Real0ne -> RE: Common Law and rights (4/26/2010 8:09:57 PM)
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I have got a ton of shit to do right now and really cannot do this justice but I will do a once quick over on it. quote:
ORIGINAL: jlf1961 quote:
Disadvantages to the gold standard * A gold standard leads to deflation whenever an economy using the gold standard grows faster than the gold supply. that assumes you are operate bleeding edge and have no possible way to change the value of the gold, red herring. When an economy grows faster than its money supply, the same money is used to execute a larger number of transactions. Yep just like we have right now with the fiat frns. no different. The only ways an economy can execute more transactions with the same amount of money are to execute transactions more quickly, and to lower the cost of the transactions. wouldnt want the bank to make less money, hell we have computers they check your account in 10 milliseconds how much faster do they need it? Another red herring As deflation drives costs down, the value of each unit of money goes up. WOW can have the money in hand gain value now can we? Oh and only the value of gold is locked, while paper on the other hand cant be changed.... uhg ....also wrong word should have used prices not costs. This increases the value of cash, but it decreases the value of assets, This one is complete bullshit! The assets directly ride with the money because the money is a hard asset. since the same asset can be purchased with less money. Whats different? fucking nothing! When we are in an inflation cycle the same problem exists with paper. When we are in a deflation cycle the same problem, exists with paper! Another red herring This in turn increases the ratio of debts to assets over time. Yeh if you never ever ever never adjust either the value of gold ot the prices of product again the same shit would happen with the frns. For example, the monthly cost of a fixed-rate home mortgage stays the same, but the value of the house goes down, and the value of the dollars required to pay the mortgage goes up. Come on jlf who is the fucking idiot that wrote this. There is no difference between the way gold would function and paper. red herring In essence, deflation rewards cash savings, and discourages the use of loans to spur economic growth. same shit red herring * The total amount of gold that has ever been mined has been estimated at around 142,000 metric tons.[15] Assuming a gold price of US$1,000 per ounce, or $32,500 per kilogram, the total value of all the gold ever mined would be around $4.5 trillion. Well than value it at 1 million per ounce now we got enough to support the whole world in spades. This is less than the value of circulating money in the U.S. alone, where more than $8.3 trillion is in circulation or in deposit (M2). Therefore, a return to the gold standard, if also combined with a mandated end to fractional reserve banking, would result in a significant increase in the current value of gold, which may limit its use in current applications. yada yada For example, instead of using the ratio of $1,000 per ounce, the ratio can be defined as $2,000 per ounce effectively raising the value of gold to $9 trillion. However, this is specifically a disadvantage of return to the gold standard and not the efficacy of the gold standard itself. huh? was that really supposed to mean somehting of value? Some gold standard advocates consider this to be both acceptable and necessary[18] whilst others who are not opposed to fractional reserve banking argue that only base currency and not deposits would need to be replaced.[citation needed] The amount of such base currency (M0) is only about one tenth as much as the figure (M2) listed above. Lets not talk about M1 LOL * Many economists believe that economic recessions can be largely mitigated by increasing money supply during economic downturns. in other words inflating the money and decreasing its value. What the hell no one cares that they can steal 30 % of your money in 10 years and you are none the wiser. Following a gold standard would mean that the amount of money would be determined by the supply of gold, and hence monetary policy could no longer be used to stabilize the economy in times of economic recession. same shit red herring many otherways to deal with it other than stupid Such reason is often employed to partially blame the gold standard for the Great Depression, citing that the Federal Reserve couldn't expand credit enough to offset the deflationary forces at work in the market. Nice after barnake came right out and admitted it was the feds fault. well it was a hell of a lot more than "just" the feds but ok barnake. Opponents of this viewpoint have argued that gold stocks were available to the Federal Reserve for credit expansion in the early 1930s. Fed operatives simply failed to utilize them. In this case, a causal factor of the Great Depression was not the gold standard but rather a politically usurped monetary system. * Monetary policy would essentially be determined by the rate of gold production. Fluctuations in the amount of gold that is mined could cause inflation if there is an increase, or deflation if there is a decrease. Some hold the view that this contributed to the severity and length of the Great Depression. Oh yeh we would be totally at the mercy of how fast the miners can bring it out of the ground. Pretending there would be no regulation. this shit is a farce. laughably stoopid. * Some have contended that the gold standard may be susceptible to speculative attacks when a government's financial position appears weak. For example, some believe the United States was forced to raise its interest rates in the middle of the Great Depression to defend the credibility of its currency. Maybe susceptable to alien attack too! Simply remove it as a commodity. * If a country wanted to devalue its currency it would generally produce sharper changes than the smooth declines seen in fiat currencies, depending on the method of devaluation. Thats all due to management and has nothing to do with the basis. This probably wont make much of a difference to Real, who thinks he knows it all. People for htose of you who do not know. A fed res note is a debt instrument. It is a debt note. So when you get paid after your days work you get 100 IOUS. Now you want to cime up to me to pay me some money for some thing and you are going to pay me with a fucking IOU. you cannot pay a debt with IOUs. You can ONLY pay a debt with hard assets. quid pro quo. Thats law like it or not. So you buy your house and you think its paid but its not. Any way to go much deeper than this at this time is way more than I really care to do right now. Literaly everything they mentioned is the next best thing to bullshit. They feed you thinkcrap so you keep on with the monetary system as it is so they can rape you in interest the hypothecation and inflation. When the treasury issued gold/silver coin represented by a cert into the public it "paid" it in as a hard cash asset with no interest attached and it had the same value melted down as it did in a coin, NOW when they issued a frn or your credit card et al into the public its loaned in as debt that has an interest payment against a bond that we must pay as a damn high priced use fee on every transaction. Apparently I know a hell of a lot more than the character that wrote what appears to be some wiki crap.
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