Stunning incident of faded Ringgit notes not fake
It is indeed a stunning incident of faded notes not fake according to Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) (DE 5th December, 2018).
I believe most of Ringgit notes in circulation have been fake or legally fake for decades as I have lodged Police Reports and writing about that in several letters in Daily Express in recent decades.
But nothing has come forth from the BN Government and BNM despite billions or even trillions had been in circulation for decades.
Are we living in a fake nation when Malaysia has been very much challenged under MA63 ?
About the Ringgit notes, how come they are not fake when such notes of same denomination has different sizes and variances of position in the features of such notes? You can check it yourselves with the notes in your pockets.
In today’s great precision technology especially in printing, how can we tolerate such massive errors in the high tech printing of notes?
Can different printers by different printing or minting companies with different plates be used for such printing giving the impression of fakeness which should give rise to no legal tender in the value of such notes?
If most Ringgit Notes be in such disappointing scenario, how do we know which notes are genuine as issued by BNM or even BNM has been issuing fake notes officially in legal terms resulting in fraudulent practices?
Again today with top quality printers, how come the faded Ringgit notes are still not fake? Has BNM done its job well or it is aware of such “fraudulent” practices in the award of printing works to dubious printers or the main contractor sub-contracted it to others of lesser quality for the motivation of profit ?
There are reports in Australia of Malaysian Government involved with dubious and corrupted printing deals. What happen to such reports ? I hope MACC would look into them in the prevalent corrupted climate in the BN Government of 6 decades.
I am attaching some of the noted discrepancies in Ringgit Malaysia notes for greater and wilder appreciation as the notes in our pockets are indeed fake.
I had seen a video clip of Chinese tourists in a coach with bulky stakes of Ringgit notes of RM50 and RM100 denominations and how come most Chinese tourists pay by online pay schemes such as Alipay, weechat, etc and yet they carry so much notes without worry of security?
It is timely that a Royal Commission of Inquiry on BNM be conducted on a wide range of pressing issues including all those questioned Governmental guarantees by BNM urgently to give genuine value to our Ringgit notes and our economy be in better position and not fake impression. Can we accept the foreign debts of more than RM1 trillions and still rising..?
Joshua Y C Kong 13/12/2018
It is indeed a stunning incident of faded notes not fake according to Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) (DE 5th December, 2018).
I believe most of Ringgit notes in circulation have been fake or legally fake for decades as I have lodged Police Reports and writing about that in several letters in Daily Express in recent decades.
But nothing has come forth from the BN Government and BNM despite billions or even trillions had been in circulation for decades.
Are we living in a fake nation when Malaysia has been very much challenged under MA63 ?
About the Ringgit notes, how come they are not fake when such notes of same denomination has different sizes and variances of position in the features of such notes? You can check it yourselves with the notes in your pockets.
In today’s great precision technology especially in printing, how can we tolerate such massive errors in the high tech printing of notes?
Can different printers by different printing or minting companies with different plates be used for such printing giving the impression of fakeness which should give rise to no legal tender in the value of such notes?
If most Ringgit Notes be in such disappointing scenario, how do we know which notes are genuine as issued by BNM or even BNM has been issuing fake notes officially in legal terms resulting in fraudulent practices?
Again today with top quality printers, how come the faded Ringgit notes are still not fake? Has BNM done its job well or it is aware of such “fraudulent” practices in the award of printing works to dubious printers or the main contractor sub-contracted it to others of lesser quality for the motivation of profit ?
There are reports in Australia of Malaysian Government involved with dubious and corrupted printing deals. What happen to such reports ? I hope MACC would look into them in the prevalent corrupted climate in the BN Government of 6 decades.
I am attaching some of the noted discrepancies in Ringgit Malaysia notes for greater and wilder appreciation as the notes in our pockets are indeed fake.
I had seen a video clip of Chinese tourists in a coach with bulky stakes of Ringgit notes of RM50 and RM100 denominations and how come most Chinese tourists pay by online pay schemes such as Alipay, weechat, etc and yet they carry so much notes without worry of security?
It is timely that a Royal Commission of Inquiry on BNM be conducted on a wide range of pressing issues including all those questioned Governmental guarantees by BNM urgently to give genuine value to our Ringgit notes and our economy be in better position and not fake impression. Can we accept the foreign debts of more than RM1 trillions and still rising..?
Joshua Y C Kong 13/12/2018
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