By Anna Von Reitz
People are desperately looking for something, anything, to replace the Federal Reserve Note. Trying to sustain and even increase the velocity of money, they have turned to digital currency --- a plethora of various tokens and coins traded via a digital system and digital "wallets" -- and all containing what?
Really?
No, of course, digital currencies aren't safe investments. We don't claim or guarantee that they are. They may be necessary for a time, but buyers need to beware and to the extent that they feel they have to invest in currency outside the conventional system, limit their investments.
Why?
Because digital currencies are not safe and can never be as safe as gold or silver in hand, or even cash in hand.
Cash, at least, is evidence of credit or debt.
With a digital currency, all it takes is a well-placed EMP or drone strike that short-circuits the global electrical grid -- and believe it or not, even the most carefully constructed blockchain system can be defeated.
The Perpetrators want to get rid of cash because the form of cash they have been using is evidence of crime -- their crime. They have passed off non-negotiable instruments as a currency, they have presented I.O.U.s issued by commercial and/or municipal corporations as currency issued by a legitimate government. They have repeatedly defaulted and sought bankruptcy protection paid for by their victims.
And every Federal Reserve Note on Earth tells the tale against them.
No wonder they are desperate to escape into the digital realm, where all the digits merely entered into a computer can "stand for" whatever they claim to keep an accounting of, but as it turns out, they are lousy accountants, too.
They are the ones who adopted Easy Eddie O'Hare's "double accrual bookkeeping system" --- otherwise known as keeping two sets of books, one for budgeted and one for non-budgeted income -- not us.
They are the ones that didn't balance the books for over 160 years, leading to a situation where one side of the ledger overflowed with debt and the other side overflowed with credit --- and the poor people stuck in between were charged "interest" on a debt that never actually existed, while the Perps feasted on their credit.
They are desperate to escape to a digital system that will be "more elastic" and easier to manipulate.
And faster.
They keep emphasizing that digital will be faster.
But that doesn't matter, really. We already have technology that is infinitely faster than human inputs can match. So it is all just BS.
Most of it is being brought to us by the Deep State Chinese Government, which, coincidentally, isn't Communist. It's Capitalist in the extreme, and it has already taken over most of the major port facilities on this planet.
Get a clue. These corporations aren't really Chinese.
They are British Crown and "American" Corporations operating in China. China was just the new forward base for these parasites.
We may all have to rely on a digital system in the short term, but nothing is more firmly etched in our minds, than the necessity to have real, actual, in-our-hand cash and money --- and not rely upon digital digits entered into digital ledgers.
If you hear anyone parroting the idea that digital currencies are safe, feel free to disabuse them of their ignorance. They aren't safe, though they may be necessary for a time.
And none of us can afford to leave the administration of any digitized financial system in the hands of the same Perpetrators who have engineered the present debacle.
At all times, remember who and what we are dealing with.
They aren't trustworthy and nothing they produce is trustworthy as a result. We have the evidence and the road rash to prove this.
Those who don't learn from the past have cause to regret it in the future.
Those who couldn't manage a paper currency and do an honest job of it don't deserve a second chance managing an even more fluid and ephemeral digital currency.
So, no, digital currencies are not safe. We may have to use digital exchanges in the short term, but the need for "hard copy" will not disappear for obvious reasons.
Meantime, choose and use digital products carefully and with full knowledge that they can just disappear --- literally in the blink of an eye. Do not place all your eggs in their basket.
This is a matter of common sense and due diligence. Nobody should need to be told that digital currencies are risky. The need to use them as a means of exchange may be necessary in the short term, but never fall into any false sense of security concerning them.
Observe-- blockchains, so long as electrical connection is maintained, can track the transit of transactions through a grid system. They don't guarantee the nature, value, or existence of the "value" being tracked.
So keep your Shinola Sensors on "High" and be sensible about any investments you make in any digital currency.
Issued by:
Anna Maria Riezinger -- Fiduciary
The United States of America
In care of: Box 520994
Big Lake, Alaska 99652
July 14th 2025
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