02/12/2023

What Can I Do to Stop CBDCs? - Dr Mercola
https://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2023/02/11/how-to-stop-cbdcs.aspx?ui=551eda515442ee5cc8f0c77cc67b3f3febd63142ec0dc6cef1d4521e5ea666eb&sd=20200307&cid_source=dnl&cid_medium=email&cid_content=art1HL&cid=20230211_HL2&cid=DM1344231&bid=1718415014
Story at-a-glance

In 2023, 11 countries have fully launched a digital currency while more than 20 more will move toward starting one
114 countries, which represent more than 95% of global GDP, are looking into CBDC — up from just 35 countries in 2020
Finance guru Catherine Austin Fitts details 10 practical steps individuals can take to stop implementation of CBDCs
Tips include using cash as much as possible and minimizing your use of digital systems, including avoiding biometric technology and QR codes
Doing business with local people and entities you know and trust, and ditching large, multinational banks in favor of trustworthy local banks or credit unions will also help

Central bank digital currencies, or CBDCs, are government-backed digital currencies issued by a central bank. They're being rapidly rolled out to bring about a new economic transaction system that could lead to a new form of modern-day slavery.

CBDCs are promoted as digital tokens that can simplify monetary policy and bring about convenient cashless societies. They're also sometimes said to be similar to cryptocurrency1 due to their digital nature, but there are important, and major, distinctions.

While cryptocurrencies are decentralized and allow anonymous transactions, CBDCs are centralized and can track every transaction. They can also be controlled by the powers that be — meaning all your CBDC assets could be taken away or turned off by a central power, and there'd be nothing you could do about it.
CBDCs Are Part of the Plan to End All Currencies