BullionStar wrote:Would very much like to hear realcenters views on the thorny issue of holding Gold/Silver as physical coins and bars against vaulted precious metal services like BullionVault / Gold Money et al.
I am predominently a physical holder (gold and silver) , but am considering moving a portion into a vault held service.
HPMBTT wrote:
2. Unless well hidden, burglars will find it anyway. Even if you have firearms for self-defense and you are at home when they break in, if a burglar or gang breaks in and they have the edge on you and you don't kill them first, you're screwed and so are your PM's. Let me be more specific. Once you're held hostage and they find the safe, then it's the ultimate dilemma: do I give them or not give them the combination?
thedrifter wrote: I keep mine in a public storage unit.
thedrifter wrote:No one but my girlfriend knows that I have as much silver as I do or were it is at.
Mossy wrote:Oh, boy. I recall a fisherman who gave his fiance a power of attorney while out on the grounds. He came back in with a hold of fish, and AK F&G told him his card was invalid, someone else owned the permit now. Oh, and BTW, his boat was no longer his. He got home and found that his house had also been sold. And he could do nothing at all.
Fem lib struck again.
Mossy wrote:thedrifter wrote: I keep mine in a public storage unit.
misteroman wrote:In hand 100%! Hide in creative places in the house.
Heating vents, old shoe in underneth toilet,etc. There are 1000's of places to safely hide ag and au
shinnosuke wrote:misteroman wrote:In hand 100%! Hide in creative places in the house.
Heating vents, old shoe in underneth toilet,etc. There are 1000's of places to safely hide ag and au
For me, finding places to hide them is not the problem. Remembering where I hid them is. I guess taping The List Of Hiding Places on the door of the fridge is not a good idea, huh?
More likely that he lived in a remote village on the Alaska coast where he was lucky to be able to buy a pad of paper to write his "power of attorney" on. It was about 30 years ago. He needed someone to handle paying bills while he was out of touch out in the Alluetians.exbingoaddict wrote:Either that fisherman had a bad attorney or he was a bad client. Always make your power of attorney limited in their scope of effect. I.e. you must first become incapacited for it to take effect.
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