a cashless society could negatively impact criminals in the black market. However, it could also make life harder for elderly people who depend on cash.

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CBDC rollout was delayed despite the technology being ready around 2015. A central banker said the ultimate goal is a CBDC that looks like a small grain of rice implanted under the skin. Universal basic income will be used to encourage acceptance of CBDCs, offering monthly payments via a CBDC chip implant. In Sweden, a substantial minority has already adopted chip implants. These implants are not just from local tech firms, but early adoption tendrils from the mother ship. Now is the time for wider awareness.

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Speaker 0 argues that we are in a peri tyrannical situation with only two clicks left, describing a world where digital ID is required to move around and conduct daily life, and where cashless central bank digital currencies are the only way to buy and sell. He warns that once these systems are in place, freedom is lost. He asserts that if people follow the breadcrumbs to 2030, looking at the UN 2030 Sustainable Development Goals, Britain specifically will have no commercial passenger aircraft leaving the country, and there will be no ships leaving the country. He further claims that private transport will no longer be owned, and individuals will have a digital ID to do everything, with electronic money as the sole means of transaction. In his view, at that point, you are a slave, and because this outcome is visible, people should say no now. He urges immediate action: “Say no right now. Stop.” He emphasizes that the developments are real and significant, yet they represent a long-running buildup to the level of control that society could face if cash is eliminated. He contends that the erosion of cash is a critical pathway to this control, implying that removing physical money enables the transition to a fully digital, traceable economy. Throughout, he frames the trajectory as intentional and avoidable if people resist early changes. He connects the fear of losing mobility and autonomy to the broader objective of a monitored, all-digital existence governed by centralized systems. The core message is a warning about a near-future shift toward digital ID and cashless currencies as a loss of freedom, with a specific forecast of Britain’s aviation and maritime capabilities disappearing by 2030, a fully digitally identified population, and electronic money dominance, culminating in a status he characterizes as modern slavery.

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A woman in Queensland was shocked when she went to her bank to withdraw cash but was told they didn't have any. Taryn Compton forgot her EFTPOS card and asked for cash at the ANZ ATM, only to be informed that the bank no longer carries cash. Taryn found it absurd and was told by the bank that they don't have cash anymore, leaving her puzzled about what's in the bank if not cash. She was not given any explanation or assurance that the situation was temporary.

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What if an organization like Ericsson controlled the internet? It raises questions about how a non-government entity could hold a government hostage through its monetary system. This situation has already occurred with the current system, particularly with the Federal Reserve and SWIFT, which operates privately. For instance, withdrawing over $10,000 from a bank often prompts questions about the purpose. Debanking is also becoming common. A personal example is the 2019 shutdown of Lebanon's Central Bank, which left many without access to their funds, while local politicians managed to retrieve theirs. People often remain unconcerned until a crisis directly impacts them, similar to the 2008 real estate crash, highlighting how governance and private sectors often disregard individual concerns until they face legal consequences.

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We are introducing the electronic euro to reduce cash payments over €1,000 in Europe. The digital euro will have some control, possibly exempting very small transactions under €300-€400. However, this could pose risks, as small anonymous credit cards were used to finance terrorist attacks in France a decade ago.
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