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In China, if caught jaywalking by a traffic camera, the digital ID system with your blood, genetic code, and photo can identify you by your walk. It convicts you, deducts money from your bank account, and publicly shames you, lowering your social credit score. A low score restricts buying drinks, playing games, riding trains, or leaving your city. This system is already in place in China.

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In the US, a social credit system similar to China's is being quietly implemented by private businesses and banks, not the government. It's based on ESG standards, evaluating sustainability and ethics. Personal ESG scores are influenced by purchase history, sales records, and public data like credit reports. Buying certain items can impact your score, reflecting your impact on the environment and society. People are being pushed to align with these standards, even if they don't want to.

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They are implementing a digital transaction control grid that restricts how you use your money, when, and where. Your money could be disabled beyond a certain distance from your home, or taxes could be deducted directly from your account. This system will likely be overseen by global entities like the Bank of International Settlements, rather than national central banks.

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Governments have an ESG agenda and use money to control the population. Public opinion is also a tool for control. Money is essential for navigating society, so limiting spending can influence behavior. For example, only 10% of wages can be used for petrol or buying meat. These measures are presented as beneficial for society.

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Speaker 0 argues that a Mussolini-quote about fascism being corporatism explains today’s emerging fascist state in America, describing a system where the government merges with corporate power. He notes a prior report on digital ID deployment by private companies with customer consent, claiming the government can collect and utilize data under legal immunity while avoiding a mandate on biometric ID. He asserts that, as during COVID, individuals can choose to consent or “leave the reservation” to fend for themselves. He introduces the idea that the social credit score is actively deployed in the US. Speaker 1 shares a personal experience about ordering food on Uber Eats and noticing an algorithm determining prices based on personal data, prompting reflection on how pricing works. Speaker 0 explains that Communist China’s social credit system, launched in 2014 to “build trust in society by punishing individual behavior,” allows banks to shut off money and restrict travel, enabling the government to condition behavior individually. He claims this is now being deployed in the United States as algorithmic pricing, using automated programs to dynamically set the price of goods and services in real time and on an individual basis. The algorithms rely on large amounts of data, including customer behavior, and can charge one individual more than another for the same product based on willingness to pay and personal data. He asserts that the social credit score is present across the US, and the New York Algorithmic Pricing Disclosure Act (launched 11/10/2025) compels private corporations to notify consumers that they are being charged based on personalized algorithmic pricing. The law defines personal data as any data that identifies or could be linked to a specific consumer or device, regardless of whether the data was voluntarily provided. He says this makes every aspect of life usable to determine pricing, calling the act the first of its kind and predicting expansion to all 50 states. He concludes that the social credit score is real in America and suggests a carbon tax is soon to follow. He also mentions an “AI run cryptocurrency economy” as the United States government’s and big banks’ chosen solution in response to debt and AI competition. Speaker 2 presents a scenario for 2027: special economic zones with zero red tape, with government intervention to accelerate progress. Speaker 3 adds that the promise of vast gains could attract governments to these zones despite protests from workers who would lose jobs and rely on universal basic income, suggesting trillions in new wealth as a compelling incentive. He notes the ongoing arms race with China and the ease with which forecasts could influence presidential decisions, especially when contrasted with regulatory delays. Speaker 0 closes with attribution to Greg Reese.

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In China, the government controls citizens' spending through a social credit system linked to their bank accounts. Programmable money is being tested in countries like Sweden, South Africa, and Canada. Nearly half of the world's nations are exploring this technology. Programmable money could enforce personal carbon limits by charging individuals who exceed their monthly carbon usage. This could result in automatic fines deducted from bank accounts without the need for bills.

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Mastercard and the United Nations are collaborating on a credit card, Doconomy, to monitor the carbon impact of purchases. The card will display a message about taking responsibility for transactions to protect the planet. Doconomy claims to be the largest bank initiative educating users on consumption's impact and aims to set a global standard for carbon calculations. The system will assign a score to each purchase and potentially punish users directly, similar to China's social credit system. This enforcement will target individuals and businesses not aligned with the scheme, with banks playing a key role in its implementation. The system is currently voluntary.

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Digital money offers significant benefits, beyond just being a digital version of physical currency. It allows for programmability, such as central bank currency with expiry dates. 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, like ammunition, drugs, or pornography. This concept has the potential to be both better and darker, but it highlights the power of a central bank digital currency (CBDC).

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China's social credit system is using high-tech methods to crack down on low-level offenders like jaywalkers. Cameras record their actions, zoom in on their faces, and shame them on nearby video screens. This system goes beyond traditional credit scores, taking into account behaviors like jaywalking, smoking on trains, and excessive video game purchases. If your score drops too low, you can be banned from buying plane tickets, renting a house, or getting a loan. Over 15 million people have already been prevented from traveling. Chinese technology firms are developing advanced cameras that use AI to track everything, including people, bikes, cars, and buses. Police in Beijing wear glasses that recognize faces linked to the government's database. The fear is that this system could be used to punish those not loyal to the Communist Party, with no real due process to challenge it.

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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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The speaker discusses the potential for central bank digital currency to enable social controls by linking to credit cards and bank accounts. Dissenters could be silenced by having their accounts shut down. Control could extend to limiting meat consumption through quotas at the cash register. This level of control is likened to living on a "prison planet."

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I am against central bank digital currencies as they can be used for control and power. In China, a low social credit score can restrict your spending ability. The government could limit where your credit cards work, only allowing purchases at nearby grocery stores. This control over spending could prevent travel and purchasing goods outside your local area, causing significant issues for individuals.

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In China, a social credit score system is already in place, using facial recognition to monitor behavior like jaywalking and deduct money from accounts. This system can identify gender, estimate age, and even recognize car models. Implementation in Western nations could lead to invasive monitoring of personal habits and preferences, impacting individuals' social credit scores. This reality is already present in some places, highlighting the need for awareness and consideration of potential consequences.

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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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I am against the U.S. Government issuing a digital currency directly to citizens. It would give the government too much power and control, potentially leading to the elimination of cash and complete control over our lives. I warned the people of Italy about this when they were considering vaccine passports and central bank digital currencies. In China, if you don't meet a certain social credit score, the government can restrict your spending abilities. They can limit your credit cards to only work at nearby grocery stores, preventing you from buying gasoline, traveling, or purchasing items and food from other parts of the country or abroad. This kind of government control is concerning and could lead to serious consequences for all of us.

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Freedom of speech is important, but the freedom to transact is crucial. If the state restricts your ability to buy things using digital currency, it can control your movements without physical barriers. Central bank digital currency can monitor and limit your transactions, making it challenging to buy essentials like food, fuel, or transportation tickets.

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In China, there are 700 million cameras as part of a mass surveillance program. These cameras use facial recognition and body movements to identify individuals. They are linked to China's social credit system, where not following rules results in losing social credit points. This can lead to consequences like higher mortgage rates, taxes, slower internet, and expensive public transport. So, if you're in China, think twice before breaking any rules because you are being watched and will face consequences.

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In China, the social credit system tracks and scores citizens based on behavior. Good scores bring benefits like cheap loans, while bad scores lead to public shame and restrictions. Surveillance cameras and AI are used to monitor citizens, who can be penalized for littering or gossiping. The system will be nationwide soon, with few daring to criticize it for fear of a low score. This control raises concerns about privacy and freedom.

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Speaker 0: Control structure for taking over The United States and the rest of the world has been revealed. Please check this out. Speaker 1: The biggest part of the great reset that you're all missing is the carbon credit scan. And what is the carbon credit scan? This is where they're telling you where they want to monitor, track and trace every so called kilogram of CO2 that you emit. And they say the global average needs to be two tons per person per year and you're using 16 tons per person per year, which means your activity has to go down by 800%. So how do they plan to do that? Well, first of all, they got the new first Mastercard in the world that is going to show a carbon allowance for every single purchase you buy. And to make sure that everything has a so called carbon credit, food. When you buy food now, if it's vegan, it's gonna show you this nice low score of only one kilogram, 1.3 kilograms of CO2 per serving. Now meat will be off the charts, so that's gonna be a no no. Check this out. If you go to a restaurant, even an Italian pizza place, they're gonna show you the amount of CO2 for your dish. So literally everything you eat, everything you buy, is your clothes made of leather, that's going to cost more CO2 because it came from a cow. So every single thing you do is going to be tracked. Why? Because they want to put limits on how much you can spend monthly. They're telling you you're using 16 tons a year and they want you to use two tons a year. What does two tons look like? Well, check this out. Say you wanted to fly from Toronto to Amsterdam and now Google, by the way, Google Flights shows the carbon emissions on that flight. That flight from Toronto to Amsterdam is four seventy eight kilograms of CO2. That's almost 25% of your yearly allowance. But don't worry, if you go over your limit, they're going to charge you $170 for every kilogram, for every kilogram of carbon credits you need. This is how they're going to control where you go, how you're going to get there, what you can buy, what you can eat, who you can see. And now imagine that in a world without cash. And imagine that in a world where the government gets to control every single transaction. And this is why they're constructing fifteen minute cities, aka prison camps, because when they put these carbon credit allowances into these cities, they're gonna have you on perpetual lockdown like they did with COVID without having a virus. Thank you, everybody.

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Mastercard and the United Nations have partnered to create a new credit card called Dokonomy. This card aims to monitor the carbon impact of your purchases and will eventually stop working once you reach your carbon limit. The initiative is voluntary for now and is considered a proof of concept. Dokonomy's website claims it is the largest effort by a bank to educate users on consumption impact and set a global standard for carbon calculations. Once the calculations are in place, every purchase will be assigned a score, allowing for direct punishment. This enforcement will apply to individuals, businesses, and banks that do not comply with the scheme, similar to China's social credit system.

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The speaker begins by noting that digital money offers substantial potential gains beyond merely digitizing physical currency. He highlights that digital money can introduce programmability, enabling features such as units of central bank currency with expiry dates. He references his book to illustrate a scenario in which central bank money could be programmed in ways that influence what can be purchased with it. The speaker describes a potentially better future, but also acknowledges a darker possibility. In a less favorable scenario, the government could decide that units of central bank money may be used to buy certain items while restricting others that it deems less desirable, such as ammunition, drugs, or pornography. He underscores that such capabilities would be very powerful in terms of how central bank money is used. He then emphasizes the implications for central banks themselves. The speaker argues that if central bank money takes on different characteristics across various units, or if central bank money becomes a conduit for targeted economic policies or broader social policies, this could threaten the integrity of central bank money. He extends the concern to the independence of central banks, implying that targeted or constrained use of central bank money could compromise their neutral status. The speaker reiterates that digital money holds wonderful possibilities, suggesting enhancements to monetary systems and policy implementation. However, he cautions that technology also carries a significant risk of steering outcomes toward a less desirable or more constricted use of money, potentially undermining core monetary principles or the perceived neutrality of central banking. In summary, the speaker presents a dual view: digital money can enable innovative features, flexibility, and new policy tools, yet it can also enable highly centralized or targeted controls over purchases and behavior. This duality raises concerns about the potential benefits versus the dangers, particularly regarding the integrity and independence of central banks if their money is used to enforce selective or restricted consumer choices. The overall message is a call to recognize both the transformative promise of digital money and the serious risks that could accompany its deployment.

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The CEO of a Dutch bank suggested the idea of a personal carbon credit, similar to a digital passport, which would track and limit individuals' carbon footprints. This proposal would allow wealthy individuals to buy carbon credits from those who cannot afford to travel or consume meat frequently. This system would perpetuate wealth inequality, creating a neofeudalistic society. The implications of this concept were discussed openly in the media, without any sense of controversy.

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Speaker 0 asserts that the control grid arrived in America via Apple, stating they worked for Apple for seventeen years and still hold stock, so they find no joy in revealing this. They claim there are no good guys here and argue that we need to shut it down while we can. They state that Apple just rolled out digital ID integration and acknowledge it sounds convenient, but warn that every convenience has a price. According to them, once identity goes digital, it becomes programmable, and once programmable, it becomes controllable. They contend that individuals are handing over their entire identity wrapped in a product, a file that can easily be deleted. If one does not comply, access is lost; if opinions are not liked, accounts are frozen. They claim that stepping out of line results in travel restrictions, bank transfer blocks, and loss of benefits. They insist this is not speculation and that it is already live. Examples are offered to illustrate the claim: Thailand has programmable digital currency; Europe introduced biometric wallets; Canada froze accounts during protests; China is described as having started the pilot and now in full production mode with a live social credit system. They assert that China is secretly building the infrastructure at a global level right now, not through laws or force, but through updates and convenience. They claim that in Vietnam, 86,000,000 bank accounts were deleted because people wouldn’t agree to a digital ID. Concerning the European Union, they state that by 2027, large cash payments will be outlawed, forcing people onto digital rails that can be controlled. They describe this as just the on ramp, arguing that freedom becomes conditional when identity is controlled by a corporation or a government that can revoke it with a keystroke. They describe the arrival of dystopia as occurring not with tanks or force, but with app updates or convenience. They conclude by urging listeners to pay attention and push back while they still can. The message ends with an appeal to “Let’s go,” emphasizing urgency to resist the rollout of digital identity and programmable control embedded in convenient updates and services.

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Mastercard and the United Nations are collaborating on a new credit card, doconomy, that monitors the carbon impact of purchases. Users will have a carbon limit, and the card will stop working once reached. It's voluntary for now, but aims to promote environmental responsibility. The card assigns a social credit score based on carbon calculations, with plans to set a global standard. Non-compliant businesses and individuals may face consequences enforced by banks. This system resembles China's approach to monitoring carbon emissions.
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