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Dr. Vernon Coleman shares his experience of being interrogated by bank staff when trying to withdraw his own money, highlighting the increasing difficulty and humiliation of banking in person.
Banks are using tactics such as asking invasive questions and requiring multiple forms of identification to delay and discourage in-person transactions, with the ultimate goal of forcing customers to bank online.
Coleman believes this is part of a larger scheme to introduce digital currency and eliminate the need for human bank staff, who will eventually become “surplus to requirements” and lose their jobs.
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Everything below is true. These paragraphs are taken from my book ‘Their Terrifying Plan’ which is available via the bookshop on my website.
From ‘Their Terrifying Plan’
I recently tried to take some of my money out of my account and was shut in a room and interrogated like a criminal before eventually, and rather begrudgingly, being given an envelope containing the cash I’d asked for.
Even moving from one account to another has become fiendishly bewildering and time-consuming.
I was standing in a bank the other day trying to move money from one account to another. I was moving my money from one of my own accounts to another of my own accounts. I don’t know if you’ve tried doing this recently but it gets harder by the week. You need to produce a driving licence or passport, of course. (Heaven help you if you don’t have one or the other, or preferably both.) And you need your bank card. And, depending upon the mental state of the cashier, you may need a utility bill, a tax form and a council tax demand. You may soon need a note from your mother.
And, of course, they now have a veritable litany of questions to fire at you. “Has anyone asked you to make this transaction?” “Are you under pressure to do this?” And so on and so on. They pretend the questions are to protect us but only the naïve and dim-witted believe that. These stupid questions are devised by very wicked people to delay the whole procedure and to force us all to bank online.
One of the daftest questions is this one: “Is anyone waiting outside for you?”
Standing next to me, at the neighbouring window, stood a little old lady well, in her nineties. She too was trying to move money from one account to another so that she could pay a bill.
“Is anyone waiting outside for you?” asked the bank clerk.
“Oh yes,” said the little old lady naively. “My friend brought me.”
The clerk looked as pleased as if she’d won the lottery. “Oh, well I can’t help you then,” she said with a big smile and a sense of satisfaction you could have bottled.
The little old lady didn’t understand. “But my neighbour had to bring me,” she explained. “I’m 93. I had to give up my driving licence.”
The poor woman didn’t understand that logic and honesty are no longer relevant.
“But your neighbour might have put you under pressure to make this transaction,” said the clerk, brim full of sanctimonious, self-righteous, box-ticking obedience.
“My neighbour?” said the old lady. “Why would she do anything nasty to me? I’ve known her for nearly 50 years.” She looked around, bewildered. “I’ve been banking here for years. Doesn’t anyone recognise me?”
“That doesn’t matter,” said the clerk, her joy now slightly diluted by exasperation. “I can’t help you if you have someone waiting for you. Those are the rules.” And then she added the killer. “It’s for your protection.”
And so the old lady, puzzled and confused, tottered out of the bank and back to her neighbour’s car.
I swear that happened. And I’m not surprised.
Morons (of whom there are many these days) claim, as they have been told, that the inquisition is for our benefit. That’s yet another lie. The banks want to force us online. And, as a side effect, they want to absolve themselves from blame when they screw up (which they do on a regular basis).
Bank staff seem to have been indoctrinated by the same people who indoctrinated NHS staff, train drivers, civil servants, teachers, council employees and just about everyone else in this increasingly miserable and oppressive world of ours.
Taking cash out of your own account has become an exercise in patience and determination.
On another occasion, I went into a branch of my bank wanting to take out some money – a little more than the machine would allow me to withdraw. I had bills to pay and I wanted to buy some presents.
“Are you going to take this money home and keep it there?” asked the clerk.
I thought this was an incredibly stupid question. The woman was a stranger and she had my address on a screen in front of her. She wanted to know if I was going to take the money home and keep it there to be stolen. What an idiot. So, I was a little cautious. As any sensible person would, I said “No.”
“So, why do you want this money?” asked the impertinent bank clerk.
“To buy sweets,” I replied. It has been my standard reply to this question for years.
Bang. I could tell from her eyes that the metaphorical shutters had come down.
You can’t make light-hearted comments any more.
The clerk looked at her screen as if it were telling her something.
“Your request has been blocked,” said the clerk.
In full sight of other customers I was ushered into a room and the door was closed.
And I was interrogated. I felt like a criminal. Most people would, I think, have found it a humiliating and embarrassing encounter.
Phone calls were made. I was instructed to answer questions put to me on the telephone. (I couldn’t understand the questioner’s accent and so I needed a translator.) To check my identity, I was asked for my date of birth (a piece of information that is about as secret as Prince Harry’s level of affection for his brother).
And eventually, after what seemed like several hours of interrogation, I was, with ill-grace and no apology, given the amount of money I had requested.
It wasn’t a loan I was asking for. It was my money.
(As an aside, a week later we had to call a drains expert in to deal with a drain which had been blocked by tree roots. The man dealing with our drains told me, in precise detail, about my experience at the bank. He even knew the precise amount of money I’d tried to take out of the bank. Banks may pretend to care about their customers but there are, it seems, no longer any rules about confidentiality.)
And it is, of course, all part of the scheme to force us to bank online – ready for the digital currency they have ready for us.
Your bank hates you. They want to turn you into nothing more than numbers on a computer.
And the staff of banks everywhere are, I fear, too stupid to realise that as soon as the digital currency is here, managed entirely online, then they will all be surplus to requirements. Every last one of them will be joining the dole queue – where they will stay forever, surviving on their Universal Basic Income and living in a small cardboard walled flat designed by someone who usually designs dog kennels.
Note:: This essay is taken from Vernon Coleman”s book ‘Their Terrifying Plan’. To purchase a copy please CLICK HERE
About the Author
Vernon Coleman MB ChB DSc practised medicine for ten years. He has been a full-time professional author for over 30 years. He is a novelist and campaigning writer and has written many non-fiction books. He has written over 100 books which have been translated into 22 languages. On his website, HERE, there are hundreds of articles which are free to read.
There are no ads, no fees and no requests for donations on Dr. Coleman’s website or videos. He pays for everything through book sales. If you want to help finance his work, please just buy a book – there are over 100 books by Vernon Coleman in print on Amazon.
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Categories: Breaking News
It is genuinely reciprocated.
If you have money to invest, invest it in gold.
By the way, have you heard about the new bank invention?
It is called FRAUD INVESTIGATION GROUP and makes sure you are under strict censorship. You may no longer choose who you would like to transfer your own money to. IF THE BANK DOES NOT APPROVE OF YOUR RECIPIENT YOU WILL BE UNABLE TO TRANSFER ANYTHING.
If you, like I did when confronted with this new madness, contact the bank to ask what the heck is going on, the reply you´ll get will likely be the same as the one I received: THE CARD YOU USE FOR THE TRANSFER IS NOT YOURS. IT IS OUR PROPERTY. YOU JUST HAPPEN TO LEASE IT FROM US. AND NO, WE DO NOT WANT OUR CARD TO BE ABUSED.
Fascism, anyone??!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I foolishly went over to online banking years ago
This is a serious question: can you un-online it?
I am however keeping online payments to a very minimum.
I do not know since I REFUSE ALL THINGS DIGITAL with the sole exception of my pc. But all things considered I do not believe you are allowed to get out of it again once in. I would think the only way is not to make use of it. Just leave it to rot.
exactly, and I too refuse digital along with Smart phones, Smart Meters, Smart washer and dryer, and would love to kick out my Smart TV. I do not like the idea that my washing machine is smarter than I am.
I know several people who are still using bank books to withdraw money!
That’s good! but what do you do if they’ve shut your bank down, and you live on an island???
was using online to pay bills when i realized that if anything happened to my computer or if the electric went down i would have no idea what bills I had or where to send them because it was SO convenient. I no longer pay my bills on line, I write checks however I am able to check my account easily. That is the ONLY way I will ever use online banking. hmmm…remember, convenience comes with a price.
Go here for real money! Not currency (fiat currency). For real private banking not the swift system.
This is NEW brand new global solution for banking that is operated with in the land and soil jurisdiction. Unlike the current swift system that is governed by maritime law, sea jurisdiction.
https://linktr.ee/theglobalfamilygroup_528hertz
[…] – Your Bank Despises You: […]
It’s the control grid. Don’t you get it yet? They own, program and control all the computer systems. They force you to use them and make it impossible for you to do anything without using their computers. Then they make it so that you can ONLY do what you’re allowed to do by removing any other option from the computer system. Your “choice” is then to do as you’re told or die, because you can do nothing else.
You’re right there!
They have made all roads into cul-de-sacs, apart from the one they want to send you down!
To use the analogy of the “frog in boiling water” syndrome, the online world worked fine as long as the temperature was lukewarm, but how many degrees are we off boiling point, any offers?!
somewhat deep and VERY hot.
Even a dog knows if you have tripped over it or kicked it. Americans, you are certainly being kicked.
I agree. At the doc office the young girl was telling me to just use this APP on your phone. I looked her straight in the eye and said I do not own a Smart Phone dearie, I carry a flip phone…will that work? lol She was amazed that someone can live without a Smartphone.
My bank has gone fully digital. All banks here have too. When you use your Bankcard to make an online purchase, your bank has to verify the purchase and it does that by sending a 6 number thing to your mobile, which you have to put into the box provided by the seller, to confirm it is you making the purchase, after you have logged in to them, with your special earlier created password and email address and your delivery address.
I purchased a set of vacuum handles which go in the shower and help you from slipping over – I’m late 70’s – my bank in its wisdom decided that my transaction was probably fraudulent and cancelled my Bankcard – I had to go in, in person, to clear it (when we still had banks – not any more, all digital)
The person at the other end would not release my Bankcard but insisted on issuing another new one, so all of the automatic payments I’d set up for the past 40 odd years on it, no longer worked and I had to reinstate them, with the new card details, which was a horrible thing to do, because now completely digital, that is not easy to do, including my home and car insurances when they fell due.
You think you have problems now – you have not see anything yet.
Welcome to the future and internet banking – at least that is easy to do as long as you have a computer and an internet connection, or a mobile phone – which I hate.
Adding to the above – all of the Bank buildings have gone, they have been repurposed as other shops now, or empty buildings, my bank is a place to buy cups of hot chocolate. The teller machines have all gone, because money is no longer used or spent. If you have any, most shops won’t accept it. Previously, just before the banks closed and went away, if you rolled up with cash at your bank, you had to prove you owned it and it was not stolen. Now, if you have a bank complaint or issue, you ring a universal bank number for your bank and you wait in line to speak to someone somewhere else and they deal with your inquiry then and there, sometimes you have to wait for that call to be made, because the operators can be quite busy answering calls ahead of yours. I have industrial deafness (I can’t wear hearing aids) and using a mobile phone can be challenging when the voice of the person I’m talking to, is not loud enough, or the person I am talking to has an unusual accent. You have to have a bank icon on your mobile phone, which is preprogrammed to recognize you when you call your bank and it might require you to put in a random number sent to your phone, by the bank, to ensure you are the person who owns the account you are about to use. You can make a few errors in putting in that verification number, (I furiously look for the number in my emails because I’m no longer quick enough to see it displayed on my phone for about 10 seconds) then you get locked out of the bankcard and have to re-verify your identity with “an operator”.
It’s OK if you are young and familiar with this technology, but it’s not easy to adapt when you are late 70’s age wise onwards and not familiar with a digital banking system.
My method of payment is with a bankcard. The bank changed my principal bankcard 4 number code to verify it is me using it and I have not memorized the new number and I’m not sure if the old number still works (I wrote the new number down and carry it with me until I understand what I am supposed to do with it now).
When an old card expires a new one arrives unannounced in the post, there is no explanation of what it is, or what it is for, the old card is cancelled and won’t work anymore, but it did last time you used it.
You have to connect with the bank, through the bank icon, to verify you are who you say you are and then activate the new card with a 4 number pin, which is not easy off the cuff – you can’t use your birthday, or numbers familiar to you, they have to be random and hard to crack, which you then have to remember or write down immediately, otherwise you might forget them and get locked out of your new bankcard.
I had nightmares when I was asleep trying to remember my old password number, so much so that I put the wrong combination in when I used it, got it right the second time though.
All said, I prefer digital banking, when I don’t carry banknotes or shrapnel, the small change which always seemed heavy and constantly was trying to pull my trousers down, which I always got plenty of, with banknote purchases – and I don’t have street vendors playing on my heart strings for money – nor am I vulnerable withdrawing cash from teller machines at night anymore, but there are aspects of digital banking which I find quite frightening – when it is your turn to be forced to make the adaption, you will see what I mean.
and this is why I choose to live a little quaint town named Salem. Sooner or later it will be here but by that time I will sitting down talkin to Jesus.
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Try a cashpoint £200 per day dummies
The bank employees’ rudeness is unforgivable, but it would seem that in some cases they are acting as social workers, especially in the case of asking old people if someone is waiting for them outside. There’s countless incidents of bad people talking old folks into going into the bank, withdrawing cash and then waiting for them in the car to get their lucre.
My husband is interrogated when he wants to take out $1,000. to pay for groceries and gasoline, because that is the way we run our household. Every time he goes to the bank he gets questioned in this way.
When I take $1,000. out at the bank machine in the bank vestibule, out comes the $$$ without question – though one fine day I guess they will install a voice asking you to justify your withdrawal.
Dr. Coleman, I would advise you to take most of your cash out of the bank, keep it at home, and then deposit only just enough to pay for one bill at a time a few days in advance if you have to pay online or even writing a check.
this is true. My friend told me that her 93 year old grandfather needed to cash a large check that his brother left him in a Will. They would not cash the check even though he had been a customer for 40 years because his drivers license was expired. He was 93 years old! so do not let your drivers license expire EVER.
That’s funny. They restrict you when they TAKE the money. Fools. Naturally the old boy got a new bank?
Just remember we have another option! A brand new banking system. Totally separate from the swift system. No brics no QFS no Gesara no NESARA. This is the answer this is YOUR SAVING GRACE:
https://linktr.ee/theglobalfamilygroup_528hertz
Yeah, they do that stuff to me, make sure I’m “not in any trouble”, act suspicious when I try to withdraw some money. It works in their disfavor, since I then elect not to keep money in the bank, keep accounts low. And no digital, avoid credit and debt cards. So sorry.
[…] by Rhoda Wilson, Expose News: […]