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Is that "silver and gold are required for purchase" or "silver and gold are to be purchased?"
Stocks and housing will rise with inflation, there is no value loss there. However those assets may become illiquid during hyperinflation, too expensive to buy. So if you're looking to trade or sell fast that may become a problem. Supply chain and service disruptions are the biggest threats right now imo, esp. fueled by the tyrannical jab mandates.
mell saysStocks and housing will rise with inflation, there is no value loss there. However those assets may become illiquid during hyperinflation, too expensive to buy. So if you're looking to trade or sell fast that may become a problem. Supply chain and service disruptions are the biggest threats right now imo, esp. fueled by the tyrannical jab mandates.
During an economic collapse, everything is re-valued to what it's really worth. Tesla, if it survives, will not be worth a trillion dollars in gold and silver. Shitshack's in major cities will not be worth half a million in gold and silver. And dollars will not worth anything.
Supply chain and service interruptions are a direct result of inflation, and hyperinflation. As dollars lose value, people will demand more of them for the same amount of work. This always starts at the root of supply, and spreads from there.
The Fed and their minions will do their best to prop up those assets forever and only if inevitable they will let them fail
At one time in the Virginia colonies, tobacco leaves were money. I can see cigarettes becoming a form of currency today.
Smith also repeatedly refers to the "12 colonies". Not sure which one he left out.
but explains that this case was due to the unusual circumstance of that particular commodity being in universal demand in Britain. Virginia would pay for British imports with tobacco leaves.
Smith also says that the US colonies did not want to hold much gold or silver because their primary problem was a lack of productive capital like machinery and ploughs, etc. So whatever gold or silver they got would be quickly sent abroad to purchase those things, and that this was a more profitable strategy than holding the gold and silver any longer than needed.
Cigarettes where used as currency in East Germany, for a more recent example.
You mean the rapid devaluation of paper currencies, as in "Not worth a continental"?
If you don't understand why dollar denominated assets(stock, housing, 401k's, bonds) are a HUGE risk right now, please read this. It is not the only example, just the most recent. The pattern is historical, and unbroken. And for those thinking crypto, without consistent electric output, and no internet access, how will that work?
https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/venezuelans-turn-gold-nuggets-local-currency-implodes
"Argentum et aurum comparanda sunt."