Nesara is wishful think. If anyone is pushing NESARA it's a red flag. Stay frost.
(media.greatawakening.win)
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I posted this before, but it is relevant here.
Where we are:
Fiat Currency is worthless, people just don't realize it yet.
Gold, Silver and other precious metals are outside the scope of the average person. They have no idea of the value of gold and silver, and to fall back on it would be disastrous and heavily one-sided to those who already have been hoarding it, (particularly the banks). Shortly -- if you need bread, and you have gold coins, you will still not get their worth in bread because people can't see gold anymore.
Cryptocurrency would eventually remove cash, which is necessary as a component of society to function. A 100% digital money landscape would be as troublesome as a 100% barter landscape. It is untenable, and a joint cash, barter, digital (debit/credit/crypto) system is necessary, if only so global commerce can function in a timely manner.
NESARA/GESARA as proposed by the nutters is impossible and fully open to corruption from the top. The AI systems' core software would have to remain secret, and everything secret is ripe for infiltration. If you're so secret, then who will help you when someone climbs to the top and rewrites everything for their self? How would anyone be able to discover malicious alterations from the top? No one would ever find out. If real, these are designed to fail.
Debt is not real. Most of peoples' debts are from interest built on an initial debt. Effectively, they have already paid for what they purchased, but are still paying on it. Low% interest schemes will not solve this. The only way to solve this problem is to cap all debt such that accumulated debt due to interest cannot exceed the total cost of the loan. This will work, because everyone can parse the idea of paying twice for something just to have it now. It is not nebulous and it is a tidy 1:1 that even a child can understand.
No digital system can prevent the Barter System. People will always be able to trade creations of their own hand without being monitored by the Governance, thus no tax on barter is ever feasible outside a nano-tech dystopia where computers are interwoven in all organic matter for 24/7 surveillance.
The only commodities are those that unga-bunga cave men can understand have value. If electricity dies, and we are sent back to a concrete stone age, the things that have value in such a world will continue to have value. Things like wood, gasoline, raw metal, thread, piping, storage containers, bags, transportation, food, tools, information (technical and craft books), and low-cost forms of entertainment. These are the only investment you can make right now that will 100% not devalue, as their value is intrinsic to their nature (ignoring perishability).
So what is the solution?
A hybrid system of Stocks/Crypto, Metal-Dollar, Debit/Credit, Cash and Barter.
All the above, basically.
Each have GLARING flaws that people exploit. Fix the exploitable flaws using the nature of another form of currency and you will create a woven cycle like this:
https://www.fizzicseducation.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/2a.jpg
No economic vector can fail. As soon as one starts to get heavy with flaws, a brief sell off will immediately happen and shift to the next woven thread as a dominant form. There can be no growth and bust cycle, and the system will run like a wheel in perpetuity.
The system must be designed such that the failings of one vector of commerce will be grafted to the strengths of another vector, and its weakness in turn grafted to another strength, in a loop.
This is how a family works. This is how life works. It never fails to keep running.
It would take a far wiser man than I to weave it together, but the idea is sound as the idea follows the immutable Law of Seasons.
This is the definition of usury from Noah Webster's Dictionary published in 1828-
Usury
U'SURY, noun s as z. [Latin usura, from utor, to use.]
[Usury formerly denoted any legal interest, but in this sense, the word is no longer in use.]
In present usage, illegal interest; a premium or compensation paid or stipulated to be paid for the use of money borrowed or retained, beyond the rate of interest established by law.
The practice of taking interest. obsolete
And here's the modern definition from Merriam Webster-
Definition of usury
1 : the lending of money with an interest charge for its use especially : the lending of money at exorbitant interest rates
2 : an unconscionable or exorbitant rate or amount of interest specifically : interest in excess of a legal rate charged to a borrower for the use of money
3 archaic : interest
From the KJV-
Exodus 22:25
If thou lend money to any of my people that is poor by thee, thou shalt not be to him as an usurer, neither shalt thou lay upon him usury.
Basically, you shouldn't charge interest to people who can't afford to pay it back. Payday loans are an abomination to the Lord.
Proverbs also provides this warning-
Proverbs 22:7
The rich ruleth over the poor, and the borrower is servant to the lender.
When I say that, I mean the debt due to interest isn't real.
If the pay-back of the loan isn't capped, eventually you end up paying back your loan indefinitely.
Effectively, you're paying someone for taking your payment. You've well passed the point of paying for the thing you wanted, maybe a dozen times over, but you're still paying the loaner for it. It means that it is entirely possible for a pack of gum to end up costing you as much as a mansion.
It's a farce. It's slavery. There is no good in it, and it's a completely one-sided transaction.
Debt has its place, but it isn't "real" because at a certain point you don't even remember what you went into debt for to begin with. You just pay the loaner who says you owe him something.
My solution would not be to affect interest at all, but to cap all loans such that you cannot demand someone pay you back double what you lent. A hard limit on debt means there would be no way to trap someone as your permanent debt slave.
Additionally, people would be more likely to pay back a loan promptly if they knew there was a limit on the loan. Instead of them just saying "I'll never pay it back anyway, so I'll just cover the interest until I die so they don't reposes stuff" they say "If I pay back the loan before X date, I end up owing 20% less than the total." It gives them a tangible goal to pursue in order to not end up owing the full amount. That would also keep the loaner happy, because they get their money back faster so they can lend more to others.
In summary, debt, as it is today, is a fantasy. The vast majority have no intent on paying it back before they die, so do they really owe that money at all?
Yes, but ...
A bank can lend out your money several times over. Basically, they can invent money out of thin air. When was the last time you went to the bank for a loan and they said you would have to wait because they were out of stock?
Simple example: You put $1,000 into the bank. The bank lends that money to 10 people at 10% interest. A year later, it could be that everyone has paid back their $1,000. So the bank then has $10,000. The borrowers have also paid back $100 in interest. So the bank has another $1,000.
OK, it relies on everyone not taking out their cash all at once but, traditionally, if that happens the banks say please help, we are too big to fail, bail us out with tax dollars. There is a banking collapse and they continue as before.
Another issue is the central banks that print the money. They lend that to the government - with interest. Now if you think about it, it is not possible for any government to pay that money all back.
Imagine: They print $1 billion at 10% interest. Next year, the government then owes the bank $1.1 billion but only $1 billion actually exists. How can they ever pay back that interest? They borrow more to pay back the interest. After a few years of that the government runs up a debt of $trillions.
In this example and my previous one, the banks are inventing money and charging interest on it.
Never depend on something that inflation can sweep out from under you.
401k's, Pensions, and Retirement plans are all traps by design.
Commodities, too, can drop to nothing instantaneously.
The astute would notice I didn't include land as a form of currency.
Land should be your retirement plan. They can find a new vein of gold, invent a new crypto, and stocks will rise and fall like leaves in the wind, but the one thing that always has the same true value as the day you bought it is land, no matter what is or isn't on it.
That's why all the boomers have rental properties. Their parents knew the importance of land, told them to buy up land, but the boomers have forgotten exactly WHY land is important.
Land is your legacy. Your family's blood, sweat, and tears give it life. It's the only thing you can give to your progeny that guarantees they have a home.
A retirement account is a promise, that is all.
Also, the debt is not ours. It's the cabals.
The Cabal can own nothing. It all belongs to God.
That is their fantasy, and they cling to it like a child clinging to his blankie.
They find no security in their own things, so they yearn for ours.
Debt is their imaginary hand stuck in our pockets, pockets their eyes have told them must be rich with treasure.
They'll lose their mind when they discover the pocket empty of all tangible items, instead filled only with the dreams of infinite potential -- the potential they once had but sold along with their souls when they made their dirty pacts with the adversary.
Debt in fiat indeed is not real.
Though I see debt, in the sense of obligation to restore to the owner after hiring a thing of value.
e.g: renting a house; renting a car, renting a drill, that sort of thing.
With renting gold and silver the problem arises when no gold and silver is around to satisfy the restoration of the rented gold and silver to the original owner.
Hence my position that debt in fiat means nothing, but debt in gold and silver is a debt in value.
The current system is also stacked against a debtor. Say a debt is being collected by means of the courts. The courts are paid first, then the lawyers, the interest is satisfied and the accompanying costs, and then somewhere at the end of the line as an after thought, the principle that started everything.
It keeps the owner of the principal often wanting but also the debtor. And consequently we see a growing group of people living of the back of people who actually do not have the means to pay them. This system is a system that favors the vultures, dealing in bullshit for value, instead of value for value.
Rightly so, this system indeed needs a change, a different footing. NESARA/ GESARA is not the solution and is actually nothing more than a thinly veiled commie plot.
Steps to improve your life:
Fuck the paper FEDERAL RESERVE NOTE.
Crypto will be cash just fine (XMR)
If the lights go out, and no one can charge their phones in order to transfer it off the encrypted flash drives, then you're not gonna be able to buy that bread.
It has glaring flaws, and those flaws aren't remedied without first acknowledging they are a lousy substitute for unplugged cash or coin.
If they make a paper dollar built on crypto just so ol' Jonah up in Alaska, whose closest possession to a smart phone is a HAM radio from the 70's, can use it to pay for his dried beans this winter, you will still not be able to hide it under your bed like you can gold, silver, and other precious metals.
It's a gassy money. You can smell it, hear it, understand it is there, and sometimes even see it, but you can never hold it in your hands.
Keep in mind, I'm not saying crypto is useless.
Far from it. Crypto is the absolute best currency form for international trade. Its instantaneous, free from inflation, and is best decoupled from a single nation. It can be used as a universal currency such that no one country has power over it.
Countries can hoard gold, and have gold in their interiors they can mine for.
Countries can't find new stashes of crypto, and, while they can hoard it, since its value is only determined by its market liquidity, hoarding it would only make the value go up such that the ones to gain are those who have tied it up in investments, where it can continue to move AND grow.
Sitting on crypto, when the max quantity in circulation is locked, means once everyone who would hoard it stops trading it, it will stabilize and its value will lock again anyways. Because of that, there is no way to get long-term gains on hoarding it without tricking others to hoard it and then quickly selling it off when they take the bait.
But as a cash... As a physical currency... With a note printed for unplugged transactions...
It's pretty freaking meh. Plus, we haven't even gone into the eventuality of counterfeiters having their way with the printed crypto-dollars. That would definitely put a nail in its tangibility coffin, if nothing else.