Central banks around the world intend to implement central bank digital currency (CBDCs) in the form of microchips implanted under the skin, according to a well-known German economist, saying that with the use of this technology, the government will be able to completely control its citizens’ personal finances.
“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,” said Richard Werner in an interview with podcaster Ivor Cummins. Werner is known for developing the now commonly used bank practice of quantitative easing.
CBDCs demand that users open bank accounts directly with central banks like the Federal Reserve, which gives governments control over how citizens access money. This is in contrast to other types of digital currency now in use.
“You have to think of CDBCs as a control system [or a permit system], not a currency,” Werner said, adding that people’s money “would no longer be truly their own.”
Werner considers implanted CBDCs a “violation of human dignity,” noting that central bankers themselves know that this common opinion among the masses “is a hurdle.”
“They say there’s a problem of trust because people suspect that governments and central banks are just trying to roll this out in order to monitor and control and restrict transactions. They’re absolutely right,” said Werner.
Cummins pointed out that thousands of people have previously consented to having microchips implanted under their skin to facilitate financial transactions and access to particular locations, even if implanted CBDCs may seem like a conspiracy theory to some. The first British person to have a bank card microchip implanted was able to make purchases late last year with just a tap of his hand.
According to a number of Christian authors, authoritarianism on a biblical scale will result if such technology becomes necessary for obtaining commodities and services.
Central banks will convince people to adopt CBDC microchip implants
Werner claims that in the beginning, CBDCs will be recruited through mobile apps. Why hasn’t it already been released? It’s not actually necessary. It’s up to us to generate that need,” Werner remarked.
He claimed that in order to persuade people to adopt CBDCs on the surface, central banks will likely employ a carrot-and-stick strategy, beginning by inducing economic crises that will lead to a demand for universal basic income (UBI), a government program in which every adult citizen receives a predetermined amount of money on a regular basis.
Then, the central banks will assert that they “need the CBDC chip implant” to effectively manage the UBI. According to Werner, such CBDCs will allow access to products and services to be denied in order to comply with legislative requirements.
Werner believes that one key step toward implementing implanted CBDCs was taken with the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, which provided justification for the implementation of vaccine passports.
Werner’s assertion appeared to be supported by Catherine Austin Fitts, a former assistant secretary of housing for the United States, who previously stated that the COVID-19-enforced measures created the framework for a global central banking system and a technocratic “regulatory and economic model that permits far greater central control.”
According to Fitts, social credit and digital surveillance will make it possible for the central bank-controlled “credit” to be “adjusted or turned off on an individual basis.”
This idea of microchipping the public is not a new idea. Head of the World Economic Forum, German engineer, and economist, Klaus Martin Schwab has been stating for years that the public must be microchipped. He’s even gone on to compliment China and their social credit score system.
Watch the video below to learn more about the central banks’ plan to introduce a CBDC microchip implant to the public:
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