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We should all just use silver by weight with each other


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2023 Feb 19, 8:00pm   24,255 views  176 comments

by Patrick   ➕follow (61)   💰tip   ignore  

https://coinmill.com/MXN_MXP.html#MXP=5000

The Mexican Peso was revalued on January 1, 1993. Pesos dated before that date (Old Mexican Pesos - MXP) are 1000 times less valuable than the New Mexican Pesos - MXN.


This is kind of funny because "peso" literally means "weight" of silver. But there is no silver in the peso anymore.

The US dollar has lost about 97% of its value from the time the Federal Reserve was created.

Why do we bother with their shit fiat currency at all? There is plenty of silver to use as currency, no shortage. And you can be sure its value won't go to zero like it does with all fiat currency eventually.

Would be nice if there were easily available small weights of pure silver available, but in the meantime, we could just use old US silver coins.

The important thing is to value currency by weight of pure silver, not bullshit pesos or dollars.


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117   fdhfoiehfeoi   2023 May 5, 10:28am  

Rounds were selling for $25/oz in the past six months.
118   Onvacation   2023 May 5, 10:36am  

NuttBoxer says

Rounds were selling for $25/oz in the past six months.

What are they selling for now?


As low as $29.68 from SD Bullion
119   fdhfoiehfeoi   2023 May 5, 8:23pm  

Looks like about $28. 40% is the best bang for your buck right now, still at $25.
120   Patrick   2023 May 10, 2:27am  

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silver_standard


The silver standard[a] is a monetary system in which the standard economic unit of account is a fixed weight of silver. Silver was far more widespread than gold as the monetary standard worldwide, from the Sumerians c. 3000 BC until 1873. Following the discovery in the 16th century of large deposits of silver at the Cerro Rico in Potosí, Bolivia, an international silver standard came into existence in conjunction with the Spanish pieces of eight. These silver dollar coins played the role of an international trading currency for nearly four hundred years. ...

For millennia it was also silver, not gold, which was the real basis of the domestic economies: the foundation for most money-of-account systems, for payment of wages and salaries, and for most local retail trade. In 14th to 15th century England, for instance, most highly paid skilled artisans earned 6d a day (six pence, or 5.4g silver in the mid-15th century), and a whole sheep cost 12d. So even the smallest gold coin, the quarter-noble of 20d (with 1.7g fine gold), was of little use for domestic trade.[3]

Everyday economic activities were therefore conducted with silver as the standard of value and with silver serving as medium of exchange for local, domestic and even regional trade. Gold functioned as a medium for international trade and high-value transactions, but it generally fluctuated in price versus everyday silver money.[3] Gold as the sole standard of value would not occur after various developments occurring in England starting the 18th century.
121   Patrick   2023 May 10, 2:44am  


Some states have chosen to use a loophole in the Federal Reserve Act that gives individual states the right to issue currencies of gold or silver coins or rounds. ... As of January 2012, Utah allowed the payment of debt to be settled in silver and gold, and the value of the American silver or gold rounds used was pegged to the price of the given precious metal. Payment in some cases can be requested to be made in silver or gold rounds. As of 2011, eleven other U.S. states were exploring their options to possibly make similar changes like Utah.
122   fdhfoiehfeoi   2023 May 10, 11:02am  

Also Tennessee, which is also working on establishing a bullion state bank(specie storage, not paper). A few other states as well, all recently.
123   Patrick   2023 May 10, 12:23pm  

Wow, also Texas:

https://sashalatypova.substack.com/p/texas-wants-to-create-a-gold-and


Texas Wants to Create a Gold and Silver-Backed Currency
Can the fiat system be reformed? Can this be done or at least initiated at a state level?

Texas has proposed a bill that would require the state comptroller to establish and provide for the issuance of gold and silver specie and also establish digital currencies that are 100% backed by gold and silver, and 100% redeemable in cash, gold, or silver. The bill would authorize the Texas Bullion Depository as the issuer of the specie and digital currencies and ensure that holders can use them as legal tender to pay debt and transfer them electronically to other people. The bill would also require the trustee to maintain enough gold and silver specie or bullion to provide for the redemption of all units of the digital currency issued but not redeemed. In practice, individuals would be able to purchase transactional currency representing the smallest fractions of physical gold or silver and redeem them for dollars, gold, or silver on demand. The bill has passed the House State Affairs Committee by a 7-6 vote and has received strong grassroots support in Texas.


Might be a sneaky way to create a digital currency which can be shut off at will by government.
124   HeadSet   2023 May 10, 1:16pm  

Patrick says

Might be a sneaky way to create a digital currency which can be shut off at will by government.

One issue that may be stooping the government from issuing a digital currency - it would stop all drug transactions. How would the CIA get its fentanyl profits?
125   fdhfoiehfeoi   2023 May 10, 3:51pm  

If the servers are housed in Texas, over state ISP, fed would have thumbs up their asses..
127   AD   2023 Oct 5, 10:39pm  

One of my favorite movie scenes (bank run in its a Wonderful Life) : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OTJCI1FNBfA

Silicon Valley Bank fucked up (buy a disproportionate amount of long duration Treasuries when rates were nearly zero) and could not effectively hide its fuck up before it had a bank run .... you think the bank's chief financial officer and risk managers would understand the basic concept of building a bond ladder ...
129   Patrick   2023 Dec 17, 3:26pm  

https://notthebee.com/article/during-the-last-quarter-costco-sold-over-100-million-worth-of-gold-bars


I don't know if this is a sign of anything other than people being worried about an inevitable economic crash and a collapse of the dollar, but that worry alone is enough to raise your eyebrows.

The wholesale mega-store Costco not only sold innumerable $1.50 hot dogs, but in the last quarter alone they have sold $100 million worth of gold bars online.


Gold is good for storing large value, but silver is more practical for every day transactions.
130   Onvacation   2023 Dec 22, 1:59pm  

Patrick says






The USA devalued their coins MUCH quicker. In the early 1930's they took gold coins out of circulation. Up until 1964 coins were made with 90% silver. They tried a couple of years of 40% silver half dollars but since 1970 our coins have been made of copper, nickel, and zinc; parking tokens.

REAL SILVER COINS

132   Patrick   2024 Jan 7, 12:54pm  

https://slaynews.com/news/europe-advances-plans-cashless-societies/


Unelected bureaucrats in the European Union are advancing plans to replace physical money with a “digital Euro” to usher in “cashless societies.”

As Slay News has reported, globalists have been pushing for the introduction of central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) for some time.

The push is being championed by the World Economic Forum (WEF) with backing from the United Nations (UN), the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), and globalist world leaders, including Democrat President Joe Biden.

However, as members of the WEF celebrate the push toward “cashless societies,” major concerns are being raised for the privacy and civil liberties of the general public.
133   HeadSet   2024 Jan 7, 1:15pm  

Patrick says

https://www.zerohedge.com/commodities/first-costco-now-walmart-major-retailers-now-offer-gold-bars



First Costco, Now Walmart? Major Retailers Now Offer Gold Bars


Cool if Dollar General starts offing gold bars as well.
134   RWSGFY   2024 Jan 7, 3:13pm  

HeadSet says

Patrick says


https://www.zerohedge.com/commodities/first-costco-now-walmart-major-retailers-now-offer-gold-bars




First Costco, Now Walmart? Major Retailers Now Offer Gold Bars



Cool if Dollar General starts offing gold bars as well.


Etsy offers screaming deals: https://www.etsy.com/listing/1646438887/
135   Patrick   2024 Jan 7, 4:40pm  

RWSGFY says

Etsy offers screaming deals: https://www.etsy.com/listing/1646438887/


Lol, "Plated"

What are those "gold bars" for? Maybe to try to trick someone who was born yesterday.



136   fdhfoiehfeoi   2024 Jan 8, 7:50am  

Etsy is gross. Think Wayfair, but instead of children, lots of satanic shit, and even kill trophy's.
138   AmericanKulak   2024 Feb 11, 7:08pm  

Etsy is a bunch of lazy girl artists/single mom hoes repackaging cheap Chinese shit as their homemade crap. I wouldn't by anything, especially injestable or skin related, including shit like "Organic Goat Soap" from etsy.
140   AmericanKulak   2024 Apr 12, 7:43pm  

Silver based currency, with payment of wages and small contracts mandated in metallic coins (no paper, either public/government OR private bank banknotes)

Has to be or the rich hoard the coins and metal while giving out paper.
142   Nomograph   2024 Apr 19, 6:48am  

clambo says

Savers lost a ton of dough

Savers always lose money if they store their wealth in government-issued currency. Government-issued currency is not intended to be a wealth storage vehicle. It's intended use is to facilitate the exchange of goods and services. Metal is a crappy medium for the exchange of goods and services. Currency inflation is purposeful and discourages the use of currency as a storage vehicle. Inflation is a feature, not a bug. If you want silver and gold, just buy silver and gold, but blaming the government for a poor investment strategy is just silly.

Why on earth would anyone want to store their wealth in a government issued currency?

Currency savers lose money. Investors make money. Try investing rather than saving currency.

People who store their wealth in currency are, in reality, seeking nanny-state government protection from exposure to free markets. If you expect the government to protect and grow your wealth, prepare to be disappointed 😛.
143   fdhfoiehfeoi   2024 Apr 19, 7:08am  

Nomograph says

It's intended use is to facilitate the exchange of goods and services


No, it's intended to rob you blind. This has always been the purpose of central banking cartels.

Nomograph says

Try investing rather than saving currency.


Examples of inflation resistant investments please. Because I know you aren't telling them to take paper and purchase other paper, all valued in the same depreciating asset.
144   RWSGFY   2024 Apr 19, 9:00am  

NuttBoxer says


Examples of inflation resistant investments please.


I'm pretty sure $100 invested in AAPL, GOOG, NFLX, TSLA, NVDA, AMZN and such 10-15 years ago has beaten inflation even with taxes taken into account. Heck, even plain old boring S&P index fund did that, so no stock-picking prowess or luck necessary.
145   RayAmerica   2024 Apr 19, 9:14am  

What value do precious metals actually have? Not much!

Trying To Trade 1 oz Gold Coin (worth $1800 at the time of the video's filming) for Worthless Random Stuff



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D_x8VswuLwU
146   RWSGFY   2024 Apr 19, 9:25am  

RayAmerica says


What value do precious metals actually have? Not much!

Trying To Trade 1 oz Gold Coin (worth $1800 at the time of the video's filming) for Worthless Random Stuff



Yawn: I was offered a massive "gold" ring on the side of the road for mere $200 because the dude allegedly ran out if gas and left his wallet at home.

I offered to call AAA for him using my phone instead of taking his hard-earned gold for such little money but for some reason he declined. I wonder why.

PS. This was all the rage in Balkans and the rest of Eastern Europe in the early 90s, but cell phones were not really a thing yet.
147   RayAmerica   2024 Apr 19, 9:45am  

RWSGFY says


Yawn

So you think it is a 'yawn' that uneducated people turn down a Canadian Maple Leaf 1oz. of Gold for meaningless, worthless junk, and it's done right outside a coin shop that deals in precious metals? Is that what you are saying?
148   RWSGFY   2024 Apr 19, 10:00am  

RayAmerica says


RWSGFY says


Yawn

So you think it is a 'yawn' that uneducated people turn down a Canadian Maple Leaf 1oz. of Gold for meaningless, worthless junk, and it done right outside a coin shop that deals in precious metals? Is that what you are saying?



People simply don't believe it's real and suspect it's a scam. Are you familiar with "too good to be true" concept? They are.

Heck, if somebody on the street offered me $1000 in $100 bills for some worthless junk I'd most probably decline and put as much distance between me and them as possible in a dignified way.

Here's a sutuation for you: you're walking down the street and see a fat wallet lying on the pavement. Another guy walking in the same direction also notices it, picks it up, opens it and finds a thick wad of what seems to be $100s. There is no ID or CCs in the wallet so there is zero chance of finding the rightful owner. He then says that since you both were there it's only fair if you split it in the middle and proposes to get off the street to count and split the money.How would you react? Would you consider it a great stroke of luck and take the money? No? Why not?

Better yet, would you buy that huge gold ring for measly $200 from that "stranded" guy I mentioned earlier?
149   RayAmerica   2024 Apr 19, 11:42am  

RWSGFY says

People simply don't believe it's real and suspect it's a scam. Are you familiar with "too good to be true" concept? They are.

Except for the fact that Dice was standing in front of a coin shop that deals in precious metals and told people that they could go inside the store and have the coin checked for its authenticity.
150   Nomograph   2024 Apr 20, 6:39am  

NuttBoxer says

No, it's intended to rob you blind. This has always been the purpose of central banking cartels.

I'm confused now. How does, say, a dollar bill "rob me blind." HINT: It doesn't. If you stuff your dollar bills in a mattress for years while knowing their value slowly lessens, you have robbed yourself. Government-issued currency is just a convenient medium to facilitate the exchange of goods and services and inflation insures that it is used primarily for that purpose.

Do you really think it's the government job to grow your wealth and keep it safe for you?

RWSGFY says

I'm pretty sure $100 invested in AAPL, GOOG, NFLX, TSLA, NVDA, AMZN and such 10-15 years ago has beaten inflation


This. But some folks seem more interested in playing victim than in building wealth.
151   Nomograph   2024 Apr 20, 7:03am  

Patrick says

The important thing is to value currency by weight of pure silver

Why is that important? My opinion is that tying currency to silver is, in fact, completely unimportant. This is evidenced by the fact that it hasn't been tied to any metal for over half a century and our economy has been more robust and stable than ever.

The U.S. dollar is tied to the economic output and outlook of the U.S., which is more meaningful imo. If the U.S. dollar was tied to silver, then it's value is based on global demand for silver and we lose control over the value of our currency. It would become unpredictable and volatile. Our economic output is much more stable and predictable, and hence so is the dollar.

Furthermore, low-level inflation prevents deflation. Currency deflation is one of the worst conditions for an economy because it discourages investing and encourages currency hoarding. The velocity of the currency (i.e. the number of times it changes hands pur unit time) slows to a crawl and the economy stagnates. People spend only what they absolutely need to because that dollar will be worth more tomorrow. The economy slumps, debt servicing becomes onerous, businesses fail, and people lose jobs.

That is what happens when people save and currency-hoard rather than invest. Hoarding currency is a practice to be discouraged whether said currency is tied to silver or to economic output.

@Patrick, I would like to hear why you think that tying currency to metal is a good practice. Do you wish to store your wealth in a government-issued currency rather than in free-market investments? Why would you want the government to be involved in your personal finances any more than is necessary? Why not just buy silver if you want to own silver?
152   Nomograph   2024 Apr 20, 7:13am  

Nomograph says


Do you wish to store your wealth in a government-issued currency rather than in free-market investments?

I suppose I can talk about my own case. I would ballpark my net worth at around $10MM. Over the years I have invested in real estate, stocks, and private companies e.g. startup equity.

At any given time, I may have $10,000- $20,000 in cash in the bank as money flows in and flows out. Sometimes it accumulates and when that happens I move it over to an investment account to ensure that I am not storing my wealth in the form of currency, and only use it to facilitate the exchange of good and services, and to service any debt.

Thus, at any given time I have about 0.15% of my accumulated wealth in the form of currency, and that is solely for convenience. I don't give a crap if that pittance is tied to a shiny metal. I just want it to be fast, easy, and reasonably stable, and the U.S. dollar ticks all those boxes ✅
153   Nomograph   2024 Apr 20, 7:31am  

NuttBoxer says

No, it's intended to rob you blind. This has always been the purpose of central banking cartels.

Fear of loss is one of the hallmarks of a scarcity mindset. Fear of loss, feeling victimized and powerless, hoarding, excessive worrying, zero-sum thinking, etc.

I would posit that the real problem for many folks is not a fiat currency, but a scarcity mindset. It is completely possible to overcome this and shift to a mindset of abundance. It takes self-understand and a willingness to do the work required for growth. Simple but not easy.

With a mindset of abundance, feelings of powerlessness and victimization are replaced with empowerment and personal responsibility. When one accepts responsibility for their situation, they become empowered to change it. An outlook of opportunity, possibility, growth, confidence, and optimism takes hold.

How much time do Elon Musk, or Donald Trump, or Jeff Bezos, or Meg Whitman, or Larry Ellison, or Warren Buffet, or Charles Koch spend wishing for a silver-backed currency? Prolly not much 😉
154   AmericanKulak   2024 Apr 20, 8:01am  

Nomograph says

With a mindset of abundance, feelings of powerlessness and victimization are replaced with empowerment and personal responsibility. When one accepts responsibility for their situation, they become empowered to change it. An outlook of opportunity, possibility, growth, confidence, and optimism takes hold.

Is abundance the normal state of food and resources for humanity across time?

Is it absolutely guaranteed to continue?

Sure, there is excess worry, but saving for a few weeks of food and essentials is wisdom. Since the invention of Agriculture about 8000 BPY, it was necessary in most places to survive the winter season.
155   Nomograph   2024 Apr 20, 8:26am  

AmericanKulak says

Sure, there is excess worry, but saving for a few weeks of food and essentials is wisdom.

Having some canned food and dried rations in case of a flood or earthquake is not what I'm talking about, obviously 🙄. I have an emergency store, complete with weapons and ammo, but I honestly never think much about it.

Expecting the government to provide a free place to store your wealth, completely sheltered from the ravages of the free market, is unrealistic. Feeling victimized because the government does not care for and grow your wealth for you seems childish to me. If you don't like fiat dollars, just buy silver. Man up. How much time did Marcus Aurelius spend crying for nanny-state government protection? HINT: none.

This isn't medieval Europe, Kulak. We have a level of opportunity that previous generations couldn't have dreamed of. It's a shame to see folks squander it by wallowing in a mindset of scarcity and victimhood. The world is our collective oyster and t's possible for just about anyone in the western world to go out and not only seek, but find their pearl.
156   RayAmerica   2024 Apr 20, 9:08am  

Nomograph says

I suppose I can talk about my own case. I would ballpark my net worth at around $10MM. Over the years I have invested in real estate, stocks, and private companies e.g. startup equity.

Just curious. Why did you feel the need to tell us the amount of your net worth in order to drive home your point?

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