Will cash lose its kingship?

Water, they say, is life. Not paying your water bill could be suicidal, if you follow the popular argument. 

So, when the cash-strapped National Water Commission (NWC) can refuse to accept cash payments, we have entered a new and dangerous dry-eyed spell, beyond the threat of drought.

The world, which is plunged into a deleterious state of confusion, is forging full speed ahead, towards the wicked embrace of the beast and its one-world system of control.

In Jamaica, the government is flip-flopping around its relationship with the impending order and the issue of a cashless society. We are rapidly advancing towards a digital society. The banks are well-advanced on this pathway, as the prime minister declared early in the game before denying his own disclosure. Notwithstanding, facilities that once provided easy access to cash have hardened and grown dysfunctional. 

But whether cashless or digital, the endgame is still the same. More and more Jamaicans are being forced to move their businesses online, where cash is no longer king and digital currencies assume rulership.

In 2017, the then Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) general manager of the Caribbean Country Department said the National Identification System (NIDS), which is now being rolled out under the leadership of a popular churchman, will lay the foundation for Jamaica to become a digital economy.

The digital economy is being promoted as the worldwide network of economic activities, commercial transactions, and professional interactions that are enabled by information and communications technology.

As the IDB country head spoke seven years ago, the Jamaican prime minister mounted his high horse to pronounce that Jamaica would become fully digital by 2023. He further stated that this was critical to driving growth, creating opportunities for businesses, promoting innovation, and creating jobs.

Admitting that some Jamaicans are hesitant about embracing technology, the prime minister threw caution to the wind and assured that digital, as the way of the world, was the way for the island nation to go. 

One year after the prime minister’s deadline to go digital, the NWC, a primary agency of governmental control, has indicated, on a poster in at least one of its payment facilities, that it will no longer accept cash payments.

Unlike other utility agencies, the NWC, an enterprise generating revenues of nearly $30 billion annually, is fully owned by the government and the people of Jamaica.  With the NWC, the government has full authority to dictate operational and revenue policies. The NWC is a most vital utility agency where the majority of communities, the entire corporate area, and nearly all townships islandwide are connected to and totally dependent on its snaking pipelines.

This move by the NWC, which has been marinating in the pipeline for a number of years, is a major signal that the prime minister will have his way. His mission to cashlessness is in sight.

Signs are now clearer to all, but they were always obvious to those who were paying close attention. About three years ago, two Jamaicans, who happen to be Seventh-day Adventists, warned the nation about what they feared was a new world order that was set to be imposed on Jamaica.

Jermaine Allen and Jacqueline Murray, of the Linstead Seventh-day Adventist Church and North Street Seventh-day Adventist Church, respectively, received visions that warned that the “mark of the beast” was to be imposed around the world. 

Allen warned against participating in a cashless system. Little did they know that the forces of darkness were already well-advanced in their wicked plan.

Cashless societies are part of a global plan for ultimate power. They are the central axis of control that aims to identify and determine the spread of wealth and how this wealth is to be managed. This mercenary frontier must be understood as an economic concept where all goods, services, and sales are executed in a tersely regulated electronic arrangement rather than free-flowing cash. Every transaction, regardless of how small, leaves indelible imprints. It becomes a trail of evidence and linkages, entrapping the consumer in an inescapable Big Brother enclosure where he or she is forced to comply or be severely penalised. 

This might sound like something out of a science fiction movie, but it is already on its way into reality, thanks to too many corrupt governments and questionable financial service companies vying for power, top dollars, and media ratings in the new era. 

Some invisible persons, with dubious titles in some undisclosed locations, have set themselves up to decide who will get what, when, and where, and how much each individual will be allowed to spend on what occasion.

They engage in a system of mass manipulation, hegemony of the highest order, way beyond the wildest imaginations of savage slave masters, and bewitched magicians. It is a system that is desperately trying to replicate the all-encompassing power of God through mammon. 

The chief commander of this system is the enemy of God, who is already defeated. Politicians, many of whom have already sold their souls slavishly to Satan, are the chief salesmen behind this system. They are blindly bent on breaking in their economies to fit into this money-driven mechanism for their own gain.

Like pawns in the hand of the enemy, corrupt and greedy leaders of small states take unto themselves the legal rights to link their countries to this Satanic capture of God’s creation. They make this far-reaching decision with deadly implications on behalf of docile people, who are too focused on meeting the daily high costs of living to even care. They plod along with little or absolutely no understanding of where they are headed.

The epic, global moral decline we are witnessing, coupled with the money-hungry one-world madness, will eventually usher in the Antichrist.  Revelation 13:1–18 reveals that no one under AntiChrist rule will be able to buy or sell unless they take his mark, which is either his name or number involving 666 placed on their right hand or forehead.

Central control of all buying and selling by forcing people to “take the mark of the beast” is the next massive hysteria, which will ride in on a bandwidth of fear. If it were possible, even the elect would be duped.  So it is not far-fetched to believe that this march of the blind towards cashlessness is setting the groundwork for the inevitable. 

If there is cash, alongside digital options, people would be able to purchase in the black market. The only way everyone in the world can be subject to this centrally controlled demonic mechanism is by instituting a totalitarian and completely cashless society.

Neither the government nor the brightest researchers at the top university seem to have a full grasp of the size or scope of the underground economy in which the majority of the Jamaican population participates. This economy runs parallel to the formal economy and is essentially cash-dependent. The huge population of unbanked persons, manual workers, minimum wage earners, vendors, professionals in private practice, and a large section of society that lives hand-to-mouth exist on the fringes of the formal economy, but are firmly rooted, along with a variety of illegal enterprises, in the underground economy. 

For Jamaica to go cashless, the thriving underground economy, which feeds the majority of the population, will have to be grounded to a halt.  

Physical money has been called one of the last bastions of privacy. Every Believer in Christ must know that any system that seeks totalitarian control of money, movement, and behaviour will also seek to control worship, family, and religion. This is not from God. We are duly warned. Remain silent at our peril.

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