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Upthinking Finance™ is now trademarked

Melissa Ciummei, an independent investor and researcher in Northern Ireland, joins us on Upthinking Finance™ to take a global look at the rapidly evolving world of digital currencies, digital IDs, and the shifting economic landscape.

We discuss the push for Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) in the EU, UK, and US, explaining how digital identity is becoming an essential precursor for programmable money and increased financial oversight.

The discussion digs into the societal impacts of these technologies, exploring everything from privacy concerns and geopolitical pressures to generational shifts in values and the consequences of ever-growing inequality.

Whether you’re curious about the politicized rollouts of stablecoins, the quiet move toward digital surveillance, or you want to understand how new technologies are reshaping money, this episode gives you a nuanced perspective on the future of finance and the growing importance of community involvement in shaping that future.

Join us for an eye-opening conversation that connects the dots between economic policy, digital innovation, and the real-life consequences for individuals and society at large.

You will want to hear this episode if you are interested in...

The Rise of Programmable Money and Digital Identification

As the world moves deeper into the digital age, few topics spark more concern or confusion than the twin emergence of programmable money and digital ID systems. But these technological frameworks threaten the autonomy and privacy traditionally associated with money and identity.

At the heart of the discussion was the evolution from fiat currency, where some level of anonymity is preserved, to digital currencies tethered to the state and tech platforms. Melissa highlights that programmable money would be the most dominant thing that people need to think about when considering CBDC.

Once financial and identity data converge, possibilities for control, whether for taxation, surveillance, or social engineering, multiply rapidly.

A Fragmented Push Toward the Digital Future

The EU is leading the charge to implement digital ID and currency. However, this technocratic race collides with real-time social resistance, especially spiraling around immigration and cultural integration.

Melissa describes a backlash in places like Poland, Ireland, and the UK, where citizens increasingly question the motives behind digital migration controls and see digital ID as a tool of exclusion rather than inclusion. 

Turning to the U.S., the conversation covered whether states’ rights and American federal diversity provide meaningful protection against the encroachment of digital money and ID versus the EU’s top-down approach.

Initiatives like Real ID and mobile driver’s licenses represent “function creep”: stepwise moves that make opting out of digital surveillance increasingly inconvenient.

Melissa gives a real-world example from airports, where facial recognition and biometric fast-tracking nudge even skeptical travelers into compliance. Seamless travel or instant payments are the carrot, but gradual loss of privacy and agency is the stick.

The Looming Economic Shift

A key issue threaded through the...