"Re: Interest and Profit on Exchange Funds" by Ron Giles - 1.6.20

Entry Submitted by Ron Giles at 4:27 PM EST on January 6, 2020



"Interest and Profit on Exchange Funds" by Doug - 1.3.20

Doug, I do work towards clear communications but I don’t always get it right.

We are talking about redemption funds when I say they are not to be used for profit-making investments. That means they are to be used for the good of mankind. If you are a human then you are part of mankind and qualify for all the help you need to have a very good and productive life.

The amount of money we are talking about, trillions of dollars, is very foreign to our minds. It is hard to wrap one's mind around the reality of a trillion dollars, yet along, quadrillions or even quintillions of dollars.

The question is often asked, “what percentage of the funds is mine to do what I want or to buy things I need.” One percent of a trillion dollars is 10 billion dollars. Try spending that on yourself – that would be a fulltime job.

The fact is that the amount of money that is needed for ourselves is really minuscule when compared to the whole. Money spent on yourself will never compete with what you can be doing for others unless of course you buy into the estimated rates given by some of the guru types which I loathe and find useless. You will have the chance to negotiate your own rates that will be commensurate with, and a factor of, the humanitarian plans you have in store. Never and I say never, deprive yourself of what your funds can be used for to enhance your own life and bring about the Abundance Mentality for yourself and your family and friends. We are all a part of mankind and the funds are to be used for mankind.

Truth is, you will go through the redemption appointment and come out with a very large amount of money. It will be sequestered away in a structured payout with an interest rate that will be your quarterly budget. Us that quarterly budget to plan out your work. If you ask for a 10 % rate over multiple years your funds will never run out. You will always have money left that is designed to be put into the economy. Work toward getting that money out into society in ways that help out the communities that you want to target for your work. The larger the rates the more people you can help, that is just plain sense.

I don’t mean to imply that if you want to use the funds for yourself you will get a smaller rate because the rates will be a component of the humanitarian project you want to do. Your own wants and needs are a built-in factor if your intent is to do humanitarian work. Please look into your heart and see where your values lay. Are you in this for yourself or are you in this to help other people as well? Don’t think that being magnanimous has any virtue in and of itself, that is a factor of pride and can be seen by a casual glance at what you are doing. Your intent to do humanitarian work will be the oil that makes the whole process work for your best good.

I suggest that we all look at ourselves as the Sovereigns we are supposed to be. Sovereigns do not need others looking over their shoulders to see if they are being good. They do things on purpose for a purpose. And that is to do good for all mankind, the ONE. Thinking that there will always be someone looking over your shoulder to see if you being good is the Santa Claus syndrome, the slave mentality. We need to show up in our glory as children of God. This is the only way to be successful with the funds we are given as a stewardship responsibility. This is the Parable of the Talents in action. We get to live that parable.

I’ll sum this up with a two-person example.

Given: Two people each have a 100T note.

Person one has a major humanitarian project in mind but only had enough money to buy on 100 T Zim Bond. The great equalizer is the rate that they ask for. With the need for the greater rate as seen by the plans the person has made, the interviewer gives him, let’s say $1000 per Zim Dollar. That will give him/her one hundred quadrillion dollars to work with. He/she asks for a 10% interest rate for the structured payout, then !0% for one year would be ten quadrillions, divide that by 4 quarters would give that person $2.5 Quadrillion per quarter as a budget. If that doesn’t begin and sustain the humanitarian projects he/she has planned then he/she should ask for more. If it does cover the work then he/she is good to go.

Person two has very little planned for his/her humanitarian work. At the redemption appointment without the need for a lot of money, he/she only asks for 1:1 rate so he/she only gets one trillion dollars. At that rate with no real plans to use it for humanitarian work, he/she is more than grateful for what they have. There is room for projects in the local area, but to do beyond that, they might not be able to get involved with projects like the new technology that needs to be funded. However, they are fine with what they have, and that is good.

Both parties start out the same but the rates make the difference in what they can do. So, it will be with all of us. The rates will make the difference in what we can do for mankind. It is all one’s choice. BTW they will both have major funds to do what they want to do for themselves, right.

Doug, I hope this makes some sense for you. There will be no one looking over your shoulder unless you want to do something illegal that could damage other people or yourself. Being responsible is the key to having an enjoyable life with whatever level of humanitarian work you want to do. You will not be judged by the heavens for the choices you make. Do what you want with your talents but in this case, we can ask for the Talents we think we will need for our stewardship projects.

Blessing to all, and to all, be a blessing

Ron Giles
______________________________________________________

If you wish to contact the author of any reader submitted guest post, you can give us an email at UniversalOm432Hz@gmail.com and we'll forward your request to the author.
______________________________________________________

All articles, videos, and images posted on Dinar Chronicles were submitted by readers and/or handpicked by the site itself for informational and/or entertainment purposes.

Dinar Chronicles is not a registered investment adviser, broker dealer, banker or currency dealer and as such, no information on the website should be construed as investment advice. We do not support, represent or guarantee the completeness, truthfulness, accuracy, or reliability of any content or communications posted on this site. Information posted on this site may or may not be fictitious. We do not intend to and are not providing financial, legal, tax, political or any other advice to readers of this website.

Copyright © 2019 Dinar Chronicles

Other NEWS


Comment :