Do They Have a Future?

Local currencies sound like a good way to keep the money local. In the United Kingdom, however, many that emerged with great expectations have called it quits, in large part because they haven’t kept up with digital payment developments.

But some, like the Bristol Pound in England and the Calgary Dollar in Canada, are.

There are, or have been, more local currencies in the world than we realize — 3,500 to 4,500 such systems in 50 countries in the last few decades — and if the pandemic lingers, those numbers will probably escalate.

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Other Towns That Have Launched Their Own Currency

Towns in other countries hammered by the pandemic have taken similar measures.

The Italian town of Castellino del Biferno (population 550) started printing a local currency called the Ducati in April.

In Mexico, the town of the Santa Maria Jajalpa (population about 6,000) has created a new currency, “jajalpesos,” that residents can use to buy local food.

Historically, there’s a strong connection between hard times and the emergence of “community currencies,” visiting Boston University professor Jim Stodder told the Washington Post. “Any time we have a serious downturn in which people are short of money, these things tend to pop up,” he said.

Usually, they stick around for a few years or less and then die out. But some live on. Most notably in the U.S. a community currency called BerkShares has been used in western Massachusetts since 2006.

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Is It Really Money?

The authority to print money in the U.S. rests solely with the federal government, and the only legal tender in the country is the U.S. dollar.

So, while the Tenino Wooden Dollar sounds like a great idea, is it legal?

If it really were a competing currency, the answer would be no. But it’s really more like scrip — a certificate that can be exchanged for goods — and scrip has been used by all manner of towns, regions, companies, and organizations for hundreds of years. As long as they are not used to avoid taxes and can be exchanged — or ultimately exchanged — for U.S. dollars, they are legal.

“No one is going to be held accountable for this because they are not actually creating money, as it’s legally defined,” Jesse Kraft of the American Numismatic Society told CNN in evaluating the Tenino currency. “These are just tokens that are creating an economic stimulus.”

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Is It Legal for a Town to Create Its Own Currency?

By Richard Dahl on June 25, 2020

Little Tenino, Washington (population 1,884) has come up with a seemingly novel way to ease the economic pain caused by the coronavirus lockdown: Create the town’s own currency.

Mayor Wayne Fournier was looking for a way to help individuals and families who were hurt when businesses were forced to close down when the idea came to him at a town meeting. During the Great Depression in the 1930s, Tenino had printed its own wooden dollars to help the local economy — why not do it again?

Fournier and city officials decided to reintroduce the wooden currency, using an old printing press to imprint thin sheets of wood with an image of George Washington and the phrase, “habemus autem sub potestate,” which basically means, “We have it under control.”

Here’s how it works: The town set aside $10,000 to assist residents with incomes that fall under the poverty line. Those people become eligible to apply for money from that fund. Instead of receiving cash, however, they get the wooden currency, which comes in notes worth $25 each. Applicants can receive up to 12 per month, or $300, and their use is limited to Tenino merchants who provide essential goods and services, not including liquor, cigarettes, or marijuana. The merchants may then submit redemption requests to the city for real U.S. cash.

Why not just give residents the cash? Because the local currency means that the money stays in the community and is not sent out to Amazon or other online retailers.

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Los Angeles Sheriff Blows Whistle: Govt Is Using Vax Mandates As A Way To Defund The Police

Sheriff Alex Villanueva of Los Angeles County warned on Thursday that the authoritarians are exploiting COVID-19 rules as a means to secretly defund the police.

“[The Board of Supervisors’] incompetence is only outweighed by their hypocrisy!” “#FactsMatter,” Villaneuva tweeted on Thursday, with a photo of a firefighter’s suspension notice.

For refusing to comply with Gov. Gavin Newsom’s COVID mandate, the L.A. County fireman risks a five-day penalty.

“Due to the Department’s current staffing crisis, which is the result of the current COVID-19,” the letter adds, “your five (5) day suspension without pay will be served at a later date.”

Justthenews.com reports:The supervisors “need to actually follow their own advice,” Villanueva told the “Just the News” show on Thursday. “They keep saying that law enforcement has to deescalate and defuse tensions, and they did the exact opposite. They went and escalated it. They manufactured a crisis when there was none” by forcing sheriff’s deputies to get fired or vaccinated.

The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors voted last week to take the COVID mandate enforcement responsibilities away from Sheriff Villanueva, the Los Angeles Times reported. The sheriff has said since October that he would not enforce the county’s vaccine mandate.

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Woman Who Stabbed Man Trying To RAPE Her Charged With HATE CRIME… Because He’s An Immigrant

A woman was arrested and charged in Vienna for defending herself against a man who was attempting to rape her violently. The charges were only brought, at is seems, because the man was a Syrian immigrant.

The woman was attacked soon before midnight on Tuesday last week as she entered her apartment building on Schönbrunner Strasse in the Meidling area, according to local sources. The assailant grabbed the victim’s privates and tossed her to the ground.

“However, the rape attempt took a dramatic turn when the woman, with foresight, managed to pull a knife from her purse,” according to Remix News.

“She used it to stab her assailant several times until he let go of his victim, grabbed her purse, and fled badly injured.” Shortly after, authorities located the culprit with cuts and knife wounds at a nearby subway station, and he was transported to the hospital.”

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Euthanasia as cure for depression? Canada to expand assisted suicide laws to mentally ill In Canada, euthanasia is becoming a standard part of psychiatric care with death on call like a maid, writes Grzegorz Górny

In March of next year, Canada will introduce a new law enabling people with psychiatric illnesses to choose euthanasia. If a patient feels his state of mind is unbearable, it will only take two doctors to legalize a lethal cocktail of drugs to be applied.

This is simply the next stage of a process that began in 2016 when the Canadian parliament passed the law on Medical Assistance in Dying (MAID) which effectively legalized euthanasia. So “maid” became a word synonymous with the wish to die.

The law was to be applied only in cases of incurable diseases or for people whose state of health meant that death was imminent. In the first year of the law’s operation, just over 1,000 people, mainly suffering from cancer, were put to death in this way.

In 2021, the law was changed to include other conditions patients deemed to be “unbearable.” As a result, the number of deaths legalized in this way reached over 10,000, over 30 percent higher than in 2020.

Now, in March 2023, Canadian law will allow for the euthanasia of psychiatric patients. According to Toronto law professor Trudo Lemmens, this means that suicide will essentially become a way of treating psychiatric illness. It opens up the possibility that a person suffering from chronic depression and seeking help may find that a therapist recommends death as a way out.

The way the law is written, according to Gus Aleviou, an expert in disabilities, could lead not only to depression being treated with euthanasia but also post-traumatic stress disorder, autism, ADHD, bulimia, anorexia, and addiction.

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Muscat: Muscat Municipality has warned that anyone found spitting in public places will be fined RO20…. Read more on: https://www.omanobserver.om/article/1118717/oman/governorates/ro20-fine-for-spitting-in-public-places

Muscat: Muscat Municipality has warned that anyone found spitting in public places will be fined RO20…. Read more on: https://www.omanobserver.om/article/1118717/oman/governorates/ro20-fine-for-spitting-in-public-places