Posted on 01/25/2010 8:52:26 PM PST by rabscuttle385
ping
Better idea. Real money. There is no hope of surviving the current debt and the increases without hyperinflation.
Anybody want to buy some frog dollars?
Only if I can buy them with McCain pesos!
I would ask Mr. RP what are we to buy the silver and gold with?
Russians like Canadian dollars. The only decent ones have be CA and Aussie dollars because they have lots of nat resources and CA has a more conservative govt, Swiss because of gold (under constant attack by the news world order gang) and if the Euro falls apart and Germany reverts to the DM. The Germans are usually fairly senisble.
The guy running for Senate in CT who is a money manger said the US dollar reserve currecy status allows Washington to spend & spend and tax off the charts.
Whatever you want from whoever will take it.
And a few minutes after that kind of money is legal again, you'll find literally thousands if not millions of sellers who will.
Ameros anyone???
Stamped blocks of salt and rai stones.
Cash.
Go online and download some vectors of $100.00 bills. Print them on nice paper.
If that doesn’t work in the silver and gold market, donate them to ACORN and then call the FBI.
Ron Paul just shut the hell up.
LOL!
Don't wake me up from The Matrix; Don't wake me up, please! I may have to do something. Please Don't WAKE ME UP!
Three reasons why this bill should be passed:
1. Because, given the disastrous job the Fed has done, the government should stop protecting the Fed’s money monopoly. The Federal Reserve Note has lost 98% of it’s value versus gold. The FRN is a horrible store of value and the Fed’s practice of over expanding the money supply fuels the bubbles which cause the busts.
2. Because, if in order to pay for the increasingly massive debt the FRN is debased too far too fast resulting in hyperinflation, if money competitors already exist we might avoid the solution that will be proposed by the government and central bankers - a worldwide currency.
3. Because free people should be free to choose their own money.
Grandfather bought 2 blocks of Manhattan for bag of wampum, 3 hawk feathers and a hammer.
Methinks money supply must simply be relatively adequate (optimal) to facilitate volume and velocity of all transactions and store of value for all entities, with larger or smaller than optimal money supply creating pressure for decreasing or increasing it’s value.
Only mistake gov’t or central bank can make is having way too much or way too little causing inflation (too much money chasing goods and services) or high interest rates (too little liquidity to lending will demand higher rates).
Other than that, if I run my little business and inflation and interest rates are reasonable, I can conduct my transactions and i’m happy.
Currency is a quite small percentage of the total money supply, so printing twice as much as usual is not nearly as bad as these bailouts, where ma gov’t is putting money in somebody’s account and issuing Treasury debt to back it up, i.e., borrowing the money. Most dollars I earn and spend I never actually hold any currency, they could be units, or whatever. The only pain would be if they lose value very fast (high inflation) so that dollars I earned were worth less when I spent them a month later and my raises don’t come through as fast as price increases - ouch !
But from a national perspective, we should strive to keep the nations currency from losing it’s value, and the key driver in that is our national efficiency, how much output we get from our inputs. That will determine the work we need to do and the work other nations need to do to produce goods and services when we trade. If we can work 1 hour days, and another country as to work 14 hour days, and we live in nice houses and they live in huts, it is our national efficiency that is making the difference.
Every internal tax burden we place on ourselves, meaning every time the gov’t spends money, adds to our cost of living, without giving us a new toy or a nice meal (hey, I didn’t order Tax!). That all adds to what our citizens need to earn in order to get by. Thus, it may increase the amount of work they need to do to create the products and services they create, i.e., if you need to take a part-time job to supplement, or it may force them to cut their spending to afford rent. In either case, you wind up with less for how many hours you work.
In a wealthy country, citizens can easily make enough to live very comfortable lives; the country has a very efficient system of converting inputs to outputs (goods and services). A great example of burden on our comfortable citizens is environmental regulation: it is an extra burden that costs time and material to overcome. But, of course, in the long run, we can’t pollute ourselves into oblivion, or who would want to live here ? So we have to balance between needing some government and keeping as much of what we earn as possible.
Harping on currency is kind of a side show. Money supply must be adequate, but efficiency is where the whole game is won or lost.
In one Freeper’s opinion...
Despite a flawed currency, productivity and generally free markets have led to a high standard of living in the US.
It does not follow from that fact though, that we should therefore necessarily continue to maintain the flawed currency and the unnecessary centrally controlled, monopolistic monetary system.
The Fed money czars believe that they possess knowledge enough to improve upon the local decisions made by millions of people interacting in the market and therefore should maintain the authority to manipulate money supply and interest rates so as to improve the efficiency of the economy. They are wrong.
Spending intellectual energy pointing out the lunacy of this sort of thinking, as pervasive and entrenched and unquestioned as it is, is worthwhile. An increase in productivity from an economy NOT hampered by a flawed monetary system, and WITHOUT all of the dislocations produced by wild business cycle swings, could be the result!
That would be Peter Schiff.
Wampum, of course. Or shiny beads. Your choice.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.