It appears that while Bill Gates was content to play the role of
Microsoft innovator and billionaire philanthropist early on, he has
decided that the second half of his life deserves a more open and
slightly more honest twist.
Indeed, in recent years Bill Gates and his Bill and Melinda Gates
Foundation have funded a variety of initiatives aimed at reducing
population, promoting toxic vaccinations, and now hyping and funding the
development of the cashless society.
In a recent article by Peter McCoy published in Bloomberg Businessweek,
McCoy reveals that Bill Gates is opposed to physical cash currency
because, like vaccine-free populations who are able to determine their
own reproduction rates, it hurts poor people (according to Gates).
Indeed, McCoy writes that Gates “hates cash” “because of its effect
on people at the opposite end of the wealth spectrum—the world’s poor
and unbanked.” Of course, in third world countries that are suffering
from starvation, civil war, and abysmal living standards, the answer is
clearly “banking.”
If only these nations had more banks and greater access to banks –
the private banks of course – then we would finally see the living
standards of these nations raised to truly acceptable levels. If only
more people had access to digital transactions, then empty bellies would
soon be filled.
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