Don’t you see that it’s stupidness, Mr PM?

By Jenni Campbell

Contributor

The wicked, serpentine web of deception has ensnared many, particularly some in influential positions globally. Leaders caught in this detestable spiral are usually steeped in corruption and ginnalship.

They carry a strange kind of duplicity and lack any sense of integrity. They will confidently declare one thing today and shamelessly deny the very same thing tomorrow.

What is also rapidly emerging is that some of these enmeshed leaders have morphed into barefaced and brazen tyrants who make the psychotic presumption that people are nothing more than docile pawns in their diminishing power game.

These deceitful, serpentine leaders fool themselves into thinking that populations are blind, deaf, dumb, dead to spiritual revelation, dismissive of their God, and willing to comply with Satanic agendas disguised as advancement.

The signs that a leader is heading towards the notorious web of deception are usually crystal clear.

So, while delivering the opening remarks at the Inter-American Development Bank’s (IDB) conference on digital transformation in St. Andrew last Wednesday morning, in the presence of dignitaries, media, and all, Jamaican Prime Minister Andrew Holness took a giant leap towards the web.

Through selective memory, Mr. Holness brushed aside the mountain of evidence, with himself and others in his government championing the benefits of a fully digital economy, which was understood to mean cashless. He castigated those with functioning memories for daring to recall and believe his own utterances, which he said was ‘stupidness’.  He ranted that his government had spent billions of dollars on new, more durable banknotes hence could not be advancing to any cashless system.

Prime Minister Andrew Holness

“Don’t you see that it’s stupidness?” he blasted. The truth is, Mr. Holness, when you first suggested the advance towards cashlessness, many of us asked the very same question.

Having arrived at the web in the presence of all and sundry, there was no turning back for Mr. Holness. With his stern face in place, he chastised the Jamaican people, hollering that it would be nonsensical to invest in the implementation of the new notes and then suddenly decide to remove them from the system.

Mr. Holness must have forgotten that such nonsense has been unleashed on populations multiple times by governments in Jamaica and across the globe. There have been myriads of announcements over many years that have not materialised. We have seen countless cases where money changed hands and neither goods nor services were delivered.

Governments, especially those with no integrity or regard for the people, have wasted large amounts of tax dollars and resources for explainable reasons.

This backtracking by Mr. Holness underscores the fact that cashless systems around the world are a dime a dozen, but these mechanisms work alongside cash and other forms of transactions. Jamaica going fully cashless is lunacy, especially if it is propagated by political officialdom. It is in this light that we must view the soundings from PM Holness and his government, albeit, he has now accepted the nonsensical nature of the idea. Stupidness!

Since cashless society runs totally on a government-backed digital currency, one must wonder what was the thought behind the initial push.

For a cashless society to be cashless, it needs a government-backed digital currency that’s legal tender—otherwise known as a central bank digital currency (CBDC). CBDCs are legal tender that can be spent pretty much like cash. (But you can’t stuff them under your mattress, use them to pay your ‘pardna’ hand or mail them in letters to mama living in the deep, rural parts.)

Mr. Holness and his government not only introduced Jam-Dex, the Jamaican CBDC, they were also wedded to promoting it.

They announced two new incentive programmes to increase the adoption of their digital currency, with the expressed intention to reward businesses that accept digital currency at the point of sale as well as individual users who use the Jam-Dex regularly. The hope was to facilitate their transition towards the digital economy, which we are now learning was never the intent.

The government ran a consumer incentive last year to reward the first 100,000 Jamaicans who signed up for the JAM-DEX with a J$2,500 deposit. However, only 36,000 people took advantage of the J$2,500 incentive. So they made a second push for up to 60,000 new wallet holders who don’t have bank accounts to sign up.

Jamaicans so far are suspicious of this invisible money that is pegged into a government system that they do not trust.

It is easier to trust the workplace and community bankers with the ‘pardna draw’ than the cryptic confusion called government.

Mr. Holness should know that the world has entered a season of misinformation and disinformation for the sole purpose of destroying lives.

A veil of confusion has been added to this, and those who are not under the Blood Covenant of Jesus Christ of Nazareth will be fodder for the foe.

This is so because we are, in fact, in the last days and the enemy is on the loose, seeking whomever he can devour.

Agents of hell are trying to confuse our people about many issues, including their money, their assets, and their gender, and to give them ungodly artificial options that really do not exist.

Witchcraft has become more prevalent, rivaling righteous beliefs.

So many of our children have gone missing; many have been molested and murdered for unspeakable reasons.

Our country is in crisis and falling fast to demonic pressures.

Pushing the globalist, Satanist agenda will only hasten our demise. Our people know this well.

The judgement of God is heavy over our nation. As the Prime Minister, the onus is still on your shoulder, Mr. Holness, to call the nation to three full days of repentance and prayer.

Detach yourself from the web of corruption, step away from the stupidness, and move decisively towards righteousness. Repent, Mr. PM, and renounce brogadism and the demonic world to which it belongs.

Ask Jehovah for wisdom and reject the very appearance of evil. The truth of God will stand, and the gates of hell, which you currently seem to be holding firmly in place at the behest of your international partners, cannot prevail. The Christian Church in Jamaica has always stood on the right side of history. History is once again calling on Jamaica to stand and speak with a sound mind and with one bold voice against the advancement of evil. And we shall speak.

Nadine Harris: