> This implies, no record of personal purchases around.
What's stopping peoole to do it?
I regularly pay my drinks cash.
I never paid a beer more than 10k though...
> The current "fight against cash" goes in direction of that risk.
I'm glad that when I pay someone for something they can't say I didn't do it and ask for the money again.
That includes the State.
I paid my taxes, here's the proof.
I already paid my energy bill, here's the statement from the bank, have a good day.
Besides, what you are talking about has nothing to do with limits to cash transactions, I am honestly scared by the idea of going around with 10k in a bag to pay for something
only a fool or a criminal would actually do it and feel comfortable about it.
it's betting against bad luck and I an quite sure that I would not win.
Are you sure that you are going to the appointment with the seller with 12k in cash and they are not showing up with guns and rob you?
And what would you do then?
Go to the police? that first thing will do is ask you why you were going around with that much cash in a bag.
Bad question. Good question instead: "What seems to be the trend which may be at some point stop people from doing it".
> what you are talking about
You do not get the point. Of course one is glad to have the ability to prove transactions that one wants to be recorded; the issue is with the threats to the ability of carrying on transactions that one does not want to be recorded.
> What seems to be the trend which may be at some point stop people from doing it
very easy answer: progress.
same reason why people don't use shells as coins anymore.
> the issue is with the threats to the ability of carrying on transactions that one does not want to be recorded.
As the philosopher Jägger once said
You can't always get what you want
It's a fundamental principle of any community that ever existed, apparently in some parts of the richest World people are incapable of understanding that me is much less important than everyone.
Imagine a World where I say "I don't want to have an ID with my picture on it" but I also want to travel around the World freely, because I don't like explaining myself to random strangers in uniforms.
There are easy solutions to what you are looking for, Theodore Kaczynski is a notorious and virtuose example on how to pull it off, but none of them involve large amounts of cash spent in a single transaction, which is fishy per se because it requires two or more parties agreeing to do something that has virtually no advantage, except the most common: hiding something. I would like to understand what that something is, because the most obvious conclusion is "something shady". We all agree on that, let's be real.
I understand if protesters in HK buy tickets for the subway in cash to not get tracked by the Chinese government. Chinese are famously a little bit repressive.
I don't understand why someone in the US, living in the best and freest country in the World, the greatest democracy ever, the place where dreams come true, a Country where, unlike China, they give protesters a price in the form of a few days in jail, would like to spend large amounts of cash instead of using more modern systems to hide from their government and the IRS, two of the things that define "the most civilized place on the Planet", according to its citizens.
Something's doesn't add up here.
If it wasn't about the US, that we all know is heaven on Earth, one might be inclined to think that it's the reaction of a cynical, narcissistic, money driven, trigger-easy population to a government that has only one way to make people behave like they live in a single united Country and belong in a modern society, not tribes: violence and tyranny.
But that's obviously false for the US.
You know, as European, the many flaws of Europe are an advantage.
Even if the government wanted to track me and all my expenses, they are so incompetent that I'll probably be dead before they realize that I bough a new electric bike with my CC. I live dangerously, I know.
This implies, no record of personal purchases around.
The current "fight against cash" goes in direction of that risk.