The Dash From Cash

Posted by Burtman on
Jun 12, 17:57.
June 12 2025, 05:57 pm.

Updated:
Jun 20, 19:17.
June 20 2025, 07:17 pm.

Read Time: About 4 Minutes

In a move that the globalist technocracy won't appreciate, Sweden has begun reversing their self-inflicted cashless lunacy. This is wonderful news.

Let me explain.

Over the past few decades, the banksters and their puppet masters have been working pretty hard to remove cash from our system, and in the last few years, their movement has been getting quite a boost. When you started to notice that cash was no longer the primary payment option, the first creeping tentacles of "cashless" were being revealed. The idea that your credit or debit card would be the first option to pay for everyday things should have tugged at the red string in the corner of your mind. Alarm bells should have been heard. But they weren't, because it was so convenient.

Not only did reliance on the credit card mean that you didn't need to carry cash, but it also meant that you never knew how much you'd actually spent, and, inevitably, you spent more, as a result. Then, the bill would come (get yourself a Red Pill to find out what you should have been doing with those → Exit The Matrix). Your wages came in and they cleared the bill. No worries. Nothing to do. And essentially, you're now letting the bank deal with all your money concerns. Wonderful.

And then, along came Stripe, PayPal, and a thousand other forms of discharge. Then Bitcoin and other all-digital "currencies". Now, you can pay with your phone. What could be more dystopian?

What's My Problem?


Fair question. Those things do seem pretty convenient. And you do appear to be in charge of what goes in and out. So why the whining?

If you're lucky enough not to live in a "future smart city" (like Maui or Los Angeles), you may not have experienced "wild fires" that conveniently knocked out water pumps and blocked access to social media websites. In that case, perhaps you are unaware of what it's like to have no cash, when the internet goes out. But some people have experienced that, and it means you can't buy anything and you can't sell anything. That's not very good, when you need to fill up your truck (or your belly), during what could turn into a days-long chaotic saga.

New Zealand realized their stupidity, when a cyclone hit, taking out power lines.
Cyclone-hit New Zealand exposes the risks of a cashless society - StraitsTimes.com

Who Benefits?


Why do I care so much about cash remaining in use? Who benefits from its removal from circulation?

Consider the position of the technocrat. If you want to totally control people (and that's is what they want), you need to control their information, food supply, health care and advice, and money.

While I won't cover the rest of those things in this post, you might be starting to see why physical cash is a problem for those corporations seeking to control our lives more than ever before. If you have cash in your pocket, you can use it right now. For anything. There's no app, there's no bank approval, and you don't need power or data to do it. That sounds like freedom. And that's why they've been trying to phase it out.

Using careful (but rather transparent, in my opinion) propaganda, the system has been trying to ween us off cash for a long time, with air miles, shopping vouchers, and even direct discounts for using a card (even though it actually costs the business more money - you have to wonder why they would agree). They have convinced us that using cards for everything is the way to go. Leave your cash in our bank and use our super convenient cashless system.

When enough people don't bother with cash, they can (and are actively trying to) phase it out, entirely. They can easily claim it's what we want because hardly anyone uses it. And then they can play the climate card. It costs us so many trees to print paper bills... yada yada. And while that might be true, those are trees they are happy to sacrifice to make way for a new mall. Never lose sight of that. And let's not forget about the immense power needs of an all-digital system that processes billions of transactions every day and needs to be online 24/7.

Which Brings Us To CBDS


Central Bank Digital Currencies are similar to Bitcoin, but the bank is back in charge. Go figure.

The banks want us to depend on them entirely, and using their "programmable currency", we would. CBDCs could be considered the "end game" of the banking families. They have already admitted that this form of currency is 100% under their control. That means that they can prevent legitimate purchases in much the same way as they prevented legitimate questions, during the plandemic exercise. And, of course, if your social credit score isn't up to par, your funds simply don't spend. No food, no travel, no nothing. Until you correct that score.




In China, where the social credit system was first rolled out, and where it is controlling the lives of over a billion people, there are certain ways you can restore your score, after committing a crime, such as commenting on a video they don't like, playing video games, not voting for the dictatorship, or walking too slowly in a train station. Some of those ways include "donating" blood, taking experimental medical interventions and ratting out members of your family who don't agree with government policies.

We need to keep cash alive, so we can't be pulled any further into the grinder. And Sweden's recent change of direction gives us hope that this could still happen. Have a read.

Sweden Reverses Course: Cash Returns as a Matter of Survival, Inclusion and Security - CashMatters.org

Read More


When disaster strikes in the 'cashless' era, there's no substitute for old-fashioned money - Japan Today

Personal Preparedness Risks: The Hidden Dangers of a Cashless Society - MiraSafety.com

How Do You Pay In A Disaster: Cash And Cryptocurrency In Catastrophes - Forbes

The Role of Cash in Emergency and Crisis Situations - CashEssentials.com

Improving access to cash in a natural disaster - NCRAtleos.com

Why Cash is King in Crisis: The Role of Financial Preparedness - PreparingWithDan.com

My Last Word


Since you now get the picture, allow me to lighten the burden with this masterpiece.




Beautiful.


Sign In To Leave A Comment

There are no comments marked as public for this item.

Sign up or sign in to read all comments and write your own.
Back To The Top