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The Art Of Clipping Coinage |
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The Art of Clipping Coinage
by Sol Palha
with Alan Lunt, John Tyler & Art Soukup
Tactical Investor
February 18, 2004
Sure
of their qualities and demanding praise, more go to ruined fortunes than are
raised.
Alexander Pope 1688-1744, British Poet, Critic,
Translator
In
the good old days when payment for goods were made in Gold, people still tried
to find ways to cheat the system. Merchants and other crooks would look to shave
some of the gold of the coins or replace some of the content with lead etc.
It
seems the need to rob and cheat each other is wired into us and as time passes
by, we just seem to perfect this art. Most individuals are not really looking to
help their fellow brothers; rather they would be only too happy to bury them as
soon as possible.
The
feds have taken this simple principle, turbocharged and modernized it They
simply starting backing the US dollar with less and less gold, until they found
out that the world was dumb enough to believe that Gold was useless. They then
removed the Gold standard completely and the world did nothing. Technically one
could argue that the US dollar is still backed by Gold. The problem is finding
out how much Gold is really stored in Fort Knox, for all we know more Gold than
stated has been sold of and/or replaced with lead bricks. Even if all the Gold
were to be there, the price of Gold would have to go up several thousand dollars
to truly back the US dollar.
The
Feds have just found a clever way of clipping gold coins. Instead of slowly
stealing a little bit at a time, they just went for the jugular and took it all.
The worst part is the masses sit in frozen stupor and actually clap their hands
and praise these arrogant swine’s. If
you think the world is going to wake up anytime soon, you are in for a rude
awakening. Wait for my follow up essay that will deal with two-topics investor
sentiment and the average Joe’s out look on Gold. (I spent about one month on
the road, mostly in Florida collecting data on investor sentiment). The average
person has no idea of what Gold truly represents and so it is going to be a long
slow protracted battle.
One
thing most people forget and on occasion it slips my mind to, is that the Feds
are a group of very evil, very smart and ruthless individuals. So do not think
they will just bow down and drop dead. They have had the luxury of studying many
worthless paper currency blunders that were committed in the past and have now
perfected the Art of Defrauding and Robbing a Nation and its people of all their
assets. In another follow up article I will also speak of a tool that the Feds
have come out with that could be Gold’s
nemesis.
In
the end the only group of people that will win any battle are non-biased
investors and that means you should not be a bear, a bull or bug for that matter
of fact. You should simply be a cold calculating investor. Forget about all this
“let's stand together BS and fight to
the end principle.” The only thing left standing will be the marker on
your grave. In the market you do not stand together, because ”it’s the winner take all principle” that prevails. Those that
try to stand together will simply find themselves in the sights of a plethora of
machine guns. A market means that at
the end of the day for every dollar won, someone has to lose a dollar. So no
matter what camp you think you are in, no amount of happy clapping will get you
into the promised land, unless you open your eyes and your mind and learn to
trade in an unbiased way. There are a few good times to win, but there is always
a good time to lose and the market is riddled with the bodies of losers who
thought they would end up winners.
Victory
has a hundred fathers but defeat is an orphan.
Galeazzo Ciano
Clipped Coinage
by
Alan Lunt
Clipping
coinage, or debasing a currency is the art of the modern age. Little do the
perpetrators realise that time after time throughout history each attempt has
ended in failure. Before milling was placed around the edge of gold coins people
used to shave the coins, reducing the gold content of each coin making them less
desirable to hold. Clipped coins were recognised as bad money and they were
discounted. In Germany the cunning money makers added lead to the gold,
ostensibly to increase the money supply, that failed when the result of that
clipping of the gold content lead to hyperinflation. In Spain when the new gold
arrived from the new world the influx of money reduced the value of gilder. In
fact each time people have "made" money they have killed it's value.
Enter
the age of the Central Banker. These men and woman have one task to perform and
that is to increase the monetary base. By increasing that base they encourage
debasing of the currency thereby causing inflation. Governments are not immune
from encouraging their bankers to print money. The added money can be spent by
Government on "much needed social programs". Finance ministers surely
know that they are stealing the savings of their constituents by inflation
reducing the value of money. It is a tax, there can be no other conclusion. An
insidious eating of the value of money gnaws at the core of a sound economy. It
creates an "incentive trap". The incentive is to spend now and not
save a bean, as the bean looses value, or as most people see it prices rise. It
drives people to borrow money as they fear prices will get away on them if they
hold off from purchasing: be it stocks, property or consumables.
All
this "pushing to purchase" has created a credit society. The most
important thing a person can have is a credit record. How ludicrous. I know of
people who have millions, they never borrowed anything, yet they are deemed to
be a credit risk because they have no credit record.
???????
A
new age is dawning, it is a slow bloomer, but debt will become a dirty word as
the Kondratiev Winter starts to bite. As people become unable to pay off the
debts at ever increasing interest rates the money lenders will start to fail.
The initial indicators will be misread, but bad policy by lending institutions
will start to be recognised. As an example the West Pac Banking Corporation was
flush with liquidity, their advertising ploy was to paper the walls of the banks
with posters proclaiming "How Landlords Get Wealthy". The subtle
message was that if you were renting you should be buying and not contributing
to your Landlords wealth. The message also suggests that prices never fall and
interest rates never rise. How stupid is that? Is it greed that drives people to
leverage themselves to the hilt, or is it fear? Fear of being left behind or
greed for the potential gains. Either way it is the unacknowledged knowledge
that inflation will eat away at the core of their finances if they do nothing.
We have been conditioned from when all vestiges of a monetary standard were
wiped internationally in the early 1970's. The chronic inflation that followed
is still remembered by the baby boomers, the values of saving were whipped from
all thought processes and not passed down to the next generation. Oh the web
that has been weaved.
What
happens when the word "value" is not tied to the word
"debt?" Value is something that is intrinsic and lasting, not
something to be debased at the whim of socialistic morons. The message is clear,
we need to be re-educated to the true meaning of the word inflation. Rising
prices is a result, not the cause. The cause is clipping of the currency,
printing money. Look no further than your elected leaders. According to David
Bond, and if history is any guide,
the life-span of a fiat currency since Roman times, from naissance to collapse
is about 30 years. New Zealand coinage came into decimal currency on 10th of
July 1967. Copper/Nickel. Next to valueless. Units of exchange that have no
base. Clipped currency.
As
the renowned economist Ludwig von Mises warned us decades ago: "There is no
means of avoiding the final collapse of a boom brought about by credit
expansion. The alternative is only whether the crisis should come sooner as the
result of a voluntary abandonment of further credit expansion, or later as a
final and total catastrophe of the currency system involved." [Human
Action, Regnery, 1966, p. 572.]
The entire world economy rests on the consumer;
if he ever stops spending money he doesn't have on things he doesn't need -
we're done for.
The Mogambo Guru
Professor Richard Dougherty
The time to worry has past;
the time to plan is NOW.
© 2004 Alan Lunt
Guest
Contributor at the Tactical Investor
Email
The Holey Dollar
by John Tyler
No
folks, I did mean “Holey” rather than “Holy”, although the dollar is
given God-like status by many.
The
dollar I refer to is a more historical example of clippage. The new governor of
the Colony of New South Wales, Lachlan Macquarie, in the year 1809 inherited a
difficult money problem (has there ever been a simple money problem except not
having enough?). There was just not enough money around. As soon as a silver
dollar surfaced, it was traded for the essentials of survival in a new land, and
exported away by the trader for a huge profit. As a result, there was no coinage
in the colony, and the troops had to be paid in rum!
Like
the present day USA, the colony of New South Wales , needed imports to survive.
Unlike the USA however, the defiling quality of the monetary printing press was
yet to be discovered, so Macquarie hatched a cunning plan.
Macquarie
imported 40,00 silver Spanish Dollars, and had a convicted forger punch out the
center of the dollar to create a lower denomination coin, the “Dump”. This
was over stamped with the colonial crown, and the internal rim of the now
“Holey Dollar” had “New South Wales “ stamped.
So
we see the use of a forger make 1 + 1=3, and at the same time devalue the
currency to anyone who had previously been exporting
the silver currency for profit. The guarantee of government also became
the alchemical philosopher’s stone, creating value from more common elements.
This friends, was done by the USA when the dollar/gold link was severed.
The
great irony is that to collectors, a Holey Dollar is now worth $100,000 and a
dump $40,000.Who knows what gold will be worth after it has been “clipped”
from the dollar?
An example of a “Holey Dollar”.
Only 350 survived as they were recalled to the smelter’s pot.
©
2004 John Tyler
CEO www.infognome.com
Consultant to www.trader007.com
Paper
money is just a hobby!!
by Art Soukup
What a strange sounding phrase
the above is.
What an odd notion that paper
money is just a hobby.
At any rate the phrase is
really really important for your economic future, so take the time to learn.
Still, I wonder if there is
any truth to the title phrase. Let's see if we can find out by first getting the
definitions of words and terms. After that, we will then analyze what we have
found. We will start with the definition of the word "hobby".
At this location: http://www.brainydictionary.com/words/ho/hobby173785.html
you will find this definition: Hobby
(n.) A small, strong-winged
European falcon (Falco subbuteo), formerly trained for hawking.
(n.) Alt. of Hobbyhorse A strong winged European falcon...perhaps the
Eurodollar. It seems to be somehow related to a hobbyhorse, so at this location:
http://www.brainydictionary.com/words/ho/hobbyhorse173786.html
you will find this definition: Hobbyhorse
(n.) A strong, active horse,
of a middle size, said to have been originally from Ireland; an ambling nag.
(n.) A stick, often with the head or figure of a horse, on which boys make
believe to ride.
(n.) A subject or plan upon which one is constantly setting off; a favorite and
ever-recurring theme of discourse, thought, or effort; that which occupies one's
attention unduly, or to the weariness of others; a ruling passion.
Hmmmm, A ruling passion, that
one focuses undue attention upon. Hmmmm again, A favourite and ever-recurring
theme of discourse. The editorials at various websites are always about the
different kinds of paper money and their relation to precious metals; therefore,
all the editorials are different kinds of hobbyhorses.
Makes sense.
We now need the definition of
"paper money", so at this location: http://www.hyperdictionary.com/dictionary/paper+money
you will find this definition: PAPER MONEY Pronunciation: 'peypur 'munee
Definition: [n] currency issued by a government or central bank and consisting
of printed paper that can circulate as a substitute for specie.
Synonyms: folding money, paper currency.
See Also: bank bill, bank note, banker's bill, banknote, bill, currency, Federal
Reserve note, fiat money, fractional currency, government note, greenback, note.
Hmmm, paper money is a
"substitute for specie".
And specie defined: http://www.hyperdictionary.com/dictionary/specie
is WordNet Dictionary
Definition: [n] coins
collectively
Synonyms: coinage, metal money, mintage
See Also: coin, currency
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
Definition: \Spe"ci*e\, abl. of L. species sort, kind. Used
in the phrase in specie, that is, in sort, in kind, in (its own) form. [The
king] expects a return in specie from them'' [i.e, kindness for kindness].
--Dryden. {In specie} (Law), in precise or definite form; specifically;
according to the exact terms; of the very thing.
\Spe"cie\, n. [Formed as
a singular from species, in sense 5.] Coin; hard money.
So coin hard money is specie;
and paper money is printed paper that can circulate as a substitute for specie.
We now have the words and phrases defined for the necessary insight, but where
is the PROOF!!
For your reading misery, the
following link points to all 50 titles of the us code. http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/
I said misery, because it took
me about 2 months just to read to shortest title of all, Title 13 Census. I had
to read many other titles (a few years) , until I found the proof that
"paper money is just a hobby".
So for your reading pleasure,
here are the links. Read them in sequence and look for the phrase "paper
money".
http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/15/
<-- top link to commerce and trade.
Just a quick look. No need to read.
http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/15/ch48.html
<-- Hobby Protection.
http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/15/2101.html
<-- Marking requirements.
http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/15/2102.html
<-- Private Enforcement.
All of the interesting stuff
in the US code always seems to be stuffed away under definitions or misc.
So at this location: http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/15/2106.html
<-- Definitions. you find in section THREE: (3)
The term ''original numismatic
item'' means anything which has been a part of a coinage or issue which has been
used in exchange or has been used to commemorate a person or event. Such term
includes coins, tokens, paper money, and commemorative medals. Hmmm, "used
to commemorate a person "... so that's why there is a picture of a person
on the paper; George Washington, Alex Hamilton, the Queen of England, and so on.
So you now have PROOF that
"PAPER MONEY is just a hobby", Requiring some kind of protection
because it is a ORIGINAL NUMISMATIC ITEM that is (Falco subbuteo), formerly
trained for hawking. Gee, by now you should be getting a warm fuzzy feeling
KNOWING that your entire wealth is based upon someone else's HOBBY; which by the
way, occupies one's attention unduly. So much for the concept of
"Valuations".
One nice thing about gold and
silver, no hobbyhorse can print the stuff.
©
2004 Art
Soukup
"In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is king."
Email