The stage for a cashless society



Switzerland's elites set the stage for a cashless society and a one-world government

This week, two powerful globalist bodies are meeting to promote ideas and proposals that would place enormous authority in fewer hands on two key fronts affecting people around the world.

From May 22-28, the World Health Assembly, with delegates from 194 nations, meets at UN headquarters in Switzerland. Item 16.2 of the provisional agenda, which was proposed by the White House and supported by the EU and several nations, is put to a vote.

The amendments to item 16.2 will give the director general of the World Health Organization sole authority to declare health emergencies in any country in the world and will compel compliance with WHO mandates, even if they go against a nation's objections.


The very definition of what constitutes a health crisis will be entirely in WHO's hands, as well as how a nation should respond. WHO's authority will be backed by international law, which will make all of its decisions legally binding and actionable.

Currently, the rule is that the WHO director general must first consult with a nation's governmental authorities before taking any action. The proposed amendments eliminate that requirement.

Ultimately, the amendments represent a worldwide transfer of health care power into the hands of a single globalist organization and the whims of its director general.

Also taking place in Switzerland this same week, May 22-26, was the annual summit of the World Economic Forum . The WEF is a powerful globalist organization that promotes a global model of governance of the world's people.

The WEF has created a Digital Currency Governance Consortium, which strongly advocates a cashless society that relies entirely on central bank digital currencies for all financial transactions, i.e. digital currencies issued and controlled solely by governments and central banks.

On its website, the WEF says there are more than 18,000 cryptocurrencies today. To streamline financial services worldwide, the WEF proclaims that "regulation of cryptocurrencies is imperative" and that "a globally coordinated regulatory approach is needed."

In simpler language, it says that governments and central banks should have oversight and authority over all digital cryptocurrency transactions

Ninety percent of the world's central banks are now exploring government-issued digital currencies and how to make them a reality. China has already implemented the digital yuan and has banned the use of all other cryptocurrencies. The EU plans to have a digital euro by 2026, and the U.S. is exploring the creation of a digital dollar.

The key to making all this happen is to assign digital wallets to businesses and individuals and require them to use them for all their transactions.

For CBDCs to become the sole means of conducting all financial transactions, governments and central banks would have full authority over where and how the money is used. It would also give them the ability to open and close people's digital wallets based on their compliance with government dictates, making financial control a powerful means of controlling people.


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