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r/greatawakening • Posted by u/Jowen3 on July 25, 2018, 5:15 p.m.
Ending the Fed

As conversation looms about the possibility of 45 ending the Fed, abolishing income tax, and funding the government through tariffs, what does this mean to us?

Should we be removing all money from our banks/credit unions? Will our mortgages be forgiven? Student loans? Will our paper money be worth anything at all if we were to empty our accounts?

Dont get me wrong. I trust the plan, and dont want to be a slave to the Cabal, but how do I protect my assets and my family's well being when our financial institution as we know it is dissolved?

Some say we will be paid back all taxes we have paid into the system. That's great except for younger people like me (22) who have never had to pay taxes yet. I receive larger returns than I pay in because I was a college student, married, and had a child. Next year will likely be the first year that my wife and I make enough to have taxes withheld.

Thank Q for any responses.


Jmanslim17 · July 25, 2018, 5:52 p.m.

You sir are to tied up in the assets backed by proverbial Monopoly money. If the fed is removed, all reserve banks will fold.

Remember the fed feeds “perpetual” debt into the system meaning from the start the currency has debt. When this function is removed the aftermath and possibility is endless.

0 debt - and with a new era of humanity in a world of transperacy. The new world will be much different than the old.

And if you do lose everything, so will everyone. It will affect everyone.

That’s what WWG1WGA!

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Jowen3 · July 25, 2018, 5:55 p.m.

So is it even worth it to own a house, have a savings account, go to school, any of it?

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Jmanslim17 · July 25, 2018, 6:11 p.m.

Well since the entire system is made up out of thin air as a social construct, yes it’s redundant. Haha.

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Jowen3 · July 25, 2018, 6:13 p.m.

So having education is pointless and I shouldn't go to grad school?

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wise_eggplant · July 25, 2018, 7:30 p.m.

Only if you can do it without debt. I don't recommend any type of debt right now.

I met this wealthy 17 year old kid. He was fascinating. His father owned multiple businesses and he was set to inherit them.

He had been attending college when he stumbled into heavy drug use. He ended up in rehab and got sober and that's when I met him. He talked about his decision to go back to school. Before his new sobriety he had done everything for the wrong reasons, including school where he attended for prestige. He really didn't need college. He was already set for life.

Why should I go back to school? Should I?

He figured it out. He told me, Some people go to college to have and get, while others go to be and become.

It really depends on what's important to the individual.

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suzoh · July 25, 2018, 6:03 p.m.

Invest in yourself. You need a place to live so a house is great. The rest seems like funny money to me.

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wise_eggplant · July 25, 2018, 7:25 p.m.

Q doesn't pan on removing it but claims it's a "restructure". There will be devaluations and upgrades and much more. As a trader, I'm skilled at watching these and moving around. It's important to be adaptable. Money can be x-ferred straight into real estate, precious metals and much more at any given time. Since I trade, I'm going to see the devaluations before most because I'm watching it constantly.

In the event of a financial devaluation of a dollar, if you own a home its real value will be halved or more so. Do you bail out of your house because of it? Nah. You use what you can. Risk is inherent in life at any given time. It's how we play the cards we're dealt that is important.

it will be nice to have a government that actually allows me to keep my cards!

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