AGgressive Metal wrote:technically a coin is not a coin unless it has a denomination.
As you can see, the IRS will bring suit as many times as needed to convict. Double Jeopardy clause of the Constitution not withstanding.
Its a corrupt, corrupt, corrupt, corrupt, government we got; as we all know too well.
mbailey1234 wrote:
Thanks for posting these Idaho!
I guess it comes down to this statement in the above article.
The essence of the argument is that under the Constitution Congress is obligated by law to mint and circulate such coins as demand requires, and must establish the value of coins as they are used as legal tender, but the coins' market value, arising as valuable personal "property," is a distinct, separate attribute of such coins, and is of no legal consequence if the coins are used as legal tender.
Am I interpreting this correctly? Although the coin could be worth more (this is a distinct separate attribute of the coins it says), you can freely use them at face value for legal tender with no legal consequence?
Like the gold and silver coins, this is what's happening on pre 82 pennies. They can be and are worth more than 1 cent but the actual "value" of the metal in them is worth around 2.5 cents. It is still legal though to pay someone in pennies and only value them at their face value.
silverflake wrote:What we really should do is put a precious metal value on currency. Instead of calling it "one dollar" we should peg it to silver and put "1/35th ounce Ag". Then you wouldn't have to worry about the useless dollar denominations which are consistently losing value anyway.
Keep stacking.
SilverEye wrote:There's no way to can get paid in precious metals at face or sneak them into a retirement account. That would be a loophole big enough to drive an armored truck through.
Rich people would never pay income tax. You could defer all income buy funding your Roth IRA with an initial $5k, having your employer sell you 100 AGE's at face, selling those at market price, and use that money to buy more AGE's at face from your employer, and so on. Roth IRA's let your investments grow tax free, and then withdrawals are tax free also. You could transfer millions or even billions and never pay income tax on it. I'm sure the IRS would not be amused.
IdahoCopper wrote: As you can see, the IRS will bring suit as many times as needed to convict. Double Jeopardy clause of the Constitution not withstanding.
cesariojpn wrote:See 31 U.S.C. § 5112(h) for your answer.
Return to Silver Bullion, Gold, & other Bullion Metals
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 103 guests