Forum Replies Created

Page 10 of 28
  • SpagsUnfiltered

    Member
    November 15, 2022 at 5:16 pm in reply to: Crypto, A Force for Good? Or a Trap?

    Sounds like you take a multi faceted approach. I believe this is wise. I do the same.

    Have some crypto, some cash, some silver, and a myriad of other consumables that I believe will be in super high demand for the first month post event.

  • SpagsUnfiltered

    Member
    November 15, 2022 at 3:03 pm in reply to: Crypto, A Force for Good? Or a Trap?

    I totally get it. I am still rather skeptical. But, I like the idea of using their systems against them if possible. Hence why I only invest what I can afford to lose (which isn’t much at all). Economic warfare is really all we have.

  • SpagsUnfiltered

    Member
    November 15, 2022 at 3:01 pm in reply to: Crypto, A Force for Good? Or a Trap?

    Great response. I don’t think that the “beer disapproved and now you are on a list” is that farfetched quite honestly. I think that sort of system is just around the corner and the FED is certainly creating Dollar Coin right now. You can actually invest in it as a lateral option on most Crypto trading aps. It’s called USDC (US Dollar Coin) and is exchanged at the rate of 1 for 1. At some point, this will be turned on past a lateral monetary hold and will absolutely replace the paper dollar.

    <font color=”rgba(0, 0, 0, 0)” face=”inherit”>My oldest daughter currently works at Wally World as a pharmacy tech, and she tells us every day how Walmart is purposefully not bringing cash into the stores. Half the time they don’t have cash in the </font>self-check<font color=”rgba(0, 0, 0, 0)” face=”inherit”> </font>outs,<font color=”rgba(0, 0, 0, 0)” face=”inherit”> and she says that store staff has to fight over the one cash register in the store that has actual cash. </font>

    Walmart is part of the DHS’s national net and just like HyVee, Kroger, etc are conditioning us to use nothing but our debt cards. Eventually we will all be issued a USDC card from our banks to replace the existing debt cards. Most people won’t see this coming and when it happens will view it as nothing more than a new card.

    <font color=”rgba(0, 0, 0, 0)” face=”inherit”>I </font>promise<font color=”rgba(0, 0, 0, 0)” face=”inherit”> all banks will “</font>incentivize<font color=”rgba(0, 0, 0, 0)” face=”inherit”>” you to turn in your cash, and it will be put on your prepaid USDC card and can be used just like a prepaid debt card. But….just like how your gift cards ALL have small micro </font>balances<font color=”rgba(0, 0, 0, 0)” face=”inherit”> left on them after you use them (because nothing costs exactly $50 right? Everyone leaves $1.23 or so on their cards that they end up not using withing the year limit), the government will use that to limit your saving power. Your USDC cards will likely have spending limits, and deadlines to use certian micro amounts. </font>

    <font color=”rgba(0, 0, 0, 0)” face=”inherit”>The USDC Card will absolutely be used to control everything you do. And think of this, there is no need to outlaw guns or ammo. All they have to do is have your cards set to deny your purchases with a system of gun control linked exclusively to the current economy and the USCD Card…just like Europe. Yeah, you can buy guns in many European </font>countries<font color=”rgba(0, 0, 0, 0)” face=”inherit”> still. Just with long waiting lists, and rules that require you to keep it at a gun club etc. </font>

  • SpagsUnfiltered

    Member
    November 15, 2022 at 2:51 pm in reply to: Crypto, A Force for Good? Or a Trap?

    Thanks for commenting!

    Honestly, people tell me that you can have hardened external crypto wallets. But as far as I can tell, this won’t be for barter post event. I think Crypto is more for buying back into the system that emerges from the event.

    Most preppers have this “prepper porn” idea that the world collapses and we get sucked into a Mad Max vortex that lasts hundreds of years. This is likely very untrue. All the world governments know collapse of some nature is inevitable and they have been preparing just as we have….only with virtually unlimited resources.

    No matter if it is an EMP, limited nuclear exchange, financial collapse, conventional war etc; the NWO in all its forms has plans in place right now to bring the world back online when they chose. Having the ability to buy into whatever replaces the current paradigm is a strategy everyone should consider.

  • SpagsUnfiltered

    Member
    November 15, 2022 at 2:47 pm in reply to: Crypto, A Force for Good? Or a Trap?

    I would agree with that.

  • SpagsUnfiltered

    Member
    November 15, 2022 at 2:47 pm in reply to: Crypto, A Force for Good? Or a Trap?

    I agree. I have 6 cryptos in my portfolio including Bitcoin. Most of them purchased on a tip from a friend I have that is very knowledgeable on crypto. He too will say that most crypto is just gambling and all you do is buy low sell high like anything else.

    I have some hope for Ethereum too. I do own some of that. I’m really hoping the SEC lawsuit against Ripple ends well. I believe XRP has real potential. However I am not an XRP Army Fan Boy like most people who own it.

  • SpagsUnfiltered

    Member
    November 15, 2022 at 1:14 pm in reply to: Crypto, A Force for Good? Or a Trap?

    Are there any other crypto you like to invest in? Or is it just Bitcoin?

  • SpagsUnfiltered

    Member
    November 15, 2022 at 12:52 pm in reply to: Crypto, A Force for Good? Or a Trap?

    Great points! Love the discussion.

  • SpagsUnfiltered

    Member
    November 15, 2022 at 4:13 am in reply to: Crypto, A Force for Good? Or a Trap?

    AH, That makes sense. Thank you for elaborating. I appreciate the feedback!

  • SpagsUnfiltered

    Member
    November 15, 2022 at 12:15 am in reply to: Crypto, A Force for Good? Or a Trap?

    What part do you consider the mark of the beast?

    Every part of what you describe can equally be attributed to a debit card or ordering on Amazon.

    That money isn’t real either. Ever since the birth of fractional reserve banking under the FED, a bank only has to have deposited 15% of all total holdings in that institution.

    By your logic, using green backs is the mark of the beast too. It’s all government usury and all fake. None of it is anything less than intergenerational debt.

    So why does crypto all of a sudden become the beast when it’s nothing but a modern rendition of what everyone of us has done since we got our first $5 for mowing the lawn?

    I think that is far too simplistic of a view of it. There is zero chance to be a purist about money. We all are hypocrites to one degree or another.

  • SpagsUnfiltered

    Member
    November 14, 2022 at 9:37 pm in reply to: Crypto, A Force for Good? Or a Trap?

    Yep. If sn animal sees a trap, and successfully removes the bait and eats it without setting off the trap….it’s a smart animal.

  • SpagsUnfiltered

    Member
    November 14, 2022 at 7:11 pm in reply to: Crypto, A Force for Good? Or a Trap?

    Thanks for the reply! I true don’t view it as the salvation of thr market. Could it be? Possibly. But more likely that it is part of the bait and switch.

    That being said, I have often advocated that it should not just be the “dirty Ashkenazi bankers” (just wanted to see if I’d get canceled like K West…haahaha) who profit on these sorts of things.

    A well rounded prepper mentality forces us to use what we can learn to use to gain wealth to use as needed. But agreed on investing more than we can lose.

  • SpagsUnfiltered

    Member
    November 14, 2022 at 6:55 pm in reply to: Crypto, A Force for Good? Or a Trap?

    Getting in early is pivotal. I honestly see 98% of crypto as quick flip gambling. As long as I view it that way and only bet what I’m willing to lose, it never bites me.

  • SpagsUnfiltered

    Member
    November 14, 2022 at 5:09 pm in reply to: Crypto, A Force for Good? Or a Trap?

    The ghetto tobacco store a few miles down the road has a bitcoin kiosk in it.

  • SpagsUnfiltered

    Member
    November 14, 2022 at 4:47 pm in reply to: Crypto, A Force for Good? Or a Trap?

    All valid points. I tend to at least in part gold to each one to a certain degree. I think with Crypto, it’s a bit of “all the above”.

    But, to be fair, that’s what decentralization gets you. Freedom is very dangerous. So are all things associated with it. But I’m willing to live dangerously free than safely as a serf.

    So I’ll dabble. I’ll learn, but always with skepticism.

    Thanks for commenting!

Page 10 of 28