I actually remember hearing that story about the counterfeit bills coming from China but didn't think anything of it at the time. Yet 1 year later, there's allegations of fake ballots coming in from China that helped with the election theft. Fentanyl Floyd was caught using fake cash, I believe $20 bills. Wonder if the $1 bills being caught was a distraction to allow for bigger bills to make their way into circulation? One might think that $1 bills are the most widely circulated because of their low value... but that's not exactly true.
Digital currency has been a regular part of the way of life for well over a decade. Physical coins and cash will be gone, they mostly already are gone. In 2020, many businesses stopped accepting cash. In my [former] workplace, it was credit/debit cards only because of the fear of "surface transmission" on cash. I remember lots of customers being pissed about having to use cards, but they eventually just adapted. Honestly, for some functions of our business, it dramatically improved customer service and accounting and even now, we're handling all billing through email/online processes. The customers/members love it. 85 year old guys are paying for services/goods on their smart phones. It's actually incredible. More and more people using things like Venmo, Zelle, CashApp.... this was inevitable. A huge portion of workers haven't touched physical cash for their wages in years.... they get checks, and actually most likely use direct deposit... accounting notes... ALL DIGITAL.
I don't know how much of an impact spreading viruses on paper money could have made or did make, especially since even the CDC eventually came out and admitted they were way off on their expectations when it came to alleged severity of surface transmission, and again we're talking about a virus with a 99.5% survival rate in the US (330 mill population... "700k" deaths.... do the math). All of the "rona/virus" speculation aside, what if it was all less about the physical transmission of "viruses" on paper money, but more for the purpose of eliminating cash and completing the final transition into all digital currency? Viruses are just as deadly in the digital world are they not? Identity theft. Fraud. Embezzlement. Market manipulation. Crypto currency is changing the world. Everything we've know about the financial systems are being revealed, the system is being transformed....
Anyone who got the emails from ExpertBread would hopefully remember his email about the First Act, with a painting of Jesus running the money changers out of the temple. Corruption requires power and power requires money, and as we all know the love of money is the root of all evil. It's always about the money. Follow the money. SHOW ME THE MONEY.
On 25 January 2020 $900,000 in counterfeit $1 bills from China
seized at International Falls, Minnisota.
https://youtu.be/l4AcHjvYBpA (44 sec)
https://youtu.be/Lqt39bn1L8o (55 sec)
What's the point of counterfeiting $900,000 in $1 bills.?
Nice vector for spreading a virus... eh?
https://youtu.be/ak-ile2HUFY (2 min, 1 sec)
I forget...
Why exactly did that shop owner call the police on George Floyd?
cc: u/MAGAdeburger u/v8power
https://patriots.win/p/12jJigtD1U/with-all-the-evidence-coming-out/
I actually remember hearing that story about the counterfeit bills coming from China but didn't think anything of it at the time. Yet 1 year later, there's allegations of fake ballots coming in from China that helped with the election theft. Fentanyl Floyd was caught using fake cash, I believe $20 bills. Wonder if the $1 bills being caught was a distraction to allow for bigger bills to make their way into circulation? One might think that $1 bills are the most widely circulated because of their low value... but that's not exactly true.
https://www.federalreserve.gov/paymentsystems/coin_currcircvolume.htm https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2019/03/04/there-are-more-bills-circulation-than-bills-it-makes-no-cents/
Digital currency has been a regular part of the way of life for well over a decade. Physical coins and cash will be gone, they mostly already are gone. In 2020, many businesses stopped accepting cash. In my [former] workplace, it was credit/debit cards only because of the fear of "surface transmission" on cash. I remember lots of customers being pissed about having to use cards, but they eventually just adapted. Honestly, for some functions of our business, it dramatically improved customer service and accounting and even now, we're handling all billing through email/online processes. The customers/members love it. 85 year old guys are paying for services/goods on their smart phones. It's actually incredible. More and more people using things like Venmo, Zelle, CashApp.... this was inevitable. A huge portion of workers haven't touched physical cash for their wages in years.... they get checks, and actually most likely use direct deposit... accounting notes... ALL DIGITAL.
I don't know how much of an impact spreading viruses on paper money could have made or did make, especially since even the CDC eventually came out and admitted they were way off on their expectations when it came to alleged severity of surface transmission, and again we're talking about a virus with a 99.5% survival rate in the US (330 mill population... "700k" deaths.... do the math). All of the "rona/virus" speculation aside, what if it was all less about the physical transmission of "viruses" on paper money, but more for the purpose of eliminating cash and completing the final transition into all digital currency? Viruses are just as deadly in the digital world are they not? Identity theft. Fraud. Embezzlement. Market manipulation. Crypto currency is changing the world. Everything we've know about the financial systems are being revealed, the system is being transformed....
Anyone who got the emails from ExpertBread would hopefully remember his email about the First Act, with a painting of Jesus running the money changers out of the temple. Corruption requires power and power requires money, and as we all know the love of money is the root of all evil. It's always about the money. Follow the money. SHOW ME THE MONEY.
No relationship... just skullduggery and things that go bump in the night
in the recent past that are part of the movie we are watching.
Embracing the concept of suspension of disbelief makes the movie easier
to watch... and every now and then... to enjoy.
Were not both events great plot twists?
What's your take on counterfeiting $1 bills?
Could purely be a debasing of the USD