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Correction: There Is No “Digital Currency Modernization Act”

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Yesterday, I published the article “It Finally Happened: Digital Currency Act is Now Law in US“, repeating claims that a new piece of legislation had taken effect and fundamentally altered financial privacy in the United States. Those claims were drawn from reports circulating across multiple alternative media outlets that are generally regarded as credible.

In publishing that article, I did not independently verify the existence of a specific bill number, legislative text, or official Congressional or White House documentation. Given the scale and seriousness of the claim, that was a lapse in judgment. I am normally more rigorous when assessing developments of this magnitude, and in this case I placed too much trust in reporting from neighbouring publications rather than confirming the primary sources myself. For that, I owe readers a clear apology.

Concerns about central bank digital currencies and financial surveillance are not new here. We have covered them consistently and at length, often well ahead of mainstream reporting. Because of that context, the claim that a digital currency law had quietly taken effect appeared plausible and aligned with a trajectory we have long outlined. However, further examination of public records shows that the specific “Digital Currency Modernization Act” described in those reports does not exist in Congress.gov, in White House releases, or in official legislative archives.

This was a rare error on my part, driven by repetition across multiple outlets rather than by primary evidence. I regret the oversight and take responsibility for it. That said, the correction does not invalidate the broader issue we have been reporting on, nor does it diminish the importance of scrutinising financial centralisation and digital currency policy.

You can continue to rely on this publication for independent, critical reporting, including on subjects that receive limited or selective coverage elsewhere. In this case, we trusted alternative sources too readily, and that standard will be tightened going forward.

Below is a clear, fully sourced overview of where the United States currently stands on digital currency and financial control, based on verifiable information rather than viral claims.

Whats Really Happening With Digital Currencies in the US
Correction The original claim is unfounded but it doesnt end there

So, What’s Really Happening With Digital Currency in the US?

Although the specific legislation I previously reported does not exist in the form described, it would be inaccurate to conclude that concerns about digital currency and financial control are misplaced. The United States is steadily developing the technical, regulatory, and institutional foundations required for a far more centralised financial system, even if the final legal step has not yet been taken.

The error lay in assuming that this process had already been completed, rather than recognising that it is still unfolding through incremental and less visible measures.

Federal Reserve Has Already Laid the Digital Groundwork

The Federal Reserve has spent several years researching central bank digital currencies and has publicly acknowledged their potential role in the future monetary system. Its discussion paper, Money and Payments: The U.S. Dollar in the Age of Digital Transformation, outlines multiple models for a digital dollar that could be held by individuals and businesses, either directly or through intermediaries.

The paper makes clear that such systems would involve a significantly higher degree of transaction visibility than physical cash. While privacy protections are discussed, they are framed as design choices rather than inherent features. This reflects a broader reality: the capacity for enhanced financial oversight is built into digital currency architecture.

In parallel, the Federal Reserve has participated in pilot programmes such as Project Hamilton, which tested the feasibility of processing large transaction volumes using a digital dollar framework. These initiatives demonstrate operational readiness, even in the absence of formal authorisation to deploy a retail digital currency.

Legislative Division and Political Reality

Congress has not reached a consensus on digital currency, but it has not dismissed the concept either. Instead, it remains deeply divided. Some lawmakers have introduced bills (such as the Anti-CBDC Surveillance State Act) explicitly designed to prevent the issuance of a retail central bank digital currency, citing concerns about surveillance and government overreach. The existence of such legislation indicates that the prospect of a CBDC is considered realistic within policy circles.

At the same time, other legislative efforts focus on expanding regulatory oversight of digital assets, modernising payment infrastructure, and integrating blockchain-based systems into existing financial frameworks, such as the GENIUS Act. These initiatives move the financial system further toward digital-only mechanisms, regardless of whether they culminate in a formal CBDC.

The result is not a rejection of digital money, but an unresolved struggle over how much control the state should exercise over it.

Expansion of Financial Surveillance Without a CBDC

Even without a central bank digital currency, financial surveillance in the United States has expanded substantially. Agencies such as the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network require extensive reporting from banks, payment processors, and digital asset platforms. Broad definitions of suspicious activity place institutions under pressure to report a wide range of lawful behaviour.

The Internal Revenue Service has similarly expanded reporting requirements for third-party payment platforms and digital transactions. These systems already enable detailed monitoring of economic activity, often without individuals being fully aware of the extent of data collection involved, which can be found in more detail here. This page explains how payment apps and third-party settlement organisations are required to report transaction data to the IRS, reflecting the expansion of digital transaction monitoring.

A CBDC would not create financial surveillance where none exists. It would consolidate existing mechanisms into a single, more efficient structure.

Programmable Money as an Established Policy Concept

The concept of programmable money is well established in central banking discourse. Institutions such as the Bank for International Settlements have published extensive research on conditional payments, targeted monetary policy tools, and programmable transaction features. One example is “CBDCs: an opportunity for the monetary system“.

Central banks in multiple jurisdictions have examined options such as expiration dates on stimulus payments, spending restrictions tied to policy objectives, and differentiated interest rates based on usage patterns. These discussions are framed in technical and economic terms, but they carry clear implications for personal autonomy and financial freedom.

The technology required to implement such controls already exists, and the policy rationale for using it has been articulated repeatedly.

Stablecoins and Normalising Digital-Only Money

Recent legislation regulating stablecoins represents another step toward a fully digital financial ecosystem. Stablecoins, while distinct from central bank digital currencies, familiarise users with wallet-based transactions, constant traceability, and software-mediated money.

By bringing stablecoins under formal regulatory oversight, policymakers are reinforcing the idea that digital-only currency is not an exception but an expected component of the modern financial system. This process reduces the psychological and practical barriers to more comprehensive digital currency adoption in the future.

Why the Concern Remains Real

The reason the viral narrative gained traction is that it aligned closely with observable trends. Cash usage continues to decline, digital identity requirements are expanding, transaction reporting thresholds have been lowered over time, and central banks openly discuss the benefits of programmable money.

In that context, a claim that a decisive legal shift had already occurred appeared plausible. The broader trajectory remains unchanged, even though the specific claim was incorrect.

A More Accurate Conclusion

The United States has not yet implemented a retail central bank digital currency, nor has it eliminated cash through covert legislation. That distinction matters and has been corrected.

However, the underlying movement toward increased financial centralisation, transaction visibility, and policy-driven control remains evident. These changes are occurring gradually, through research initiatives, regulatory expansion, and incremental legislative action rather than a single dramatic event.

The appropriate response is neither panic nor complacency, but sustained scrutiny. Digital currency remains an active policy objective, and its eventual implementation, if it occurs, is likely to be presented as a continuation of existing systems rather than a radical departure from them.

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g.calder
I’m George Calder — a lifelong truth-seeker, data enthusiast, and unapologetic question-asker. I’ve spent the better part of two decades digging through documents, decoding statistics, and challenging narratives that don’t hold up under scrutiny. My writing isn’t about opinion — it’s about evidence, logic, and clarity. If it can’t be backed up, it doesn’t belong in the story. Before joining Expose News, I worked in academic research and policy analysis, which taught me one thing: the truth is rarely loud, but it’s always there — if you know where to look. I write because the public deserves more than headlines. You deserve context, transparency, and the freedom to think critically. Whether I’m unpacking a government report, analysing medical data, or exposing media bias, my goal is simple: cut through the noise and deliver the facts. When I’m not writing, you’ll find me hiking, reading obscure history books, or experimenting with recipes that never quite turn out right.
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Erica Barr
Erica Barr
58 minutes ago

This is really interesting, You’re a very skilled blogger. I’ve joined your feed and look forward to seeking more of your magnificent post. Also, I’ve shared your site in my social networks!

Jimmy Jukebox
Jimmy Jukebox
Reply to  Erica Barr
13 minutes ago

Hi Erica ,
I read your comment you enjoyed this article and will share and look forward to many more articles ,,
This website / blogger look up her Articles on John Coleman if you don’t know much on Vaccines ,
Forgive if you already know about Milton J ROSENAU Flu Study in 1919 ,
Type that into the search bar on The expose , Really good article.. plus many other topics to stumble across in a search bar…
Anyway this is a good blog / blogger,

:Stuart-James.
:Stuart-James.
27 minutes ago

Currency is Currency, there is no issue really whether it’s notes or coins or digital.
In fact, digital currencies are far more efficient and workable over conventional currencies.
The real issue is the corruption that follows with fictitious debts on fiat currencies. Digital currency just allows corruption to continue with debt based economy that only serves those that control the currency flow that supports their fraudulent practice of usury on their zero value currency.

Jimmy Jukebox
Jimmy Jukebox
27 minutes ago

I’m not a Democrat or Republican , I live very close to Chicago in the united states ,
The Lady politician from The United States called Georgia not to be confused with the country Georgia near Russia , Her Name Marjorie Taylor Green said before she retired in January if 2026 , She said Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill contains a clause for Digital Currency by the Central Bankers , That clause says Digital Currency is coming to united states in 2028 ,
She’s the only one to speak out on the digital currency clause in the big beautiful bill ….
Now add in The AP address Law where by next year in united states IF you want internet access you will have to register for a ap address for internet service , reasons why it’s coming security , tracking ability ,
Now add in The year 2030 where The book The Great Re-Set says You won’t own anything and you will be happy , That was accomplished in the last 20 / 30 years designed to confiscate all property when the Dollar Crashes ,,
They Setting The Stage To Bring The Anti-Christ ,
Add in How The mRNA Covid-19 Vaccines Destroyed the Reasoning Skills and Curiosity Ability in those who were vaccinated , some are more effected than others by the Vaccines , I noticed after watching vaccinated folks there might be some truth to nicotine in cigarettes reduces the mRNA Covid-19 Vaccines effects…
Now add Canada Just said no more airplanes flying to Cuba cause Cuba no longer van fuel airplanes flying out of Cuba…
A consequence of united states getting Venezuela Oil…
It’s all by Design,
Now add things behind the scenes we the public people have not much information of what’s really going on with The Data Centers and Artificial Intelligence AI ,
I am not looking forward to digital currency…
Digital Currency is just going to another form of control, Kinda like how taxes were small and fee many years ago , now there’s taxes everywhere on everything and anything….

Jimmy Jukebox

Kj1990
Kj1990
11 minutes ago

Thank you and respect to you for being so quick to correct!