I absolutely would agree with that. And it's not only the permissioning too, it's the rules too. Just give you one example, in China, they'd have issued a central bank digital currency, a digital yuan. And one of the things that they did with it was, they put on its a bunch of rules that if you actually bought into this currency, you were in to use the crypto version, you are airdropped money, they put extra money in your account. But they put rules on what you could do with the money, you had to spend it in a certain period of time, I think they gave you 30 days. And you had to spend it on certain things, and you couldn't spend it on other things. And even in China, even though they were giving you free money, with all those rules, didn't go over very well. People don't like you know, to have all of those restrictions.
I live in China controlled Hong Kong and this is exactly what they are doing here. We are presently in heavy lockdown and they're giving us money with the excuse because of the lockdown. Then there's also a time limit and how we can spend that money.
There's a lot of agendas going on because of 'covid' but seems like this is part of the financial experiment. Free money that they print, and at the same time, we have to spend it to push a consistent consumer driven economy to keep the GDP up.> >
I live in China controlled Hong Kong and this is exactly what they are doing here. We are presently in heavy lockdown and they're giving us money with the excuse because of the lockdown. Then there's also a time limit and how we can spend that money.
There's a lot of agendas going on because of 'covid' but seems like this is part of the financial experiment. Free money that they print, and at the same time, we have to spend it to push a consistent consumer driven economy to keep the GDP up.> >
This is fascinating, in a despotic sort of way. Lockdowns in order to experiment with acceptance and usage of digital currency.