Say NO to the Fedcoin Scheme – It’s a Trap!

Say No to the Fedcoin Scheme - it's a Trap! coin shortageAt the local convenience store, my wife Jo handed the clerk a $5 bill and waited for her change; finally asking for it. The clerk said, “We have a coin shortage. We have to round things to the nearest dollar.” Screw that! She dug in her purse, cobbled together the correct change and demanded the clerk give her a dollar back – while the line of “social distanced” customers behind her grew long.

The next day she bought a fountain Coke, normally $1.00 plus tax. The clerk said, “$1.00 please.” The merchant absorbed the tax. There are signs in the local stores saying they have a shortage and will buy rolled coins.

BS Alert SymbolMy BS meter went into full alert. A government capable of putting a man on the moon could solve a coin shortage in a matter of a few weeks. If there is a shortage, it’s because some politicos, or bankers want to create one.

Sure enough, Ron Paul’s article, Fedcoin: A New Scheme for Tyranny and Poverty, appeared.

“If some Congress members get their way, the Federal Reserve may soon be able to track many of your purchases in real time and share that information with government agencies. This is just one of the problems with the proposed “digital dollar” or “fedcoin.”

…. Some progressives have embraced fedcoin as a way to provide Americans with a “universal basic income.”

Both the Senate Banking Committee and the House Financial Services Committee held hearings on fedcoin in June.

…. Fedcoin would not be an actual coin. Instead, it would be a special account created and maintained for each American by the Federal Reserve. Each month, Fed employees could tap a few keys on a computer and – bingo – each American would have dollars added to his Federal Reserve account.”

Miller on the Money Financial Advisor Special Report

Stefan Gleason at FX street writes, “A Digital ‘Fedcoin’ May Be Coming… And It Would Be Terrifying”:

“Cryptocurrencies…allows for de-centralized peer-to-peer transactions to take place outside the government-controlled banking system.

Backers of cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin tout their privacy advantages and resistance to inflation due to their strictly limited quantities.

But what if this free-market innovation were co-opted to achieve opposite ends – centralized tracking of every transaction with no possibility of escaping digital devaluations? (Emphasis mine)

That’s what some central bankers are ultimately aiming for by replacing paper cash with their own digitized, monopolized currencies.

…. Consider what Federal Reserve Governor Lael Brainard said at a recent conference…. “By transforming payments, digitalization has the potential to deliver greater value and convenience at lower cost.”

“Central planning doesn’t work. A little bit of it is a drag. A lot is fatal.”

– Bill Bonner

Her solution? Centralization.

…. Fed chairman Jerome Powell has also taken a keen interest in the concept of central bank digital currency – i.e., Fedcoin.

During testimony before Congress…Powell noted…”I think it’s very much incumbent on us and other central banks to understand the costs and benefits and trade– offs associated with a possible digital currency.”

“Having a single government currency at the heart of the financial system is something that has served us well. It’s a very, very basic thing, it really hasn’t been in question, and I think before we move away from that, we should really understand what we’re doing. Preserving the centrality of a central, widely accepted currency that is accepted and trusted is an enormously important thing.”

Venezuela issued a digital currency called the “petro” in early 2018 – primarily as a way of getting around U.S. sanctions.

…. The petro makes it much easier to monitor transactions – and punish those conducting transactions inconsistent with the prevailing government’s objectives,” explains William J. Luther of the American Institution for Economic Research. “By requiring petro use, the Maduro regime tightens its grip on power.”

It’s a trap!

Lucas Cacioli quotes Brainard and outlines the real issue:

“There are risks,” Brainard said referring to private digital payment systems and alluding to Libra, “Some of the new players are outside the financial system’s regulatory guardrails, and their new currencies could pose challenges in areas such as illicit finance, privacy, financial stability, and monetary transmission.”

It could be deduced that the Fed’s major impetus for joining in on the digital currencies is largely around the dangers it anticipates from a privately owned stable coin with the ability to replace sovereign currency. (Emphasis mine)

On Dec. 18, Brainard appeared before a European Central Bank Forum and cautioned the ECB forum that the risks already associated with cryptocurrencies within the financial system would be exacerbated by a widely adopted stablecoin for everyday transactions. As Facebook’s active users account for nearly one-third of the global population, the possibility for quick massive adoption of Libra is very real.”

Now we wouldn’t want the government to have competition from the private sector, would we? VA hospitals, Amtrak and the Post Office are beacons of great service and efficiency.

GoldSilver Affiliate - Miller On The Money

David B. Black at Forbes writes, “Who Needs Cryptocurrency FedCoin When We Already Have A National Digital Currency?”

“The cryptocurrency enthusiasts are at it again…now they want a “national digital currency.” Hurry! The Chinese will beat us to it, and we’ll be left behind!

Somehow, no one in the debate acknowledges the obvious fact that we already HAVE a national digital currency. It’s fast, cheap and secure! It has no issue with regulators, and it’s accepted everywhere. Who knew? It’s called…the US dollar. The wild-eyed “national digital currency” groupies prefer to ignore the fact – yes, it’s a fact – that the US dollar is a digital currency.

….almost 90% of US dollars have no physical existence – they are purely digital. But this isn’t just for the USA; world-wide, only 8% of currency exists as physical cash!

…. Look at the history of where the concept came from. While no one likes to talk about it, the undisputed origin of the concept is a brilliant, well-implemented and widely used body of software called Bitcoin. The concept and every major feature of Bitcoin was designed to operate with no central authority of any kind in charge. Amazing. …. Bitcoin was also designed to give total anonymity to the people who deposit, send and receive Bitcoin….

…. More recently, we have seen highly publicized efforts to legitimize something like…Facebook’s Libra, which has the backing of a large number of name-brand financial institutions.

All this leads up to the newly “coined” notion of a “national digital currency” – let’s have the US government implement it instead of Facebook and its consortium partners!”

For centuries governments have demanded their currency is the only recognized medium of exchange. Friend Jeff Clark recently said, “Paper dollars are “money” because the government says they’re money.”

Gold is real money because there is a finite supply. You can’t weave straw into gold. Jeff adds, “And it only takes a 7th grade education to understand that the more you create of x, the less valuable x becomes.

On 12/31/1999 gold closed at $290.25/oz. Today it’s over $2,000/oz. The more dollars that are created out of thin air, the less valuable they become.

Fedcoin is another attempt by the government to drive us to a “cashless” society, under total government control.

Of course, the Fed is totally supportive. Member banks have their own personal sales tax, the fees they charge merchants for every credit card transaction. I read where Citigroup is borrowing from the Fed (taxpayers) at 0.35% and charging their credit card customers 27.4% interest.

NPR reports, “Cities And States Are Saying No To Cashless Shops.”

Ron Paul warns:

“…. Fedcoin poses a great threat to privacy. The Federal Reserve could know when fedcoin is used, who is using it, and what they use it for. This information could be shared with government agencies, such as the FBI or IRS.”

The government could use the ability to know how Americans are spending fedcoin to limit our ability to purchase goods and services disfavored by politicians and bureaucrats. Anyone who doubts this should recall the Obama administration’s Operation Choke Point. Operation Choke Point involved financial regulators “alerting” banks that dealing with certain businesses, such as gun stores, would put the banks at “reputational risk” and could subject them to greater regulation.

“The state is essentially an apparatus of compulsion and coercion. The characteristic feature of its activities is to compel people through the application or the threat of force to behave otherwise than they would like to behave.”

– Ludwig von Mises

Is it so hard to believe that the ability to track purchases would be used in the future to “discourage” individuals from buying guns, fatty foods, or tobacco, or from being customers of corporations whose CEOs are not considered “woke” by the thought police? Fedcoin could also be used to “encourage” individuals to patronize “green” business, thus fulfilling Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s goal of involving the Fed in the fight against climate change.

Fedcoin could threaten private cryptocurrencies, increase inflation, and give government new powers over our financial transactions. …. Whatever gain fedcoin may bring to average Americans will come at terrible cost to liberty and prosperity.”

Hmmm, I wonder how long before NPR is told they must support Fedcoin and a cashless society or their government funding might be cut?

Fedcoin would allow the government to move to a cashless society, know where you spend every dime, make it easy to devalue your wealth through inflation, manipulate those who disagree politically, and most of all it is easier to confiscate your wealth with the press of a button. It must be stopped!

Tim Plaehn The Dividend Hunter

For more information, check out my website or follow me on FaceBook.

Until next time…

Dennis

www.MillerOnTheMoney.com

“Economic independence is the foundation of the only sort of freedom worth a damn.” – H. L. Mencken

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16 Comments
oldtimer505
oldtimer505
August 20, 2020 2:23 pm

You bet your sweet ass this is a trap. It is no more than an “allowance” extended to you by a governance that can take it back at the push of a key. If anyone wants a daddy or mommy again to tell them what they can or can’t have then jump right in and get your allowance, just don’t expect anyone else to pull your fat out of the fire this time.

Oh by the way, “cashless society” is double speak. There is no such animal. If you let the government control your cash you are truly a “”SLAVE””.

Call me Jack
Call me Jack
  oldtimer505
August 20, 2020 3:03 pm

My wife is having none of it.I watched my wife pull out a quart ziplock bag at Walmart.She paid for that purchase with about 30 bucks in change.Oddly enough,Walmart didn’t seem all that thrilled with her kind gesture.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  oldtimer505
August 20, 2020 5:35 pm

Hi,

Oddly enough, I have an article coming out on that very subject of debt slaves.

Regards,
Dennis Miller

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
August 20, 2020 2:25 pm

Wow. Is it not enough that they already print and control ALL the money….and get the government to FORCE us to use it?? Criminals know no limits.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  MrLiberty
August 21, 2020 3:55 am

Kind of like living in a Democrat city, paying taxes for police, and watching criminals peacefully take over your city.

Steve
Steve
August 20, 2020 3:14 pm

It would be like having a federal agent looking over your back with you sheepishly looking for approval to buy a candy bar.
Didn’t get that vaccine?……well, when you decide to let us know and we’ll let you buy some food.
You’ll have no recourse to anything.
Get a ticket?…..the money is automatically and instantly withdrawn and maybe will be refunded if you win your day in court. Good luck with that.
Wanna buy bullets?…….sorry, your social score is too low however if you complete this 48 hour online course you can petition for the purchase of 5 per month.
It’s a total loss of autonomy and freedom. I really can’t imagine a worse scenario for us regarding currency.

Anonymous
Anonymous
August 20, 2020 4:24 pm

I have at least half a dozen coffee cans filled with coins. I’m not giving coinstar 9% but would gladly exchange them for paper bills from a bank or business. Surprisingly, no bank or business is asking for my coins. They just tell me there’s a shortage and they have no change.

oldtimer505
oldtimer505
  Anonymous
August 20, 2020 4:29 pm

I was in line at one of the local stores to check out. I heard sales lady say they were short on coinage so I went out to the truck and got 5 bucks worth of coins out of my stash. When I offered it to her she just gave me the deer in the head lights look then reluctantly took it and forked over a fiver. I truly think there is a shortage of gray matter and not coins. The other possibility is they are rounding the price up for a few extra pennies of profit.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  oldtimer505
August 21, 2020 3:57 am

You shop Kroger too?

ottomatik
ottomatik
August 20, 2020 6:07 pm

It’s coming, to be timed with the Reset.
Notice how there will be no public discourse or vote of any kind for such a monumental shift in monetary practice.
I am a big fan of cryptocurrency in general and Bitcoin in particular, but the author quotes and attributes “privacy” to it that is not accurate. Every transaction between wallets is open record that anyone can “see”. Weather the “owner” of the wallet can remain private is doubtful.
The Fed should be able to develop Fedcoin, and Facebook, Libra, and any others who step up. And concurrently we should be able to use whichever we desire, as consumers and as businesses.
This Freemarket approach is the American way and embodies traditional notions of Liberty. As I have posted before Chinacoin is rising, powerfully, and will embody all of the centralized fears listed in the above article, but will lack innovation and stagnate.
Crypto is the future, paper is the past, just like the fax. A critical time for financial Liberty approaches and requires the participation of Patriots, for if inaction and non-participation rules the day, a new Creature from Jekyll Island will be born, naturally nastier then the last.

oldtimer505
oldtimer505
  ottomatik
August 20, 2020 6:50 pm

Ottomatik: You say paper is the past like the fax. I will agree that fiat paper should have ‘never’ been but, the only form of currency that has passed the test of time is barter. Tough way to go but, it has always proven itself. All the others have been the medium of grifter’s.

mark
mark
  oldtimer505
August 20, 2020 7:12 pm

John Laws (AKA the FED) currently rule and own the world.

The real problem is they are currently backed by the US Miltary.

ottomatik
ottomatik
  oldtimer505
August 20, 2020 7:21 pm

I agree. Before 1795, well 1792(Martha’s silverware is the legend), there were no US coins to barter with, it was done with French, Spanish, and English coins with a few continentals around. They actually lasted well into the 18th century as it took the US a number of years to generate the needed coinage.
For this time there was a wide ecosystem of currencies being used as money, the popular ones had established and trusted precious metal content
I am a big fan of gold and silver, but lets face it, we are never going back to physical exchange of gold and silver. It’s impractical. So as the currency evolves, which it invariably will, opportunity exits to decentralize and democratize money.
If desired, it would be very easy to back a crypto, say Goldcoin, with actual gold.
Or Silvercoin, or Wheatcoin, or Whatever coin.
Further, there are coins that “work” that is they are programmable and have features like smart contracts. Etherum for example, you need a roof, the roofer needs coins, a contract is drawn up, and the payment is deposited into a 3rd party wallet with the actual coins being programmed to transfer to the roofers wallet when the roof passes county inspection.
The possibilities are endless and why I promote a free market of money, not that there are not great dangers, there are, but there are with any system. I prefer Liberty and the innovation it spawns, hallmarks of America.

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
August 20, 2020 6:59 pm

“Fedcoin would not be an actual coin. Instead, it would be a special account created and maintained for each American by the Federal Reserve. Each month, Fed employees could tap a few keys on a computer and – bingo – each American would have dollars added to his Federal Reserve account.”

A year ago how many were scoffing at this idea. All the many excuses for why it won’t or can’t happen.
“a special account created and maintained for each American ”
Meanwhile, we wait for the next election to save us or a Grey Champion of the people is coming and then for sure we’ll rise up.
HORSE HOCKEY.
We’ll roll over like a 3 dollar crack ho. Maybe try to negotiate for them to use a little KY till we get used to the size.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Fleabaggs
August 21, 2020 3:59 am

Don’t forget the upcoming 3X price increase for all personal lubricants.

Unreconstructed
Unreconstructed
August 20, 2020 11:24 pm

US Constitution
Section 8

The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States; but all Duties, Imposts and Excises shall be uniform throughout the United States;

To borrow Money on the credit of the United States;

To regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes;

To establish an uniform Rule of Naturalization, and uniform Laws on the subject of Bankruptcies throughout the United States;

To coin Money, regulate the Value thereof, and of foreign Coin, and fix the Standard of Weights and Measures;