In comments monitored by Worthy News, Professor Richard Werner, a prominent German economist, warned: “I was taught by a central banker [that] the CBDCs look like a small grain of rice that they want to put under your skin.”
Werner, who spent time at several central banks and devised the widely used (and according to Werner, abused) bank practice of quantitative easing, added: “You have to think of CDBCs as a control system [or a permit system], not a currency.”
Werner believes such planned implanted CBDCs are a “violation of human dignity,” adding that central bankers realize this common opinion among the masses “is a hurdle.”
CURRENCY APPS
Werner cautioned that in the “initial phase,” CBDCs, which global groups such as the World Economic Forum support, will be introduced through phone-based applications or apps. Other digital currencies already use those apps. “Why hasn’t it been rolled out yet? There’s no actual need for it. That need has to be created,” Werner added.
Soon after, central banks will pressure people to adopt CBDCs under the skin, starting with generating economic crises that will lead to a demand for a “universal basic income” (UBI), Werner explained.
Werner said banks would claim they “need the latest technology, the CBDC chip implant,” to run the UBI “efficiently.”
Already thousands of thousands of people consented to have microchips implanted under their skin to facilitate financial transactions and access to select locations, most notably in Sweden.
Two-thirds of employees believe that in 2035, humans with chips implanted in their bodies will have “an unfair advantage” in the labor market, according to a Citrix survey of employees in the United States and Europe.
Those sentiments and microchip projects, such as in Sweden, will likely convince more authorities to introduce the CBDC microchip soon, according to a Worthy News assessment.
Former U.S. Assistant Secretary of Housing Catherine Austin Fitts has said that measures implemented “under the cover” of COVID-19 lay the foundation for a new global central banking “regulatory and economic model that permits far greater central control.”
DIGITAL SURVEILLANCE
She warned that digital surveillance and a social credit system as exists in China would allow central-bank-controlled “credit” to be “adjusted or turned off on an individual basis.”
General Manager Agustín Carstens of the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) has admitted that any Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) will have broad implications.
In video footage seen by Worthy News, he said CBDCs would give central banks “absolute control on the rules and regulations” governing CBDC use “and the technology to enforce that.”
Supporters of the CBDCs and the expected implanted microchips argue that they will further ease payment transactions and lift people out of poverty and that privacy will be taken seriously.
But critical experts remain concerned about the digital dawn of a new brave world.
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