
Thailand Primed: CBDC, đ˛digital IDđ, problem-reaction-solution
Some businesses are still cash only (support them).
Unofficially official cashless society
The lady in my local minimart was wearing a red t-shirt with a giant QR code recently. I jokingly asked her if that was the QR code to scan, in order to pay for goods. She giggled and said âno, itâs fashion!â RightâŚok then.
Iâve resorted to getting a chunk of cash changed into lower denomination bills at the actual physical bank (whaaaat?!?) at the start of each month, so that I have exact change in as many situations as possible. Try it.
I often take on the role of a human đ§, when friendsâ banking apps arenât working, or when tellersâ card machines arenât working, or when the establishment only accepts cash.
Have you noticed such bank app âerrorsâ becoming increasingly frequent?
I noticed it loads when I was in the UK over Christmas. I had to wait around for ages in lots of places because friends and family insisted on paying by card, and the frigginâ machine was âbroken.â
I paid with cash, then just relaxed with my đş and watched the poor bar manager getting all flustered as a queue of cashless card holders unleashed a torrent of abuse on the poor chap.
But one friend keeps telling me how âcash sucks.â đľđ¤Ż
Is it a bug or a feature?
My local bank here in the land of masks smiles, is Kasikorn. I felt like they ârug-pulledâ me twice in the past six weeks, the naughty little great-resetters that they are!
When I went to pay for a food delivery, the banking app crashed on me. I was all drained of cash, because of being the human ATM the night before for friends. Donât worry, they paid me backâŚwith QR code bank transfersđ.
Hereâs the joyous little message I got on my slave-phone:

I had to break open the minion and spend every last coin Iâd horded just to pay the delivery driver, who had to wait patiently for me to double back to the Creed dungeon (he got a good tip of coins too).

More recently, Iâd treated myself to another food delivery and for the first time in a while, found myself cashless again.
I pulled out the slave-device whilst taking the lift down to the lobby, and got blindsided by a long-winded, time-consuming bank app update. Reams of terms and conditions. Highly unusual. After getting back to my hovel, I noticed theyâd also emailed me a copy.
Letâs have a gander at the most ominous terminology theyâve sneaked in there:


Hmm, remember the error message I got? This seems to lay the foundation of the bank being able to blame the customers for when the network crashes (whether for real or by design).
You stupid customer, what are you playing at making transactions? You should be owning nothing and being happy!

Ah, the biometric malarkey. Will they be chipping me with Elonâs neuralink next?
Or will I have to do a Tiktok dance to prove I am a human being in motion, to verify my digital ID? Know-your-customer (KYC) is getting weirder and weirder with the hoops one needs to jump through (for both banks and centralised crypto exchanges).
Interesting how they went with âuser may open the biometrics function.â
Thin edge of the wedge before mandatory fingerprint and facial scanning?



This is all reminiscent of operation chokepoint in the United States. For those that donât know about operation chokepoint, it was an attempt to debank âdisfavoured individuals,â and it seems to be happening again now, as we head towards a cashless society.
Iâd highly recommend James Corbettâs recent podcast on this topic to learn more about it.
Problem-reaction-solution
An interestingly suspect series of articles graced the Bangkok Post recently. I smell propaganda and agendas at play.

âŚproblems like poverty and inequality have arguably worsened, even though the government has forked out huge sums on populist schemes. The number of welfare card users continues to soar. It is now reported that 22 million people — almost one-third of the population — have registered for this card.
We see the populist schemes mentioned and a whopping one third of the countryâs population registered for the welfare cards.
Letâs visit the prequel piece along the timeline:

Police are closing in on the hacker who threatened to release data stolen in an alleged security breach affecting 55 million Thais, said Digital Economy and Society (DES) Minister Chaiwut Thanakamanusorn.
Woah. This hacker has some serious skills to obtain all that glorious data. According the worldometers.info, Thailandâs population consists of 69,799,978 people.
“We’ve narrowed down the potential suspects but I think we’d better leave it to police,” said the minister.
He said security vulnerabilities could occur when state agencies that provide public services want to make it easy for people to get their services, adding people may soon find accessing services more complicated but it is for the sake of data security.
Well yeah, I should bloody well think so. Quick! Someone take away all my liberties. Protect me. Save me. Surveil me. No, wait, what? What services will get complicated to access? đ°
Itâs for our own good, isnât it?
Wisit Wisitsora-At, DES permanent secretary, said the meeting was to establish facts surrounding the incident, to ask state agencies to assess their security risks and raise awareness about the Personal Data Protection Act (PDPA).
Oh, crikey.
Mr Wisit said the meeting also discussed how to promote a wider use of digital ID and push for development of digital identity verification system to tackle fraudulent online transactions.
I knew it! I told you so!
[Tells normie friend about the Bangkok Post articles and waits for their reaction]đŚť
âItâs obviously necessary, Nicholas. We live in a digital world that needs digital solutions to keep us safe, so stop espousing all your paranoid conspiracy theories, you nutcase.â
The government must put in place better measures to improve personal data protection and make the issue national agenda as the country transits into the digital economy, according to the TCC.
Whoâs going to be up CBDC creek with a crypto, cash, or gold paddle?đľđźââď¸
Onwards we march towards the political party cash giveaway, wahooo!âŚ

The Pheu Thai Party insisted yesterday its policy to give away 10,000 baht to everyone aged 16 and older can be implemented as soon as Jan 1 next year to replace the current state welfare card if it becomes the new government.
Sounds absolutely amazing, if you are a Thai national and over 16 years old. Whatâs the catch?
The 10,000 baht of money is aimed primarily at stimulating spending in communities in the first six months, with the help of blockchain technology that will ensure the money given is spent within a 4-kilometreradius to spur economic activity, he said.
Blockchain? Thatâs all about crypto stuff, right? Crypto is the same as CBDC, isnât it [sarcasm]? Spend it within a 4km radius? Kinda like a 15 minute cityđ¤.
It sounds very convenient. Anyway, what is the catch?
Upon the implementation of the 10,000-baht project, every Thai who is 16 years of age and older will have a new savings bank account and a digital wallet which will be automatically connected to his or her ID, said Paopoom Rojanasakul, deputy secretary-general of Pheu Thai.
Jakkapong Sangmanee, the registrar of Pheu Thai, said the party wouldn’t terminate the existing state welfare project for low-income people but, when the digital wallet project begins, most Thais will no longer want to use the state welfare card.
It sounds perfectly innocuous [sarcasm] and no doubt the masses will embrace it without a second thought.
Onwards to the latest piece in our riveting franchise series:

The army has yet to find a way to contact a sergeant, a driver at its transport department, suspected of hacking the personal data of 55 million Thais, according to the army spokeswoman.
Eh? Could they message him in LINE app or tag him in a Facebook post or something? He must be seriously off-grid, this sergeant; a master of disguise and evasion.
The arrest warrant stated the sergeant major was wanted on a charge of disseminating information under the computer crime law.
Uh-oh, that instills fear into the hearts of all men to go out of their way to not fall foul the broadly interpretable âcomputer crimes act.â
The suspect, using the pseudonym “9Near” posted on Breach Forum that he held the personal data of 55 million Thais, including names, surnames, addresses, birthdates, ID card numbers and telephone numbers.
The hacker threatened to expose the information if the government agency allegedly involved in the data breach failed to meet a ransom demand last week.
The suspense. Itâs like a crime caper movie.
Reports said the suspect’s wife is a nurse who is now on the run with her husband. She reportedly gained access to the Mor Prom app, a health service portal of the Public Health Ministry that contained the personal data of most of the Thai population.
Wifey is on the run now too, whatever will happen next?! *Do they even exist?*đ¤Ť
An interesting comment posted under this article sums up the state of affairs in a thought provokingly concise way:

Alright, thatâll do it for today. The post went on longer than Iâd intended, probably due to my anecdotal ramblings – although perhaps you realise how that ties in with concerns over a cashless society, and digital dystopia.
You may also learn a great deal from a recent email interview by Graham Smith from bitcoin.com with by James Corbett. Corbett discusses the role of crypto, governments using crises to push through CBDCs, and the parallels between the 1907 financial crisis and what weâre witnessing unfold now with SVB, Signature Bank, Credit Suisse, and others.
đ§Happy Songkranđ§ŕ¸Şŕ¸§ŕ¸ąŕ¸Şŕ¸ŕ¸ľŕ¸ŕ¸ľŕšŕ¸Ťŕ¸ĄŕšđŚđŤ
Nicholas Creed is a Bangkok-based journalistic dissident. If you liked this content and wish to support the work, buy him a coffee or consider a crypto donation:
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