Jon Ossoff’s Secret Plan to Ban Cash and Track Every Dollar Has Critics Calling It the End of American Privacy
In a fiery address to a closed-door fundraising circle, sources claim Senator Jon Ossoff is championing a “Digital Dollar” initiative that would phase out all physical currency and place every American transaction—from a cup of coffee to a car loan—on a government-controlled ledger. While Ossoff’s camp insists it’s a blow against tax evasion and money laundering, moral critics are ringing the alarm that this is the final nail in the coffin for personal liberty. “Once you eliminate cash, you eliminate choice,” says one ethicist. “This isn’t progress; it’s a surveillance cage where every purchase is judged and every dissent is tracked.” With supporters calling it a “necessary evolution” and detractors calling it “the digital shackling of the soul,” the debate over Ossoff’s cashless future is igniting a firestorm online. Is this visionary policy or the downfall of a free society? The public is left to wonder if their wallets—and their rights—are about to go extinct.