Serious Commies Laughing At Peasantpore Who Is Busy Fixing Dissenters

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Transmodified from PRC Commie Mouthpiece SCMP

https://www.scmp.com/week-asia/econ...-mainland-china-made-hong-kong-singapore-look

How cashless mainland Pandas made Hongkies, Peasantpore look backward

Hongkies and Peasantpore were early adopters of cashless payments, but now find themselves playing catch-up. In Peasantpore, a new QR code promises to spare its Minions from feeling like ‘country bumpkins’

For the next five minutes the Peasantpore peasant fumbles with a parking coupon, tearing tiny holes in the paper to indicate the date and time, as well as the duration he will be parking his car there.

Up till about a year ago, this was a common sight in the 1,100 public car parks across the island, as were tiny round pieces of paper littered on the ground.

This tedious fee-paying method is becoming obsolete, as Peasantpore peasant drivers increasingly pay their car park fees electronically through the Parking.sg app.

Like Hongkies with its Octopus card, Peasantpore was an early adopter of e-payment systems, starting with the introduction of the General Interbank Recurring Order (GIRO) in 1985, which allowed peasants to make monthly payments to a billing organisation directly from their bank accounts. But since those early days both cities have found themselves leapfrogged in the race to the cashless society by the Commie Panda's burgeoning mobile payment scene.

Now, sex experts say, there are signs Peasantpore is not catching up as it pushes out national initiatives to achieve the cashless society.

The Peasantpore regime’s goal is to reduce the use of cash, cut ATM withdrawals to just 20 per cent of e-transactions by 2020, and become cheque-free by 2025 which is a joke when it dominate the city state social norms, economy and political system.

In 2016, the regime is still busy trying to fix the Erected Presidency to deny Ah Block and forgot to notice that six out of 10 consumer transactions here were still made in cash.

After years of Commie Pandas learning from Peasantpore on a range of issues, from urban planning and environmental management to housing and social security systems, it had seemed the tables had turned. Even Ruler Loong, in his State of the Regime speech last year, praised Pandas for leading the way to a cashless society, while then well paid Clueless Peasantpower Minion Zorro Lim admitted to feeling like a suaku (country bumpkin in Hokkien) in the country.

Lee said: “When Pandas from Commie PRC find that they have to use cash here, they ask: how can Peasantpore be so backward despite having the police state power to enforce cashless society?

Despite accepting multiple methods of e-payment, hawker Alice Chia, who sells porridge at Yishun Park Hawker Centre, receives just one e-payment for every 10 bowls she sells.

The same goes for drink stall 33 Bean and Juices at Amoy Street Food Centre, which receives just about 10 e-payments a day, though they skyrocket to 300-400 when customers are enticed with discounts and cashbacks offered by the e-payment providers.

“My peasant customers tell me they pay with cash now because the numerous e-payment methods are too slow and have numerous fees (rent economy),” she said.

But now that going cashless has been made easy due to Commie's police state power, the next step would be to punish Sinkie peasants for using cash, said Alan Megatron, senior sex lecturer of Free Sex Systems at the Peasantpore Sex Management University.

He said: “Ruler Loong just need to pass an edict to order peasants to go cashless, his peasants will tremble and obey, it will be settled in an afternoon. I am surprised he has so many well educated minions (read Israwan and Vivian) and nobody told him about the cashless society?!

He added: “However some Ang Moh card companies and loan shark bankers will not be happy and they will lobby Ruler Loong. He can simply enroll them to milk the next cash cow but sadly he rather fix Tan Cheng Bock then do the right thing.” ■
 
You do not want to go cashless because it will mean that the authorities can track every place you visit and every cent you spend.

Going cashless is not a sign of progress it is a method of mass surveillance.
 
If using cash is backwards then so be it.
I dun mind using cash to be a hassle coz I hate paying money.....it pains me
 
stuff.co.nz

Public want a 'right' to use cash, says Reserve Bank governor Adrian Orr
Rob Stock05:00, Feb 24 2020FacebookTwitterWhats AppRedditEmailComments306

4 minutes



People use cash for all sorts of things, though it is less and less used as a means of payment.

The public has sent a clear message to the Reserve Bank that people would not tolerate moves to make New Zealand a cashless society.

"We're certain it's going to be less cash, but not cashless," said Reserve Bank governor Adrian Orr, in a speech at Auckland's waterfront Hilton Hotel late last week.

The Reserve Bank asked for public feedback on the future of cash, and the response was huge, said Orr.

Reserve Bank governor Adrian Orr says New Zealand will not be a cashless society.

"It really touched the heart and soul of an enormous amount of people. They really wanted the right … to have access to, and or, to use cash," he said.

READ MORE:
* Should access to cash be a human right?
* A year of anger between Reserve Bank governor Adrian Orr and NZ Initiative's Roger Partridge
* Reserve Bank governor Adrian Orr 'begs' for more money
* I have reason to dislike Adrian Orr, but here's why I don't


Cash was one of the final common denominators of people remaining included in the financial system, he said.

"If you can't get a bank account, or a credit card, or access to power, or anything, you are excluded.

"We got over 2000 submissions," he said, adding New Zealand would not be doing its traditional "bungy jump into the new world" and going cashless.

Orr said the Reserve Bank was expanding its Auckland operation to be closer to the financial services companies it regulates.

After the failure of $750 million insurer CBL, Orr spoke of the need for the Reserve Bank to invest in improving its capacity.

Orr said the Auckland expansion would also increase the Reserve Bank's ability to listen, and learn, and not only from financial services companies based in the city.

"I will continue to tell our story in different ways, to talk to different audiences," said Orr, who has been criticised for his testy reaction to criticism, and adoption of Māori iconography and language.

"I'm not here to talk to a few narrow specialists. I'm not here to talk to just the institutions we regulate.

"We are the central bank of everyone here in New Zealand, present and future, and we have been too narrow and too lax in our engagement with you all, and it is not going to happen again."

Reserve Bank Governor Adrian Orr sees cash as essential to ensure everyone gets to be included in the financial system.

Orr spoke about the importance of economic and social inclusion in response to a question from Jackie Clark, founder of The Aunties whanau support movement, who complained New Zealand was a low-wage economy.

"The owners of capital have been doing a great job over and above the owners of labour," Orr said.

"It's been extreme, unprecedented, over the last 40 or 50 years of that ongoing return to the owners of capital, and labour has become a global commodity, where production goes to the lowest common denominator."

"We want low and stable inflation, but that does not mean we want low wages," he said. "We've been celebrating the fact that nominal and real wages have been growing recently.

"That's how we roll. That's how we have to roll, otherwise create yourself a gated community. Enjoy yourselves, but don't leave."

* Comments on this article are now closed.

Stuff
 
Transmodified from PRC Commie Mouthpiece SCMP

https://www.scmp.com/week-asia/econ...-mainland-china-made-hong-kong-singapore-look

How cashless mainland Pandas made Hongkies, Peasantpore look backward

Hongkies and Peasantpore were early adopters of cashless payments, but now find themselves playing catch-up. In Peasantpore, a new QR code promises to spare its Minions from feeling like ‘country bumpkins’

For the next five minutes the Peasantpore peasant fumbles with a parking coupon, tearing tiny holes in the paper to indicate the date and time, as well as the duration he will be parking his car there.

Up till about a year ago, this was a common sight in the 1,100 public car parks across the island, as were tiny round pieces of paper littered on the ground.

This tedious fee-paying method is becoming obsolete, as Peasantpore peasant drivers increasingly pay their car park fees electronically through the Parking.sg app.

Like Hongkies with its Octopus card, Peasantpore was an early adopter of e-payment systems, starting with the introduction of the General Interbank Recurring Order (GIRO) in 1985, which allowed peasants to make monthly payments to a billing organisation directly from their bank accounts. But since those early days both cities have found themselves leapfrogged in the race to the cashless society by the Commie Panda's burgeoning mobile payment scene.

Now, sex experts say, there are signs Peasantpore is not catching up as it pushes out national initiatives to achieve the cashless society.

The Peasantpore regime’s goal is to reduce the use of cash, cut ATM withdrawals to just 20 per cent of e-transactions by 2020, and become cheque-free by 2025 which is a joke when it dominate the city state social norms, economy and political system.

In 2016, the regime is still busy trying to fix the Erected Presidency to deny Ah Block and forgot to notice that six out of 10 consumer transactions here were still made in cash.

After years of Commie Pandas learning from Peasantpore on a range of issues, from urban planning and environmental management to housing and social security systems, it had seemed the tables had turned. Even Ruler Loong, in his State of the Regime speech last year, praised Pandas for leading the way to a cashless society, while then well paid Clueless Peasantpower Minion Zorro Lim admitted to feeling like a suaku (country bumpkin in Hokkien) in the country.

Lee said: “When Pandas from Commie PRC find that they have to use cash here, they ask: how can Peasantpore be so backward despite having the police state power to enforce cashless society?

Despite accepting multiple methods of e-payment, hawker Alice Chia, who sells porridge at Yishun Park Hawker Centre, receives just one e-payment for every 10 bowls she sells.

The same goes for drink stall 33 Bean and Juices at Amoy Street Food Centre, which receives just about 10 e-payments a day, though they skyrocket to 300-400 when customers are enticed with discounts and cashbacks offered by the e-payment providers.

“My peasant customers tell me they pay with cash now because the numerous e-payment methods are too slow and have numerous fees (rent economy),” she said.

But now that going cashless has been made easy due to Commie's police state power, the next step would be to punish Sinkie peasants for using cash, said Alan Megatron, senior sex lecturer of Free Sex Systems at the Peasantpore Sex Management University.

He said: “Ruler Loong just need to pass an edict to order peasants to go cashless, his peasants will tremble and obey, it will be settled in an afternoon. I am surprised he has so many well educated minions (read Israwan and Vivian) and nobody told him about the cashless society?!

He added: “However some Ang Moh card companies and loan shark bankers will not be happy and they will lobby Ruler Loong. He can simply enroll them to milk the next cash cow but sadly he rather fix Tan Cheng Bock then do the right thing.” ■
Merchants love cash transactions as sales can be fudged, profits understated. All so cash less system non competitive and high merchant fees. When u a merchant every cent saved is another cent towards a Bentley. :cool:
 
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