mbailey1234 wrote:They need a local, or better yet state, currency that is based on gold or silver to really get my attention.
Z00 wrote:mbailey1234 wrote:They need a local, or better yet state, currency that is based on gold or silver to really get my attention.
OK, this is something that has occupied my mind a bit lately.
HOW can you issue a currency "backed" by anything that has such a daily volitlity as precious metals?
...
You tell me how to overcome this problem and I'll start issuing silver backed tokens in 2 weeks.
Z00 wrote:mbailey1234 wrote:They need a local, or better yet state, currency that is based on gold or silver to really get my attention.
OK, this is something that has occupied my mind a bit lately.
HOW can you issue a currency "backed" by anything that has such a daily volitlity as precious metals?
...
You tell me how to overcome this problem and I'll start issuing silver backed tokens in 2 weeks.
Aqualung48 wrote:If the currency is backed by PMs on a one to one basis, neither would fluctuate in value that much. The laws of supply and demand might affect the prices of individual items, but overall, there would be not much change. Consider a few examples of how the buying power of gold has remained the same. How many $20.00 gold coins would it take to buy a car in 1920? How many of those same coins (or substitute 1 ounce AGE's to make the math easier) would it take to buy a car today? Another example is the price of gas. In 1964, a 90% quarter would buy you a gallon of gas almost anywhere here in the USA. The same quarter will still buy you a gallon of gas because of its melt value. PM backed currency stabilizes the value of money. This works to the detriment of a government that spends without worrying about tomorrow. The only way it can hope to pay down those massive deficits, is to use deflated money. If our national debt was in ounces of gold, instead of dollars, I doubt we could ever pay it without severe austerity measures. The last time the US government had no debt was in 1835, during the Andrew Jackson administration. Andrew Jackson hated paper money.
Aqualung48 wrote:Ron Paul in 2012!
My biggest problem with Ron Paul and implementing the gold standard right now
Engineer wrote:Aqualung48 wrote:Ron Paul in 2012!
My biggest problem with Ron Paul and implementing the gold standard right now is the fact that we haven't gone bust yet. I'm all for a hard backed currency, but I'd rather see the bankers go bust in a national default than letting the taxpayers shoulder the burden that made the bankers rich in the first place. If the banksters start hurting hard enough, I might even be able to buy one of their private islands some day.
I'm guessing TPTB will try to push the idea of a hard backed currency AFTER they've gotten us into as much debt as possible, but before we can pull an Iceland. We need to fight against that...
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