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New global monetary system
https://x.com/pete_rizzo_/status/2056263...28269?s=20

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Nowt to do with any form of global govt. Global crypto currency will be owned and managed by global governance partnerships of usual money grubbers, mega-corp for and not for, profit. 

You will be able to vote for your favourite bloated local ideologue whose lackies will work really really hard passively ensuring your compliance.

Your built-in obsolete AI fridge will do your shopping for you and if you pour your disgusting GM orange juice down your smart drain, your crypto account will be auto deducted
It is a world of shit and pain the controllers have in store for us and like every fascist that came before, they truly believe they know better than you what is right for you
(05-18-2026, 10:25 AM)covent Wrote: Nowt to do with any form of global govt. Global crypto currency will be owned and managed by global governance partnerships of usual money grubbers, mega-corp for and not for, profit. 

You will be able to vote for your favourite bloated local ideologue whose lackies will work really really hard passively ensuring your compliance.

Your built-in obsolete AI fridge will do your shopping for you and if you pour your disgusting GM orange juice down your smart drain, your crypto account will be auto deducted
It is a world of shit and pain the controllers have in store for us and like every fascist that came before, they truly believe they know better than you what is right for you

It appears there will not be a replacement of cash currency with digital crypto currency, but rather a co-existence of both.

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"No, cryptocurrency is unlikely to fully replace cash. Current analysis indicates a hybrid future where physical cash, digital fiat (including Central Bank Digital Currencies or CBDCs), and cryptocurrencies coexist, each serving distinct roles in the financial ecosystem. 
Key barriers preventing replacement include:
  • Volatility: Cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin suffer from high price fluctuations, making them unreliable as a stable unit of account for daily transactions like buying groceries. 
  • Scalability and Speed: Public blockchains often face transaction bottlenecks and high fees during peak usage, lagging behind traditional card networks and cash in speed and cost-efficiency. 
  • Regulatory and Privacy Concerns: Governments are prioritizing CBDCs to maintain monetary control, while cash remains valued for its absolute anonymity and resistance to digital surveillance, which public ledger cryptocurrencies cannot fully provide. 
Instead of replacement, the trajectory points toward coexistence, with cryptocurrencies primarily functioning as investment assets or settlement layers for cross-border transfers, while cash and CBDCs handle routine daily spending. " (LLM)

https://cryptoviewport.com/investment-tu...explained/
"The only journey is the one within."
(05-18-2026, 10:32 AM)quintessentone Wrote: It appears there will not be a replacement of cash currency with digital crypto currency, but rather a co-existence of both.

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"No, cryptocurrency is unlikely to fully replace cash. Current analysis indicates a hybrid future where physical cash, digital fiat (including Central Bank Digital Currencies or CBDCs), and cryptocurrencies coexist, each serving distinct roles in the financial ecosystem. 
Key barriers preventing replacement include:
  • Volatility: Cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin suffer from high price fluctuations, making them unreliable as a stable unit of account for daily transactions like buying groceries. 
  • Scalability and Speed: Public blockchains often face transaction bottlenecks and high fees during peak usage, lagging behind traditional card networks and cash in speed and cost-efficiency. 
  • Regulatory and Privacy Concerns: Governments are prioritizing CBDCs to maintain monetary control, while cash remains valued for its absolute anonymity and resistance to digital surveillance, which public ledger cryptocurrencies cannot fully provide. 
Instead of replacement, the trajectory points toward coexistence, with cryptocurrencies primarily functioning as investment assets or settlement layers for cross-border transfers, while cash and CBDCs handle routine daily spending. " (LLM)

https://cryptoviewport.com/investment-tu...explained/


There may be co existence for a period of time

(Unless their plan is to completely crash the legacy system in a total reset)

But even if they do choose the other route and allow both currency rails to run simultaneously, the end goal is to phase out cash, entirely 

Running both systems will be expensive and inefficient 

When tokens can do what cash can do with more security in half the time for less cost, the optimal choice will be blockchain 

Running both systems will be like running landlines with cellphones or running dialup with fios

Eventually, one disappears
https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-...structure/

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https://x.com/BitcoinNewsCom/status/2056...31553?s=20

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https://x.com/JesseCohenInv/status/20562...37184?s=20

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(05-18-2026, 11:02 AM)cherokeetroy Wrote: https://x.com/JesseCohenInv/status/20562...37184?s=20

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Yes, I am trying to learn about this phenomenon and how China has systematically been reducing their position (akin to perhaps ending up becoming a thousand cuts?). Will the tech billionaire bros come to the rescue?

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"While some nations are quietly reducing holdings for reserve-management or geopolitical reasons, abrupt withdrawal is unlikely due to the deep liquidity of U.S. Treasuries and the lack of immediate alternatives.  A sustained retreat would raise U.S. borrowing costs and weaken the dollar, but domestic buyers and allied investors currently absorb much of the gap, preventing a "seismic" collapse. 
Key Factors Influencing Foreign Demand
  • Shifting Ownership: Japan is the largest foreign holder with $1.2 trillion in Treasuries, followed by the UK and China, whose holdings have gradually declined since peaking in the mid-2010s.
  • Economic Consequences: Reduced foreign buying forces the U.S. Treasury to offer higher yields to attract buyers, which increases interest costs for the government and propagates into higher rates for mortgages and business loans. 
  • Market Resilience: The U.S. market is supported by domestic investors and the dollar's status as the global reserve currency, making a coordinated "dump" of Treasuries risky for sellers who would face valuation losses and market instability. 
  • Geopolitical Hedging: Some countries are diversifying away from U.S. assets, but analysts note that selling U.S. debt is a blunt and risky tool that can harm the seller’s own economy, leading to quiet reduction rather than overt weaponization." (LLM)


    https://bipartisanpolicy.org/article/for...-u-s-debt/
"The only journey is the one within."
(05-18-2026, 11:12 AM)quintessentone Wrote: Will the tech billionaire bros come to the rescue?

Possibly

https://x.com/alexelorenzo/status/205642...33949?s=20

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