My wife's father died early last year and his estate was finally settled recently and she received several large checks from the settlement of the estate. She listens to my rants about what is going on and I can see it in her eyes of here he goes again. Today, she went to the bank and the teller told her that the check cashing network has been down for several days and isn't expecting to be up anytime soon. She called me and said something big is coming down the pipe and is actually somewhat concerned now. It was like a switch was flipped in her that said maybe my husband isn't so crazy anymore and he might actually be seeing something coming down the pipeline.
I can't help but wonder if the behind-the-scenes for GESARA/NESARA is getting ready to be put in place. The power that be are intentionally slowing down the banking system to make sure that they capture everything and making sure that it's assigned to the right people and their accounts.
I was a bank teller for many years and we have always had rules when it comes to cashing large checks. Anything over $10k, we always asked they make an appointment in advance so we could order more cash from our main vault to have on hand. Most banks don’t keep as much cash on hand as people think for security reasons. We could only cash checks under two circumstances. The first one being that the check is from our bank so we can verify the funds are available. The second circumstance being that the person presenting the check has an account with us and they have enough money in their account to cover the check in case it bounces. Normally the only exception we made to those two rules was if it was a payroll check that a bank customer brought in regularly and we felt confident it wouldn’t bounce. I don’t know what the “check cashing network” is and I’m pretty sure that teller doesn’t either. She was probably just too lazy or dumb to explain why she couldn’t cash the check. I’m all for the Q movement but I don’t think this experience at the bank means anything.
Banks nearly always have fragile IT systems that have grown organically for years especially with mergers and acquisitions. It's not that uncommon to have ridiculous outages that you would wrongly assume to be impossible. Bank named TSB in England was bought by Santander from Spain and they wrecked everything for weeks after trying to create a common IT.