Nice dodge
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Originally posted by Denny View PostNice dodge
But anyway, did you buy some gold yet!!?
lolOriginally posted by racrguyWhat's your beef with NPR, because their listeners are typically more informed than others?Originally posted by racrguyVoting is a constitutional right, overthrowing the government isn't.
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Originally posted by Broncojohnny View PostWe should go back to the gold standard so that the dollar is worth a set amount of gold. That is, until you ask the government for that gold and they don't have it and have to borrow it from JP Morgan.
Oh dear, wait a second, I thought this whole gold standard was going to take power away from the bankers, not turn the evil bankers into another version of the Fed! All of this happened before in 1893 but I'm sure it won't happen again if we just trust that the gold standard is the way to go! Last time it happened there was a Railroad bubble and Union Pacific went bankrupt then 15,000 business followed afterwards and set the stage for >12% unemployment for five years. Probably won't happen again though, just trust me.
Oh and BUY GOLD!
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Originally posted by StanleyJustinTaliwhacker95 View PostWell then I'd have to ask: If both systems suck, what is the best way to go? The gold standard has its issues, sure. But so does fiat currency. Are we to just suffer inflation until a burger and fries is $489,523? Where does it come to an end? What is the way to make the problems stop? The only thing I can come up with, is to start actually punishing any form of white collar crime with extreme prejudice. Allowing not a single exception. Make it the death penalty for all of it. But that of course, is never going to happen. So how long, with no options, until a fall?
And yes, we have inflation until a burger and fries costs $489,523. Ideally that will happen. It will take quite a while but it will happen. A little bit of inflation in the economy is a good thing, about 1-3% a year is a "little bit". That situation is certainly a lot better than one with a fixed money supply where deflation can happen overnight. Deflation being where a dollar is worth more tomorrow and people start hoarding dollars.Originally posted by racrguyWhat's your beef with NPR, because their listeners are typically more informed than others?Originally posted by racrguyVoting is a constitutional right, overthrowing the government isn't.
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The age of the robber barons was a consequence of a gold standard for currency.
Imagine the havoc if a silver standard had been mandated as well?
A similar situation exists today with jewelry grade diamonds. This is a controlled resource in a somewhat cornered market. It depends on artificial scarcity and an extremely aggressive marketing campaign to inflate percieved value. Sound familiar?
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Before 1873 the US had a silver and gold standard.
The age of the robber barons or the "gilded age" was really no different than any other period where a specific asset class is hyped. It wasn't caused by the gold standard but by huge amounts of capital, both private and public, being deployed into railroads in a haphazard fashion. This has happened many times in everything from tulips to railroads to automobiles and the internet.Originally posted by racrguyWhat's your beef with NPR, because their listeners are typically more informed than others?Originally posted by racrguyVoting is a constitutional right, overthrowing the government isn't.
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Originally posted by Bassics View PostThe age of the robber barons was a consequence of a gold standard for currency.
Imagine the havoc if a silver standard had been mandated as well?
A similar situation exists today with jewelry grade diamonds. This is a controlled resource in a somewhat cornered market. It depends on artificial scarcity and an extremely aggressive marketing campaign to inflate percieved value. Sound familiar?Whos your Daddy?
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Originally posted by Broncojohnny View PostBefore 1873 the US had a silver and gold standard.
The age of the robber barons or the "gilded age" was really no different than any other period where a specific asset class is hyped. It wasn't caused by the gold standard but by huge amounts of capital, both private and public, being deployed into railroads in a haphazard fashion. This has happened many times in everything from tulips to railroads to automobiles and the internet.
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Originally posted by StanleyJustinTaliwhacker95 View PostWell what about the constant bumps to minimum wage that fiat currency is going to cause? I ask because everyone around here seems to have a problem with having a minimum wage, myself included.Originally posted by racrguyWhat's your beef with NPR, because their listeners are typically more informed than others?Originally posted by racrguyVoting is a constitutional right, overthrowing the government isn't.
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Originally posted by Broncojohnny View PostBefore 1873 the US had a silver and gold standard.
The age of the robber barons or the "gilded age" was really no different than any other period where a specific asset class is hyped. It wasn't caused by the gold standard but by huge amounts of capital, both private and public, being deployed into railroads in a haphazard fashion. This has happened many times in everything from tulips to railroads to automobiles and the internet.
Interesting comment about the tulips, I was just reading about the fortunes made and lost in Amsterdam with the competing varieties; and how the underlying insurance industry that arose long before enabled people to risk far more than what they could ever repay otherwise. Copper clad ships!
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Originally posted by Bassics View PostI disagree. Capital was locked up and controlled by a very limited number of underwriters. If anything, railroad grants were an opportunistic way of keeping that capital in one place. Profiteering from railroad right-of-way grants preceeds the industrialization of the US, even president Lincoln had his hand in the cookie jar.Originally posted by racrguyWhat's your beef with NPR, because their listeners are typically more informed than others?Originally posted by racrguyVoting is a constitutional right, overthrowing the government isn't.
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