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saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.
You're behind on your information. They've already been doing this without permission for at least a year now. They were calling these "test bonds" or something like that... they were dealing them out secretly to banks, and to the federal government. It's awefully dumb...bedub1 wrote: Isn't that like borrowing money from yourself?
Or like giving the government money.bedub1 wrote:paying your taxes is like giving an alcoholic a beer
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.
Nuh uh, basing something with pretend value off of something else with pretend value is the safe solution.MeDeFe wrote:Backing a currency by a limited resource like gold isn't exactly an ideal solution eaither.
And what happens when there isn't enough gold to cover for the money that's being circulated?Frigidus wrote:Nuh uh, basing something with pretend value off of something else with pretend value is the safe solution.MeDeFe wrote:Backing a currency by a limited resource like gold isn't exactly an ideal solution eaither.
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.
Oh yes, absolutly. I was just talking about this whole "secret bond" issue. The part tied in with the economic crisis.b.k. barunt wrote:At least a year? Guess again. It all started way back when they had all the idiots turn in their gold - their patriotic duty of course. Then in the 60s our currency was no longer backed up by silver either. The Federal Reserve (which is neither federal nor a reserve) can print more money whenever it wants to, which is why inflation keeps going up at alarming rates.
It's not the ones running the government that are idiots, it's the ones who keep perpetrating the myth by voting and paying their taxes like good little droids.
Honibaz
Umm, i think that was the point of having gold as a basis - so they wouldn't print more money than what was backing it up. Too simple?MeDeFe wrote:And what happens when there isn't enough gold to cover for the money that's being circulated?Frigidus wrote:Nuh uh, basing something with pretend value off of something else with pretend value is the safe solution.MeDeFe wrote:Backing a currency by a limited resource like gold isn't exactly an ideal solution eaither.
The problem with gold-backed currency is that you're backing an infinte thing with someting finite.b.k. barunt wrote:Umm, i think that was the point of having gold as a basis - so they wouldn't print more money than what was backing it up. Too simple?MeDeFe wrote:And what happens when there isn't enough gold to cover for the money that's being circulated?Frigidus wrote:Nuh uh, basing something with pretend value off of something else with pretend value is the safe solution.MeDeFe wrote:Backing a currency by a limited resource like gold isn't exactly an ideal solution eaither.
Honibaz
Infinite currency is not the problem, it's the infinite productions of us. The number of goods increases exponentially. Either you would regress into very small fractions of money (like 1/100 of a cent) or you can go the other way and back money with the idea that pieces of paper are worth anything.GabonX wrote:Yes, because infinite currency is exactly what we want![]()
Actually, every single economist is with me on this one since it's one of the first things you learn in economics.As sad as it is, it seems like the chief economists are with you on that one
Well a standard of just gold may not be the answer but wealth should be backed up with more than just perception. Gold, silver, copper, labor, industry, all of these things should be used to back up the value of any given currency.Snorri1234 wrote:Infinite currency is not the problem, it's the infinite productions of us. The number of goods increases exponentially. Either you would regress into very small fractions of money (like 1/100 of a cent) or you can go the other way and back money with the idea that pieces of paper are worth anything.GabonX wrote:Yes, because infinite currency is exactly what we want![]()
Money is not and never has been anything with any value, we give them value to make trade easier. Backing it up with a gold-standard is useless since you're assigning worth to something with no worth but a finite amount. Every single person (except for Ron Paul) knows a gold standard is a terrible idea since it does not work.
And they've done a stunning jobSnorri1234 wrote:Actually, every single economist is with me on this one since it's one of the first things you learn in economics.GabonX wrote:As sad as it is, it seems like the chief economists are with you on that one
GabonX wrote:Luckily the United States has the most powerful military in the world and bullets are the most universally accepted form of currency.
That's DR. Ron Paul to you buddy.Snorri1234 wrote: Every single person (except for Ron Paul) knows a gold standard is a terrible idea since it does not work.
I'm not an economist, so i can't respond to your abstract reasoning, but maybe that's the problem. You guys (and the economists have complicated a simple issue. You have 2 billion in gold - print 2 billion worth of currency. As long as you do you have a finite amount - i don't know what this infinite shit is, but it's unacceptable as it results in ever escalating inflation.Snorri1234 wrote:Infinite currency is not the problem, it's the infinite productions of us. The number of goods increases exponentially. Either you would regress into very small fractions of money (like 1/100 of a cent) or you can go the other way and back money with the idea that pieces of paper are worth anything.GabonX wrote:Yes, because infinite currency is exactly what we want![]()
Money is not and never has been anything with any value, we give them value to make trade easier. Backing it up with a gold-standard is useless since you're assigning worth to something with no worth but a finite amount. Every single person (except for Ron Paul) knows a gold standard is a terrible idea since it does not work.
Actually, every single economist is with me on this one since it's one of the first things you learn in economics.As sad as it is, it seems like the chief economists are with you on that one
Guys...the so called 'Gold standard' was left behind years ago. As for backing a finite amount of moolah with a stack of bars in Fort Knox, The Fed reserve or anywhere else, it was never going to work once global asset values started to rise inexorably during the 20th Century.b.k. barunt wrote:I'm not an economist, so i can't respond to your abstract reasoning, but maybe that's the problem. You guys (and the economists have complicated a simple issue. You have 2 billion in gold - print 2 billion worth of currency. As long as you do you have a finite amount - i don't know what this infinite shit is, but it's unacceptable as it results in ever escalating inflation.Snorri1234 wrote:Infinite currency is not the problem, it's the infinite productions of us. The number of goods increases exponentially. Either you would regress into very small fractions of money (like 1/100 of a cent) or you can go the other way and back money with the idea that pieces of paper are worth anything.GabonX wrote:Yes, because infinite currency is exactly what we want![]()
Money is not and never has been anything with any value, we give them value to make trade easier. Backing it up with a gold-standard is useless since you're assigning worth to something with no worth but a finite amount. Every single person (except for Ron Paul) knows a gold standard is a terrible idea since it does not work.
Actually, every single economist is with me on this one since it's one of the first things you learn in economics.As sad as it is, it seems like the chief economists are with you on that one
Keep the currency to match the gold backing it up and you have a finite amount - why won't that work? I don't spend more than i have so it works for me. And no, i don't use credit cards.
Honibaz
You are correct. Govts. Throughout the capitalist system have tried to stem tides only to find to their horror that they are pretty meaningless in the face of the natural laws of the market. We experienced it last during the 1990s when the Conservative (in power) Govt upped interest rates momentarily to a staggering 15% in defence of the Pound. naturally this puny defence buckled within hours as the markets made mincemeat of the whole idea and the pound crashed out of the, then, EMU (European Monetary Union)...history has shown that this huge correction in the value proved to be highly beneficial....further evidence if it was needed of the crass stupidity of most politicians who got it completely arse about face in their predictions.dewey316 wrote:No matter what the government does, this is going to happen, we can't keep riding the wave of borrowing and borrowing, and fixing prices of assets at an artificialy high price. Eventualy the whole system blanaces itself, and we are seeing the scale tilt the other direction now, to rebalance asset values to match back up with income and inflation.
The Governments have to borrow, simple as that. If they did not do so and let market forces resolve the issue completely, the natural law of nature would take place with the weakest literally not surviving the implosion. However, you are correct to concern yourself. Here are some interesting facts:dewey316 wrote:What scares me the most now, is that governments are doing what the private sector did, and got us here. They are borrowing money they can't pay back, they are trying to manipulate asset values, and keep the status que of the bubble going. I fear that we saw happen to millions of family's in the US, is going to catch back up to the governments that are involved in both the lending and borrowing of the bogus assets. If (or when) that happens, things will get bad, very fast.
I put two of the things you mentioned in bold, that's (at least part of) what currencies got based on after the gold standard was abandoned. The system adopted after WW2 was based on the assumption that the USA could stay ahead economically indefinitely, the US dollar would be backed by gold and most other currencies were set at a fixed rate to the dollar. When other economies grew strong in relation to the USA, people started to wonder why they had to pay 3 times as much for an American hamburger (just as an example) as for one purchased in their own country.GabonX wrote:Well a standard of just gold may not be the answer but wealth should be backed up with more than just perception. Gold, silver, copper, labor, industry, all of these things should be used to back up the value of any given currency.Snorri1234 wrote:Infinite currency is not the problem, it's the infinite productions of us. The number of goods increases exponentially. Either you would regress into very small fractions of money (like 1/100 of a cent) or you can go the other way and back money with the idea that pieces of paper are worth anything.GabonX wrote:Yes, because infinite currency is exactly what we want![]()
Money is not and never has been anything with any value, we give them value to make trade easier. Backing it up with a gold-standard is useless since you're assigning worth to something with no worth but a finite amount. Every single person (except for Ron Paul) knows a gold standard is a terrible idea since it does not work.
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.
Why does the Government have to borrow? I know that there is presidence for not wanting a government to have a surplus budget, but there is no reason that our debt is approching the level of our GDP (speaking for those of us in the States). This is an asinine level of debt. In the last 50 years, the US went from the largest creditor nation (you would expect this, from an economic super-power), to being the largest debtor nation. Plain and simple we went on a speculative spending spree (speculating that our economy would continue to grow at a rate that we could somehow manage the debt), the magnatude the world has not seen before. The simple truth is, the debt our government racked up in the last 50 years (dems, and pubs combined) will take generations worth of taxation to pay back. I do not see how the idea of spending more money, can do anything for the situation. The only options either a)hyper-inflate the dallor to make the debt worthless to the creditors, which will also trash our ability to do business anywhere in the world, and plunge us into a depression ala Zimbabwe. or b) we cut back governement spending, we come up with a balance budget, and start actualy paying back some of our debt, and hope that the next generation doesn't make our same mistakes.Fruitcake wrote:The Governments have to borrow, simple as that. If they did not do so and let market forces resolve the issue completely, the natural law of nature would take place with the weakest literally not surviving the implosion. However, you are correct to concern yourself. Here are some interesting facts:dewey316 wrote:What scares me the most now, is that governments are doing what the private sector did, and got us here. They are borrowing money they can't pay back, they are trying to manipulate asset values, and keep the status que of the bubble going. I fear that we saw happen to millions of family's in the US, is going to catch back up to the governments that are involved in both the lending and borrowing of the bogus assets. If (or when) that happens, things will get bad, very fast.