Failure of the War on Cash

Monday, April 11, 2016
By Paul Martin

By: Jeff Thomas
GoldSeek.com
Monday, 11 April 2016

Some years ago, when I suspected there would be a War on Cash at some point, everything in the behaviour of the central banks pointed to the idea – it fit exactly into their own informed, yet unrealistic pattern of logic. I therefore decided that it would be a likely development and would take place at a time when they had tried everything else and had run out of other ideas. As to a date when this might happen … I had no idea.

When several countries had begun to limit the amount of money that a depositor could take out of a bank, I decided that the first shots in the War on Cash had been fired and began to publish my prognostications as to what shape it would take. First, there were the benefits to the bank (the elimination of cash transactions, which would assure that virtually all monetary transactions, large and small, would have to be passed through banks, allowing them to effectively “own” all deposits, charge for every transaction and even refuse transactions.) The governments would also benefit. In approving the banks’ monopoly on monetary transactions, they’d benefit primarily through the new ability to tax people by direct debit, ending any remnant of voluntary payment of taxation.

What I didn’t anticipate at that time was that, within a few months, the War on Cash would be escalated quickly – more quickly than was safe for them to do, as it could alarm depositors. (As in the old analogy of boiling a frog, it’s always best to turn up the heat slowly, to lull the victim into complacency, as he’s being done in.)

This indicated to me that the central banks had decided that they’d already waited too late and had better hurry up the programme to assure that it was in place before a currency crisis could heat up.

Since then, someone came up with an excellent name for the phenomenon, “the War on Cash,” one that succinctly describes the plan in a nefarious way, as it deserves to be described. Today, anyone who is paying attention is aware of the War on Cash and what it might do to him. As each new salvo by the banks and governments is uncovered, attentive observers are publishing such developments on the internet.

However, there’s a further facet to the War on Cash that no one (to my knowledge) has yet addressed. The war is still new, and those who will be attacked are understandably still scrambling for their muskets and hurrying to the ramparts. (Musing on how a war will play out usually comes later, as it’s winding down and a victor seems apparent. However, in my belief, it’s wise to examine what the landscape will look like after the war is over, as it can serve to inform us as to what battle tactics should be employed.)

So, let’s have a look. First off, we know that whenever there’s a coming monetary collapse, major banks look forward to employing their political influence to assure that legislation and emergency government measures protect them in such a way as to assure that the upcoming competitors are put out of business. We can expect the same this time around. These smaller banks arise during boom times by creating many small branches – the type seen in strip-malls and shopping villages. Typically, they may have only 1000 or more depositors per bank – just barely enough to create profit, but, as “convenience banks,” they can count on a steady business from those who live nearby.

The Rest…HERE

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