adagirl wrote:buy when there "is blood in the streets."
adagirl wrote:buy when there "is blood in the streets."
Jonflyfish wrote:adagirl wrote:buy when there "is blood in the streets."
And to think it was supposed to be "sound money". What you have described sounds much more gory.
Cheers!
Jonflyfish wrote:adagirl wrote:buy when there "is blood in the streets."
And to think it was supposed to be "sound money". What you have described sounds much more gory.
Cheers!
Thogey wrote:Jonflyfish wrote:adagirl wrote:buy when there "is blood in the streets."
And to think it was supposed to be "sound money". What you have described sounds much more gory.
Cheers!
I reality is this: There is NO money.
There is debt, we trade on the full faith and CREDIT of the us gubermint.
I guess the value of the US Debt valuates our silver. It seems like the planet functions by trading our paper (debt obligations ) We are lazy and useless. We consume, we don't produce.
How do we make good on the paper?
IMO, debt is overvalued. I buy gold, guns and silver.
I wish it was possible to store liquid fuel.
neilgin1 wrote:I just watched as 25 rolls of a fine collection traded hands with the lowest roll, going for 33 times $10 face, up to 129 times face.
it was (probably) a consignment deal by American rarities, Franklin Halves, all BU' plus's, 1948-54, all mints, Phil, Den, and SF, the median trade was 50-60 times face. I realize the high numi premium attached, but it was sight to see, in a downward trending market on the board.
It seems to me, that if you can find a solid date roll, with less than 10 million minted, in BU plus condition.....bidding will be quite ardent.....and ardent bidding isn't only confined to silver coins...I watched as the diary and sermon notes from an 1845 Abolitionist preacher went for $1,200, and the original newspaper reporting of the 1904 Welsh Revival traded for $937.00.
wow.
AGgressive Metal wrote:Jonflyfish wrote:adagirl wrote:buy when there "is blood in the streets."
And to think it was supposed to be "sound money". What you have described sounds much more gory.
Cheers!
Um, its five times higher than 10-12 years ago? And measured against the world's "best" currency at that. Imagine if you lived in Venezuela, Syria, South Africa, Argentina, Russia, India, etc where inflation has been worse - wouldn't you rather have silver than local currency?
Thogey wrote:Jonflyfish wrote:adagirl wrote:buy when there "is blood in the streets."
And to think it was supposed to be "sound money". What you have described sounds much more gory.
Cheers!
Reality is this: There is NO money.
There is debt, we trade on the full faith and CREDIT of the us gubermint.
I guess the value of the US Debt valuates our silver. It seems like the planet functions by trading our paper (debt obligations ) We are lazy and useless. We consume, we don't produce.
How do we make good on the paper?
IMO, debt is overvalued. I buy gold, guns and silver.
I wish it was possible to store liquid fuel.
theo wrote:
I agree with what both of you are saying, but it seems to me that he is goading us for a reaction. . . which he is getting.
The interesting thing is, in the past JFF has claimed to be a stacker of physical PMs himself which would suggest that he agrees wholeheartedly with your statements. This makes some of his recent statements all the more confusing.
Jonflyfish wrote:AGgressive Metal wrote:Um, its five times higher than 10-12 years ago? And measured against the world's "best" currency at that. Imagine if you lived in Venezuela, Syria, South Africa, Argentina, Russia, India, etc where inflation has been worse - wouldn't you rather have silver than local currency?
Higher than it was, less than half of what it was... it's too volatile. Perhaps that is why there might be "blood in the streets". I'd take the Russian currency. For all the others listed I'd rather have a farm with sheep.
Cheers!
AGgressive Metal wrote:
I like the sheep idea. I think perhaps there are different definitions of "sound" that could lead to confusion. I see your point that silver has been volatile in dollar terms lately, but that is because the Fed is manipulating interest rates, buying assets, bailing banks out, and more (along with basically all other central banks). The idea that gold and silver are sound money is based in observed history where the metals proved themselves in that role for many centuries. Their volatility lately is more a reflection on the volatile corporatist/socialist economy and corrupt paper markets, in my opinion. Silver has done a lot in the last 10-13 years - if it takes a breather I will be disappointed but not dismayed. US dollar creation will not stop, if for no other reason than to fund the debt, so we'll see $40 silver again someday soon.
AGgressive Metal wrote:
I like the sheep idea. I think perhaps there are different definitions of "sound" that could lead to confusion. I see your point that silver has been volatile in dollar terms lately, but that is because the Fed is manipulating interest rates, buying assets, bailing banks out, and more (along with basically all other central banks). The idea that gold and silver are sound money is based in observed history where the metals proved themselves in that role for many centuries. Their volatility lately is more a reflection on the volatile corporatist/socialist economy and corrupt paper markets, in my opinion. Silver has done a lot in the last 10-13 years - if it takes a breather I will be disappointed but not dismayed. US dollar creation will not stop, if for no other reason than to fund the debt, so we'll see $40 silver again someday soon.
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