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Paper is actually more valuable in an honest financial system, seriously. Look at the bank of Florence,
If they said they had your money, they had it, every red cent.
A balance sheet from the London branch of the Medici Bank, dated November 12, 1477, shows that a significant number of the bank’s debts corresponded to demand deposits. Raymond de Roover himself estimates that at one point, the bank’s primary reserves were down to 50 percent of total demand liabilities. 60 If we apply the standard criterion used by A.P. Usher, this implies a credit expansion ratio of twice the demand deposits received by the bank. There is evidence, however, that this ratio gradually worsened over the bank’s life-span, especially after 1464, a year that marked the beginning of growing difficulties for the bank. The roots of the general economic and bank crisis that ruined the Medici Bank resemble those Carlo M. Cipolla identifies in his study of fourteenth-century Florence. As a matter of fact, credit expansion resulting from bankers’ misappropriation of demand deposits gave rise to an artificial boom fed by the increase in the money supply and its seemingly “beneficial” short-term effects. Nevertheless, since this process sprang from an increase in the money supply, namely credit unbacked by growth in real savings...
What happened?
Banks would never become powerful entities if all they did was charge a small fee for locking up gold or assisting distant transactions.
Venice did charge for holding deposits, notary work, etc. But they did not loan out what they did not have. Their paper actually commanded a premium over metals because of the number of coins in circulation, and how good the bank was at determining value.
The politicians eventually forgot why they had outlawed fractional reserve, and re-instated it.
They didn't forget.
If we're going to trade paper, we can trade paper without the gold/silver.
No Gold/Silver standard without a Constitutional Amendment to pay all wages in physical silver/gold and banning ANY AND ALL, Public OR Private, paper/digital for that purpose. And it must declared legal tender for the satisfaction of all debts, including physical delivery - nobody can refuse the metal itself as payment for purchases or debt.
What is the ratio between all US wages paid in two weeks' time, and the total value of gold and silver in the US?
The US has about $5.5 trillion in cash, bank deposits and money market instruments. Going to a gold standard is not feasible.
There is a great future in bullets. Think about it. Will you think about it?
and I don't think a farmer is going to be trading you food for a bitcoin.
There is no savior in gold. The gold simply doesn't exist and if you have any, it will simply be confiscated because it's been outlawed.
There is a great future in bullets. Think about it. Will you think about it?
At the end of Wiemar Germany, you could literally buy a HOUSE with a single ounce of gold.
46 hrs per oz sounds reasonable.
Current price of $1800 / 46 = about $39 per hour equivalent.
richwicks saysand I don't think a farmer is going to be trading you food for a bitcoin.
Personally, part of my portfolio diversification / retirement plan is to purchase / build a small farm with decent self sufficiency. A deep well, decent soil, good supply of seeds, some animals, solar, septic, and remote.
It's good insurance against a lot of potential catastrophes. Doesn't cost too much either, and will likely hold its value well.
Personally, part of my portfolio diversification / retirement plan is to purchase / build a small farm with decent self sufficiency. A deep well, decent soil, good supply of seeds, some animals, solar, septic, and remote.
There is no savior in gold. The gold simply doesn't exist and if you have any, it will simply be confiscated because it's been outlawed.
A farmer isn't going to be trading you food for gold either, but since farmers on average are in debt about $1 million, they will trade for dollars.
46 hrs per oz sounds reasonable.
Current price of $1800 / 46 = about $39 per hour equivalent.
RC2006 saysThere is a great future in bullets. Think about it. Will you think about it?
Have you seen the price of ammo recently?
I have no doubt it is a great investment.
He said MEDIAN labor. I believe median labor is around $25/hour. So, that means 72 hours.
What happens when your currency collapses?
The Lebanese are living through a terrible economic experiment
Misc saysRC2006 saysThere is a great future in bullets. Think about it. Will you think about it?
Have you seen the price of ammo recently?
I have no doubt it is a great investment.
It is starting to come down.
As a percent of our nation's wealth, gold has plummeted in value.
I plan to keep it somewhat low maintenance. My desire isn't to live off the land most of the time, but to be able to live off the land, if needed. If the need arises, I can plant lots of additional seed, and begin multiplying the animals. Stockpiles of dry goods can easily cover food needs during a farm ramp up phase.
As a percent of our nation's wealth, gold has plummeted in value.
Misc saysRC2006 saysThere is a great future in bullets. Think about it. Will you think about it?
Have you seen the price of ammo recently?
I have no doubt it is a great investment.
It is starting to come down.
It is. Just found 9mm for $.33/round. A month ago it was about a dollar a round and pre hoaxdemix it was $.19/round.
Does all the legal shoplifting in San Francisco count as deflation?
Misc saysAs a percent of our nation's wealth, gold has plummeted in value.
What wealth? You mean the record unemployment? The record national debt? The outsourcing of all manufacturing? Dependence on industrialized food? Shortages in basic raw materials across all industries?
But forget all that. You go out and buy some gold right now for the paper spot price(paper because it's based on trading contracts, not physical), and get delivery in a week. Go ahead, I'll wait...
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At some point, people can't keep up with the rising prices and quit buying. Wouldn't that naturally lead to deflation? I know the fed can print indefinitely, but if people refuse to spend, I think we'd still have a downward slope in prices. Additionally, with the "supply" shortages caused by government paying people to stay home, I would assume these shortages would stop once people start going back.
Ourselves and people in our neighborhood pretty much said "fuck it" to all projects that required lumber, and we're seeing those prices starting to come back down. I think we'll see the same with car prices and most other commodities.
Here was a good article on what I feel is starting to happen:
https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/hangover-here-explosive-inflation-leads-record-collapse-home-car-purchase-plans
I was gung ho on buying real estate the other month, but I've had some people who own hundreds of rentals tell me last month to wait 3-6 months minimum, as they expect prices to start falling.