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September 30, 2022 • 37 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello, and welcome to another episode of the Mark Mass Show,
where we talk about the decentralized revolution, the way the
world is swinging, the pendulum swinging from centralization to decentralization.
We look at this through the lens of politics, finance,
and technology. Of course, the technology being bitcoin, cryptocurrencies, the
decentralization that is leading to the acceleration of this decentralized revolution.

(00:23):
And I like to look at the convergence of these
three things to see just how quickly things are changing. Now. Uh,
it's like the frog and the boiling pot, the proverbial,
you know, frog and the boiling pot of water. It's
like it happens like slowly, so you don't really notice it,
but it's happening. And if you can start to learn
to see the signpost, you can see how fast this
is changing now. Um, the world obviously has been swinging

(00:45):
towards centralization, and we have the the World Economic Forum
and the World Trade Organization that you and the I
M F, etcetera. And they've been working towards this for
a long time. But of course the more they push,
the more they squeeze, the more things are falling back.
And some of the things we can see that have
been planned for a long time. There was an article
that came out this week that was pretty shocking to

(01:09):
a lot of people. Uh, really shocking to a lot
of people, But it actually shouldn't be because this article
is actually pretty old. And as a matter of fact,
there's an article what what came out this week was
shocking because of what it proposed, but what proposed is
actually just coming true, which is something that was actually

(01:30):
proposed fifteen years ago. So an article came out in
December of two thousand six, and the article is plans
to create a carbon trading credit card for everyone. Now
I've covered this before about a year ago. I covered
how MasterCard is making a credit card that would track

(01:51):
carbon purchases. You can find that on my YouTube channel.
Just search Mark Moss on YouTube. But this article came
out in two thousand and six and it says that
there was a plans for this, so, um, you shouldn't
been caught off guard, unless, of course, you weren't paying attention.
And it says here that every citizen would be issued
with a carbon credit card to be swiped every time
they bought gas, paid for an electricity bill, utility bill,

(02:15):
booked an airline ticket and under a nationwide carbon rationing scheme,
rationing scheme, a world of scarcity, not abundance, not not
the world that we live in and with unlimited amount
of abundance and wealth. No, a rationing seam scheme for
con scarcity that could come into operation within five years. Now.

(02:36):
This was written fifteen years ago. They said I could
come into operation five years. It was a little bit
behind the time. But here it is today. But first
I was talking about what they were talking about here
fifteen years ago. And it says that under the schemes,
no such thing as a conspiracy. Right, what's the definition
of a conspiracy. Conspiracy is two or more people plotting

(02:58):
to do something. Conspiracies happen all the time. My wife
and I conspire against our kids all the time. Um,
this scheme, this is no such thing as a conspiracy. Well,
this is a scheme where everybody would be given an
annual allowance of the carbon they could expend on a
range of products, food, energy, and travel. If they want

(03:21):
to use more carbon, they'd be able to buy it
from somebody else, and they could sell any surplus. So
you only get a certain amount of food, energy, and travel.
That's it. Now, if you're really rich, you can buy
extra credits. Probably if you're really important, like John Kerry
telling African nations that they shouldn't have any natural gas

(03:44):
to bring them out of poverty. And he's flying there
on his private jet to tell them. But you know,
he's doing good for the world, so he could go
ahead and blow all that carbon. Right. So I suppose
if you're a John carry or someone who's doing good
for the world, you get extra carbon. Or if you're
someone very rich, the poor people though you get you
you don't. You don't have enough carbon credits, so no
red meat for you. You get the slop, the piece

(04:05):
sup the bugs. That's what you get. Um, you don't
get to travel. You used all your carbon credits to
keep your house warm in the winter. You didn't need
to keep your house warm. You could have just you know,
worn long Johns and a bunch of blankets, and then
you could have saved those credits and then maybe you
could have got a bus to go see your mom
fifty miles away, not a plane ticket. You don't have
enough credits for a plane ticket, so you couldn't get that.

(04:28):
That's what they're talking about here. I know that sounds crazy.
I'm just gonna read it again. Everybody would be given
an annual allowance of the carbon. They would expend on
a range of products, food, energy, and travel. They wanted
to use more carbon, they would buy it from somebody
else so they could sell it. I'm poor, I don't
have enough money. I'll sell my allotment and I'll just um,
I'll just eat bugs and p slop and i won't

(04:50):
ever travel, and I'll just use blankets. Yeah, it says
carbon allowances could be treated as bank accounts. Of course,
we store that in our bank. Um, we can trade
them through our bank system. Um. And think about this.
We'll get into this in a in a minute. Actually,
but how would they enforce something like this? At what

(05:13):
point do they say that I can't get any more meat? Like? Who?
Like some like a police officer comes to my house
and watches me at the grocery store? Like, how do
they enforce that? We'll come back to that. So this, uh,
that was this article that has read. It was fifteen
years ago, but it resurfaced just this week, of course,

(05:34):
by none other than the World Economic Forum the West.
They came up with an article titled Mike Carbon An
Approach for Inclusive and Sustainable Cities and so um. They
are basically saying that this world that was envisioned fifteen
years ago is back now. They say that there's three

(05:56):
developments that really helped them see that they could shape
the is my carbon initiative. One of them was the pandemic,
and the pandemic was an amazing test of social responsibility.
No one could have imagined that all these people would
have willingly just locked themselves down in their home, maintained

(06:17):
social distancing war masks blindly accepted, didn't taken mass fascinations,
accepted contract tracing applications to monitor not just their own
movements but who they interact with. It demonstrated the core
of individual social responsibility. They say, how good. Then they

(06:38):
talk about all this the new technological breakthroughs number two,
the Fourth Industrial Revolution as it's called now. The head
of the World up Comic Forum, Claud Schwab, wrote a book. Well,
he's written several books, but he's written a book called
the Fourth Industrial Revolution. Now I've read the book. I've
read his other book, covidenteen, The Great Reset. I haven't

(06:59):
read his most recent book, the Great Narrative, But I
have read there the two. I don't like to tell
people what's in the books because it makes me sound
like a crazy person. What I'd recommend is that you
go read the book for yourself. I say that I
take them at their word. They're the ones that said it.
Let them tell you what it has to say. So
read what the Fourth Industrial Revolution is. Let me just

(07:22):
let me. Let me, let me give you a hint.
Industrial Revolution was bringing machines. So before the Industrial Revolution,
we had, you know, horsepower and manpower. The Industrial Revolution
brought machines that could do the work of five thousand men.
What's the fourth Industrial Revolution? The fourth and fourth Industrial
Revolution is the merger of man and machine. He talks

(07:45):
about a world where you can't even tell the difference
between man and machine. We have chips in our brains.
They all of our brain waves go into AI clouds
that they can read, and on and on and on.
That's in fourth Industry Revolution. I say, no, thank you.
They talk about emergent technologies like artificial intelligence, blockchain, and

(08:06):
digitalization that can enable tracking personal carbon emissions. How nice
new ways to track you see what they're saying here?
They have a world like I'm for Him as a
scale three sixty initiative that demonstrates the use of Fourth
Industrial Revolution technologies across the whole life cycle. There can
be there's major advances, uh, including transportation and personalized apps

(08:31):
like an account for your personal admissions. Now, again, how
do they get you to buy into this? How do
they get you to buy into this and not buy
plane tickets, not travel to go to your mom, not
have any more red meat, and on and on and on. Well,
there's part indoctrination, which would get you to buy into

(08:55):
it that way, and then if you don't buy into it,
then there's the forced means. We're gonna get more into
that in a minute. You're listening to the Mark ma
Show talking about the decentralized Revolution, the way the world
is swinging from centralization towards decentralization, and we look at
through the lens of politics, finance, and technology. We're talking
about politics, Uh, it's around the finance, and of course

(09:17):
it's through the technology. I'm gonna back with more and
this in a minute, talking about what just came out
this week from the World Luck Coming Forum. You don't
want to miss it. We're gonna talk about the bigger
implications of this and the dangers to you. So I'll
be back with that and more in a minute. Don't
go away, Oh, welcome back. You are listening to the
Mark Ma Show. We're talking about the decentralized Revolution, talking
about the way the world's changing rapidly, rapidly, rapidly. Right

(09:41):
BeForever Nic it's from centralization to decentralization, and the centralization
is still they're in full effect. Now I'm gonna get
too back to what they're doing and how they want
to enforce this specifically. Of course it's with technology, but this,
but this came out. They want to really track individuals

(10:03):
and make sure that they limit your own um carbon exposure. Now,
where where did all this come from? And where does
all this go? Let's talk about where it goes first,
all right, and then we'll come back to where did
it come from. Now let's see um some other things
that are happening in real time. Now we have sensualization.

(10:26):
You might think of that as collectivism or globalization. The
opposite of collectivism would probably be individualism. So I am
a person, I am made in God's image, I have
I have been endowed by the creator right the things
that are said in the Declaration of Independence. Collectively, as

(10:50):
an individual, I have the pursuit of life, liberty, and property.
I have the right to my own property, start with
my own body. With what I own, I have the
rights protect my own property. And that's it. Now. Collectively,
at some point, maybe our interests aligned. So for example,

(11:10):
you and I are together, an attacker comes to kill
both of us, we might decide to align together to
fight that attacker. We both have fields that need to
be planted. I say, hey, I'll help you with yourrors
if you help me with mine. So we're individuals. What
we want maybe different, but sometimes our interests come together
and they align collectively. There is there is no such

(11:32):
thing as the state. There's individuals. The state is a
collection of those individuals. What happens, though, is at some
point a certain group of individuals want to have power
over the rest of the people, and that starts creating
centralization or central planning. Central planning always fails, It always
has and the reason why it doesn't have enough data

(11:55):
to make the decisions that need to be made in
a free market, and it takes away humans motivation, incentives,
things that they just don't think about. Now, let's take
a look at where we're at today and where this
is going really quickly. So here's this article. I saw
Europe's economy and living standards are plumbering plumbing, so uh

(12:15):
and arguably we're you know, living in the best time
in history. Technologies at all time high efficiencies, an all
time high life has never been better. But yet living
standards are plumbing. Why is that? Well, let's see it
says enterprises are on the verge of closing. In Britain,
sixty of enterprises are on the verge of closing due

(12:35):
to higher electricity prices of British British factories have reduced
working hours and seven percent are temporarily closed down. Electricity
bills have risen by more than one percent compared to
last year. So that's in Britain, sixty of enterprises are
on the verge of closing down. If six of the

(12:57):
enterprises closed down, what happens, Well, all those people that
had jobs there don't have jobs anymore. Now all those
people are unemployment, they have no income, they're not spending
money and other people's businesses, and then those businesses closed down,
and then those people are at a job and then
they don't have any money and they don't spend money
and other people's businesses anymore. On top of that, now

(13:18):
we don't have any business provide any goods and services
or what would be considered wealth. Right, we wealth is
goods and services. We need businesses to produce those things,
goods and services. But yet sixty on the verge of
closing down. Why higher electricity prices. Now, let's keep going
and then we'll talk about this. In Germany, the number

(13:40):
of firms and individuals went bankrupt in August alone just
last month rose compared to the same period last year.
The figure was significantly higher than German analysts has had
expected our forecast. According to the experts, and they expected
through the autumn the number of bankruptcies will only increase.

(14:00):
German Chancellor Olaf Schlotz acknowledged that many Germans have faced
with rising prices for fuel and food. So again in Germany,
the number of businesses and individuals that went bankrupt just
lacks last month or up over This is way higher
than people had forecast. It's only going to get worse

(14:22):
through the fall, and that the chance of oil off
schlots acknowledged that this is happening because of rising prices
for fuel. Again, the same as Britain wire six percent
in the business going out of business because of fuel
because of energy prices. Now we're just barely getting started.
The crisis is just ahead. At the same time, many
experts believed that stopping the nord Stream will cause Europe's

(14:45):
worst energy crisis in decades. So we haven't even seen
a yet. Many experts expect this to see the worst
crisis in decades. The circumstances that it's we've already seen
a sharp increase in energy resources on the European market,
which is why businesses and in Britain are going out
of business, which is why bankruptcies are going through the

(15:08):
roof in Germany. As a result, energy bills of European
households have increased. According to Golden Sacks analyst, its cumulative
cost will peak in early So business is going out
of business in the UK, increase in bankruptcies in Germany
and we haven't even gotten to the peak of it yet.

(15:30):
They're saying the peak will come in early three. But
as I just said, the experts were already caught off guard.
It's already way worse than the thought it would be.
Is it a chance that we won't see the peak
for a while? It says that the increased cost of
gas or energy has an adverse effect on the living
standard of people. Duh. As the world gets more access

(15:52):
to cheap, abundant energy, human life flourishes. We can use
machines to do the work of five thousand men than
we can and use that time to create more machines,
or create more science or technology or medicine, drive the
world forward. But if we have the opposite of that,
which is less energy, less cheap and abundant, then we

(16:14):
get the opposite of that. We get less human flourishment. Now,
it says um. An even more dangerous problem is the
falling liquidity of your European products produced at the new
cost of energy. European products are becoming uncompetitive in the
world market. Their price is much higher because of the
cost of their energy. So in order for me to

(16:36):
run my manufacturing plant to make cars or electronics or
handbags or whatever fill in the blank, I have to
have energy. I gotta turn the lights on, I gotta
turn the machines on. The sewing machines c and C machines,
whatever it may be. I need energy to do that.
If I don't have energy to do that, I can't
run my production. Or if the cost of my energy

(16:58):
goes up, it pushes my expenses up and I may
not have enough profit. If my expenses go too high
and I can't sell my product for more money, or
my product price comes down and I can't produce it,
I have no profit. What happens shut down, which is
why in Britain six of businesses are on the verge
of going bankrupt because they can't afford to produce the products.

(17:22):
But even worse than that, as I make the case
over and over, wealth is not money. Money isn't wealth.
Nobody wants money, which I know sounds absurd. We want
the things where we need, the things that money buys us.
Wealth is goods and services, so we must manufacture things.
We must produce things. That's how we build wealth. And
now Europeans are becoming uncompetitive in the world. They cannot

(17:45):
produce wealth. Oh man, I'm gonna go deep with this,
but I gotta take a break. You're listening to the
Markmas Show. We're talking about the decentralized revolution, the way
the world is swinging from centralization to decentralization, and I'm
explaining why centralization is the problem. We're gonna get back
to the attack that years on you, UM, and then
we'll tie all the way back to what we started about,
which was this carbon tax that's happening on you, and

(18:07):
they're gonna enforce it. Gonna be careful. So I'll be
back with all that and more in a minute. Don't
go away, We're back, all right, Welcome back. You are
listening to the Mark Moa Show. We're talking about the
decentralized revolution each and every week, talking about the way
the world is changing as we look at it through
the lens of politics, finance, and technology. We're talking about UM,
a plan that started fifteen years ago and now it

(18:27):
has come to pass. This week on the World that
kind of forms website, they talked about their new plan
to have a carbon tracker for you, and if you
don't have enough carbon credits, you won't be able to
buy food or energy to heat your house or travel
to go see your mother. Now we're talking about where
this naviotly goes. We're kind of jumping forward talking about

(18:48):
the massive energy crisis that's happening over in Europe, and
um we left off. Were said that European products are
becoming uncompetitive in the world market because their price is
too high. Why is their price too Why because their
energy is too So they're not able to produce wealth.
They can't produce goods and services, which means they can't
export anything, which means they have no energy or no
money coming back in. I love this quote from Turkish

(19:13):
president and Drudge and Edrogen. He says that Europe reaps
what it sews, So European countries are themselves to blame
for the problems they face this coming winter because of
reduced gas supplies from Russia. That's according to the president.
According to him quote, Europe reaps what it sews, while

(19:33):
Turkey has no problems with gas supplies. Now, part of
what I'm hoping that you're picking up here is centralization.
None of these people that are being affected in Britain,
or in Germany or in the rest of Europe, none
of these people want this to happen. None of them
voted for this to happen. None of them are okay

(19:54):
with this happening. There's some central authorities that they don't
want have in control over their life. They've decided that
the people should suffer for the greater good. The people
didn't choose that. They don't want that. That's the problem
with centralization. They don't know what you want. They don't
know what's best for you, and frankly, they don't have

(20:15):
the information to be making these types of decisions. They're
not God. They're not God. Now um Europe reaves put
us out. It made these policies. It's like your mom,
you made your bed, now you sleep in a kind
of thing. They said, Turkey has no problems. The crisis
in Europe is a result of political mistake. Political mistake.

(20:36):
On one hand, sanctions against Russia are favorable only to
the United States. On the other, the imposition of the
post hydrocarbon economy on Europeans has shown its insolvency. So
they've done it in two ways. One, they've decided to
shut down their own energy. Germany shut down their nucle

(21:00):
the reactors Europe. The UK, Britain has decided not to
get its oil or natural gas out of the ground.
They've decided that so their own imposition on the post
hydrocarbon economy, they've decided to shut it all off, they've
decided to put themselves a depending on what Russia is doing.
That's on one hand, now they put themselves depending on Russia,

(21:21):
and then on the other hand, they decided to shut
Russia off. So I'm not gonna make any of my
own food or grow any of my own food. I'm
just gonna buy it all from this person. But then
I'm gonna sanction that person decided not to buy any
food from that person. So now I have no food. Yes,
that's exactly what's happening. But then with food they did

(21:41):
with energy, it's insane. As a result, energy prices in
Asia and Latin America today are much lower. H Asia,
so much lower. Good thing for China, right, Latin America?
All right, energy prices are way down and much lower,
and so are the wages of production workers. Everyone's more prosperous. Congratulations.

(22:06):
In other words, European products are totally uncompetitive. Why because
the cost to produce those goods has gone up too much.
Now where does this lead? Where does this lead? Now?
It is because of central planning. In a decentralized world
of individualism and free markets, we would never have this problem.

(22:30):
We have this problem because of central Planning one, Central
planners DESI had to shut down their fuel to central
planner deside not to buy anymore. And what's the result,
It says here, poverty is coming. The next logical consequence
will be mass production closers and rising unemployment. That sounds
pretty bad as a matter of fact, As I already
said right at the beginning. In the UK they had

(22:54):
businesses think there are are on the Virgin one bankrupt.
So the next logical consequence will be mass production closures
and rising unemployment. More people out of work, more business
is being shut down. Um, no production of goods and
services or no wealth, he says. Um, rising unemployment will
cause a drop in living standards and an additional burden

(23:15):
on government budgets as the fight against poverty requires additional
social spending. So rise in unemployment will cause a drop
in living standards. Yeah, if you don't have a job,
a good paying job, you don't make enough money to
live nice right, to go out to dinner once in
a while, to be able to like take your kids
on a little trip once in a while, to have
a new car so it doesn't break down the side
of the road all the time. Oh yeah, and you know,

(23:37):
keep your house warm in the wintertime. Um, if you
lose your job, you can't afford any of that. Now
there's no heat at the winter for you. There's no
one at the dinner with your spouse, there's no taking
your kids on a trip, there's none of that. Your
quality of life you're living standard went down. And on
top of that, as if that's not already bad enough,
look man, we're going we're there's massive prosperity in the world.

(23:59):
The only reason why the quality of life should ever
be going down is because of these decisions they've made.
They have chosen to decide to do that. If you
have a nice job paying you a million dollars a year,
and you have the best life, and your wife is
loving it and your kids are loving it, and you're
taking vacations all the time, and you decide to quit
your job and not get another job, your quality living

(24:20):
go down. And that is your choice. That's exactly what's happening,
except where it's not your choice. It's the central planners
choice for you, not for them. Of course, you know,
John Kerry is gonna keep flying his private jet. His
life's gonna be fine. It's your life that's going to
have a lower standard of living. Now on top of that,
there's an additional burden on government budgets. So now the
government budgets have to help out all these people. They

(24:42):
have to fight against poverty, which requires what that's right,
more spending. So now they have to continue to print
more money, which causes more inflation and causes the problem
to get even worse. European economy survived through stimulus, but
this exacerbates in inflation. Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutt said, quote,

(25:04):
you can't help everyone. So we in the West will
be a bit poorer because of the high inflation and
the high energy costs. So because the inflation is so bad,
you know, price of everything is going up so high,
and the high energy costs, well, the high energy costs
pushing the prices up so high, and the unlimited money
printing that we do continue to push the price of

(25:24):
things up so high. So because we just you know,
shut down our energy and decided not to buy anymore,
and you know, because we just can't stop printing trillions
and trillions of dollars out of thin air, then you know,
the cost of things going up and we're just going
to be more poor. How about no, how about no?
How about let's not print trillions of dollars for meaningless,

(25:46):
worthless things. How About let's get our own energy out
of the grounds. We can bring our costs down. How
About we bring our cost downs, we can get our
own manufacturing base back to work and back being competitive again.
How about no, how about we just kind of go
back to how it was. It was like a decade
ago when we were on the path of prosperity. But
instead we're just gonna accept this. Well, as he says,

(26:06):
quote will be a bit poor because of high inflation.
On top of that, migrations are ruinous to the budget.
Migrant influx in the European countries of the past two
decades has been less than one million people a year,
but already last year one point three million people entered
the countries, and this year they were already one point

(26:29):
eight million people this year. Well, that is a massive
burden on top of the government, which means what, Well,
it means more money printing. They don't have any jobs
because the jobs are being shut down, and so now
the government has to take care of that. How much
does that cost? It costs a lot of money. The

(26:49):
average cost person immigrant per migrant is seven thousand euros
per year. Germany alone spends up to fifty five billion
euros annually on refugee aid. And if you think that's bad,
in the United States, through the southern border through Mexico,
we've had two million people already across. The United States
has the same problem. I'm talking about Europe right here,
but your but the US isn't the same problem. Sell

(27:13):
central planning is failing. I'm gonna come back. I'm gonna
talk about that. I want to break down these numbers
for you, and then I'm gonna talk about how they're
trying to enforce this and how you and I can
escape this if you don't want this in your life.
You're listening to the Mark Moa Show. We're talking about
the Decentralized Revolution, talking about the way the world is
changing through politics, finance, and technology. Of course that technology

(27:33):
is bitcoin and the decentralized Revolution. Let me be back
with all of that and more in a minute. You
don't want to miss it, so don't go away. Let
we're back, all right, Welcome back. You are listening to
the Mark ma Show. We're talking about the decentralized revolution,
the way the world is changing as we're looking at
it through the lens of politics, finance, and technology. Of course,
that technology being bitcoin, the decentralized technology that is changing

(27:56):
the world. Now we're talking about Europe and the problems
are going through, of course we're talking talk about it.
It's central planning causing this same thing. We sell the
United States as well. Um It says that following the
catastrophic electricity and heating bills, Europe's population is facing mass
unemployment followed by a decline in social support from the state,
and these processes inevitably lead to an overall decline in

(28:18):
living standards. There's no reason why I we need to
do UM except this. This is the effect of central
plan This is no different then what happened through the
nineteen seventeen Bolshevik Revolution in Russia, or what happened through
Hitler's Germany, or what happened in China and Mao's Great

(28:40):
leap forward in the forties and the fifties. It's the
same thing. It's a small group of people taking control
of an entire population, an entire economy, and trying to
dictate where people go, what people do and trying to
make plans that they think are best, but they don't
have the data to back that up. And just like

(29:01):
in the Bolshevik Revolution, it led to massive shortages, allowed
to lead to massive starvation, and ultimately it led to
massive deaths. Approximate people died during the Bolshevik Revolution which
was rookie numbers. Because Maw in China tried to really
up those numbers. He tried, he had about fifty million

(29:21):
people died in China. Why same thing. He mismanaging economy
because it doesn't have the data. No central planner can
do it. We had mass starvation, mass misallocation. And that's
exactly what's happening today through what Kloud Schwab of the
World like my Forum calls a public private partnership, we

(29:41):
have centralization again. They want to tell you what you
can do, where you can travel, how much you can eat,
what you can eat, and so forth. So going back
to where we started the article on the World Like
my Forum website, this week that came out, which was
my Carbon and Approach for Inclusive and Sustainable Cities, which
was floating the idea of now putting in place an

(30:03):
app that tracks are carbon exposure, which came from a
fifteen year old article where they actually talked about it
for the first time. And under the scheme, everybody would
be given an annual allowance of the carbon they could
expend on a range of products, food, energy, and travel.
If they want to use more carbon, they'd be able
to buy it from somebody else. So this is where

(30:26):
it's going. A small group of unelected leaders having their
way in history tells us what happens. Now, how do
they enforce this? Well, that's where the final piece comes
in your money. They aren't gonna be it and you're
not gonna have police officers at grocery stores, you know,
checking your carbon score before you put things into your

(30:48):
grocery basket. Right, You're not gonna have people at your house,
you know, verifying what you're cooking. What they do is
they do it through control of your money. So to
the point we've talked about here, they have a credit card,
and your credit card or your debit card or your
bank tracks it for you. So then you're going to
put gas in your car, there's no police at the

(31:10):
gas station checking your carbon credits before you buy gas. No,
it's already tracked for you on your credit card. So
you go to swipe your card and they're like, nope,
you've you've exceeded your a lotment of carbon. No gasoline
for you, But I I need gas. My car is
out of gas. I gotta go help my mom she's sick.
Well sorry, nope, nope, you've met your carbon allotment. Or

(31:32):
you're at the grocery store checking out and it's like, uh,
I can't sell you this red meat. Your your credit card,
I won't pay for it all. You get his bugs today.
You want to go travel, your daughter is getting married.
You want to go see your daughter up. No, I'm sorry,
you don't have enough carbon credits. You can't travel to
go to your daughter. You can't buy the ticket. Why,
because of your money. The money is how they control you.

(31:55):
It's always the way I say it, over and over.
I'm a broken record. Without the freedom of payments, there
is no freedom. I should have maybe have a big
sign made and to put in your office. Without the
freedom of payments, there is no freedom. Which is why
everything hinges on the money, which is why through the
Fourth Industrial Revolution that the world of my foreman is

(32:16):
promising us. They want to move us into a central
bank digital currency as CBDC. With a cb d C,
they can program the money. So again it's not right.
Now we have a digital payment system, and sure, the
government could go through all your records and they could
you know, subpoena in your bank records and your credit
card statements, and then they could go through them all
and they could try to build this picture and then

(32:37):
they could you know, get a get a warrant and
they could free your bank account or whatever. And they
can do that today. A CBDC is different though. The
CBDC is programmable. So in advance we set the rules like, hey,
if they've hit this certain threshold on carbon, then they
can't buy this, this or this. They can only buy this,
this or this. We've determined that this minority sub set

(33:00):
of people need this special treatment, so they get extra
money or they get these extra privileges with their money.
This upset doesn't um This upset of a person said
something mean online. Uh, you know, he associated with this
other person who went to this location, and so he
doesn't get any privileges anymore. You see how that is
very easy to do with this type of money, and

(33:22):
again without the freedom to transact. There is no freedom
and this is coming. It's coming very very fast. As
a matter of fact, just this week we saw announcements
um that the President Biden, the Biden administration had put
together an executive order, I meaning on the dictator, I
say what I want. The executive order was that there
was supposed to be this deep dive and research done

(33:44):
into the digital currency space, and the reports came back
just this week and they they recommended it released a
framework outline of the regulation of digital assets, including cryptocurrencies,
and it said, uh, the framework suggests the creation of
a US Central Bank Digital currency or c b DC.

(34:07):
There you have it now. Of course, Uh, if you
had to guess which nation in the world do you
think would be the first one to roll that out?
If you guess the nation that has the social credit
score system, the one that denies you bus tickets and
plane tickets and things like that, because you might have
said something to mean online, we're talking about China, then
you would be correct. Of course, China be the first

(34:28):
one to roll at to CBDC. It's the final piece
of their puzzle. That's exactly what you has are doing.
A framework suggests the creation of a US Central bank
digital currency, the CBDC could make it possible an efficient
payment system, create technical innovations, facilitate cross border transactions, all
wall fostering environmental sustainability, meaning if you don't buy or

(34:51):
I'm sorry, if you've if you've met your allotment of carbon,
or you've bought too much petrol, or you've bought too
much red meat, then no meat for you. Now, we
don't need a CBDC to have an efficient payment system.
We have bitcoin. Uh. We don't need the government to
create technical innovations, we already have them. We don't need
to facilitate cross border payments and transactions. We already have that.

(35:14):
Bitcoin did almost a hundred million dollars of cross border
payments in Del Salvador in the last eight months, near
instant and near free. So we already have it. Now.
It doesn't control you. It doesn't foster environmental sustainability, which
is the last part they said. So it doesn't have that.

(35:35):
But of course why would it. Why would you want
a money system that controls you? The answer is you wouldn't.
Why would you adopt a currency that gives them complete control,
surveillance over you and control over you why would they
have that. You have that, and of course you wouldn't.
Why would they want it? Well, of course why, of
course you know why. Because they want that total control.

(35:57):
Like Henry Kinstinger said, control all the food, you control
the people, control the energy, control the continent, control the money.
You control the world. So they've already got the food.
They want to track your food on your app to
make sure you're not over of your carbon score. Then
they want to control the energy, shutting it down. Control
which type of energy you can use, what type of few,

(36:17):
what type of fuel your car could run off of
in California, no more gasoline engines up. And then finally,
finally the money. Control the money, you control the world.
They have to take control of the money. Now the
central bank already has control over the money because they
can print it, reduced the supply and increase supply whenever
they want. But now they'll have the ability to bake

(36:37):
in the control. And that's where things are going. That's
why we need to end this move to centralization and
swing back to the centralization where you and I have
the power to direct our lives as I see fit,
as we see fit. Sovereign individuals with our own sovereign money.
It all starts with the money. Without the freedom of payments,
there's no freedom. And that's where bigcoin comes into play.

(36:58):
It's the exact opposite of a central bank digital current.
See hopefully that makes sense. Hopefully you know which way
you want to move uh, and it's not towards the state.
That's what I got for your today. Thanks so much
for listening. Until next time.
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