The Dark Side Of The Cashless Society

Authored by Addison Wiggin via The Daily Reckoning,

Real quick, grab a $100 bill from your wallet.

OK, humor me, any bill will do. What do you see?

I’d tell you what I see, but when I grab my Book Book, which serves as both a phone case and a wallet, there’s no cash in it. There rarely ever is. Please, keep that in mind for today’s foray into inductive reasoning.

I saw this makeshift sign over the weekend:

Seen at the Walgreens three miles from my house.

“At the airport. Very sparse here, ghost town,” reads an email from a colleague’s mom, “No coins.”

One of Agora Financial’s publishers, Doug Hill, had a similar experience flying to San Francisco last week for a meeting with a private equity fund. He couldn’t get accurate change for a pop rag he wanted to read. No coins.

“With the partial closure of the economy,” Federal Reserve Chairman, Jerome Powell says, “the flow of funds through the economy has stopped.”

Economically-speaking, the national coin shortage is a physical reminder of how slowly the nation’s economy has been; ‘velocity of money’ hit roughly zero.

“We are working with the Mint and the Reserve Banks,” Mr. Powell contends. ”As the economy re-opens, we are starting to see money move around again.”

Fair enough. What else is he going to say?

Back to the Benjamin burning a hole in your wallet. On it, you’ll see digits… a serial number for each bill.

As those bills are returned to the Federal Reserve from their journey around the country, the bills that have gotten too wrinkled, torn or worn thin get their serial numbers retired. The paper gets shredded.

Here’s what I was thinking while watching the film on Netflix the other day:

Wouldn’t it just be easier, and less expensive, if the Fed didn’t have to go through all the trouble of reclaiming and decommissioning the paper? Why not just track the serial numbers electronically?

Anyway, while fact checking the coin shortage story, a USA Today reporter included this little nugget: A Facebook post form including “a sign from a Texas-based grocery store chain H-E-B asking shoppers to use a debit card, credit card or correct change, if possible, due to the shortage.

The posts then warn against the potential of the U.S. becoming a ‘cashless society’.”

The Daily Reckoning has been on this “cashless society” story for some time.

Ideally, a cashless society is no big deal.

As I mentioned, I rarely hold cash if ever. Over the weekend, I got a haircut and didn’t leave a tip because my Book Book was dry.

But it’s not an ideal world.

And the mind does wander to dark places, doesn’t it?

Our own Jim Rickards has argued that elites are pushing for the cashless society so they can “herd” us all into “the digital pens.” Then they can impose negative interest rates on us.

But there’s another angle to the cashless society that hasn’t gotten much attention:

What if the powers that be can “cancel” people with unpopular political opinions?

The Walgreen’s sign says I can pay with credit, debit or gift card. I can use Apple Pay or Google Wallet. But here’s where the story gets spooky…

Ever since Mark Zuckerburg got summoned to appear before a Congressional committee over his backroom dealings with Cambridge Analytica prior to the 2016 election, Facebook is not so friendly to folks who don’t think like they do.

Google followed Facebook’s lead. We have reps at each place. Under their guidance, we try to abide by their rules. But the rules can, and have changed, without warning. It’s their platform, they make the rules. “You don’t like the rules,” their attitude goes, “you don’t have to post with us.”

Then there’s the federal government…

According to the U.S. Treasury site, since the pandemic began the Treasury has issued “more than 140 million Economic Impact Payments worth $239 billion to Americans by direct deposit to accounts at financial institutions, Direct Express card accounts, and by check.”

A prepaid card from the Treasury. Why not?

My kids, who strangely enough qualify, could hypothetically still use the card to procure sundries at the Walgreens down the street.

But what if, hypothetically again, that card doesn’t work because their dad is an ornery son of a b$tch who got in a spat with some readers over the Black Lives Matter movement… and some government bureaucrat didn’t like what I said?

That is, what if suddenly my EIP card doesn’t work at Walgreens anymore?

Or what if Facebook or Google don’t like what I write? What if Apple doesn’t like me either?

Hmm…I use gmail. I use a Mac. I shop at iTunes. I use my credit and debit cards for everything. I never have cash in my Book Book.

Boy, going down this rabbit hole is frightening. Good thing none of it could ever happen… right?

Gold is perhaps the best defense against negative interest rates and the cashless society.

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17 Comments
musket
musket
August 1, 2020 11:23 am

This all started several years ago when the bureaucracy failed to keep up with the traffic flow of Americans and their daily finances………it is now a useful tool by said bureaucracy to keep track on the spending patterns of said Americans. It is time to get your CONgressional representatives nuts in a vice and get he/she/it to stop said bureaucracy and their little games……otherwise it will get worse.

John
John
August 1, 2020 11:46 am

Has everyone forgotten that THE BANK gets a cut OF EVERY TRANSACTION? Attempting to force everyone into the pot to be served up in unison would make it so much easier for them. If you succumb to this idiocy you and the country are finished. Modi the clown leader of India tried this and had to back off. Let us hope the people of the United States are at least on par with those of India.

reverendken
reverendken
August 1, 2020 12:32 pm

if they don’t take cash have them charged with creating undo hardship.

Fedup
Fedup
August 1, 2020 2:40 pm

Why not create a ‘coin collection’ at the banks with a coin sorter and deposit the money in your account?
Everyone has jars of spare change around the house that they’d like to cash in.

Big Ben
Big Ben
  Fedup
August 1, 2020 3:35 pm

I was in my bank last week inquiring about this very topic since I have approximately $500 of quarters at home. The teller told me they cannot give coin, in volume, to local businesses. The bank has a coin sorter. It works just like CoinStar. You will be charged a fee for depositing coins into your account. I told them never mind. I subsequently sent a message to the President of the bank advising him to waive the fee. I am awaiting a reply.

Mr. Bank President
Mr. Bank President
  Big Ben
August 1, 2020 7:41 pm

Ben,

For you, as a one-time exception, we will waive the fee for our coin counting service. Come on down anytime and tell the staff I said to do it. You are a very important customer to us.

John Doe
John Doe
August 1, 2020 3:22 pm

The intention behind this push is obvious. Look no further than the monopolistic free speach musseling by Big Tech. If they don’t like what you purchase, you’ll go on the blacklist and get scheduled for a visit by their goon squad. Closed non-anonymous financial ecosystems like digital currencies are rife for abuse. What if the government told everyone in the country they would lose 3 percent of their savings every month from their bank acct? What if they just decided to freeze your acct altogether because they didn’t agree with your purchases? The inability to use cash is a VERY big deal. Make no mistake, this coin shortage was another component of the Plandemic they had organized to accelerate the digital currency solution to track and demographically profile potential “trouble makers” who don’t align with the new fiscal system they have in their back pocket. Screw the globalist elites. Buy tangibles.

old white guy
old white guy
August 1, 2020 3:29 pm

The government can cancel any and all cards. They of course are busy making cash worthless because they can’t track you if you use cash.

Anonymous1
Anonymous1
August 1, 2020 7:53 pm

reality check: the vendor pays 3% premium, on every credit card transaction. they love cash. so ask the store for a cash discount, or better yet, pay all transactions with $50 or $100. they will never turn away your cash, it is yet another test, to see how stupid their customers are.

Glock 1911 M1A .308
Glock 1911 M1A .308
August 1, 2020 8:47 pm

The government being able to decide who…can buy or sell…sounds just like…the beast system. Whoops, that sure degenerated quickly. Live free or die.

Armchair Skeptic
Armchair Skeptic
August 2, 2020 12:12 am

Way back when ATMs were still new they didn’t charge for transactions. Then came the fees.
Once we go cashless the banks will charge fees for all transactions, whether purchasing or moving your money around. Want to borrow your friend $20? It’s going to cost you $5 to send it to him and it will cost him $5 to receive it. Why charge on both ends? Because they can and you can’t do anything about it.

Anonymous
Anonymous
August 2, 2020 4:11 am

Agree, but another reason is that hyperinflation is going to render coins worthless. What’s the point of making pennies when a soda costs $10???

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
August 2, 2020 2:19 pm

There would be no point in minting new pennies, but the pennies already minted? That’s a different story. The metal the coin is made of has value that can’t be inflated away. When a soda is $10, a 1981 penny will have about $0.20 in copper.

Armchair Skeptic
Armchair Skeptic
  Anonymous
August 2, 2020 5:41 pm

Without coins price increases can only be in whole dollars. That soda that cost you $10 today could be $11 tomorrow.

B.S. in V.C
B.S. in V.C
August 2, 2020 10:06 am

In God we trust all others pay cash

swimologist
swimologist
August 2, 2020 10:57 am

The “dark side” of a cashless of the cashless society?
There’s another side?

Call me Jack
Call me Jack
August 4, 2020 4:54 am

The “Great Coin Shortage” is a total damn hoax.I have enough pennies,nickles,dimes,and quarters to run the local walmart for a week.How much do you have lying around? I carry a zip lock bag of change.When asked for a card because “we can’t make change”. I tell ’em i can make my own change.