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"And when he opened the third seal, I heard
the third living creature saying, Come. And I saw, and behold, a black
horse; and he that sat thereon had a balance in his hand.
And I heard as it were a voice in the midst of the four living creatures
saying, a measure of wheat for a shilling, and
three measures of barley for a shilling; and the
oil and the wine hurt thou not," [Revelation 6:5-6].
Introduction
The
following is a rejoinder to the article that Alan Greenspan wrote on the
subject of whether the United States could return to a gold standard.
His article appeared in the Wall St. Journal on September 1, 1981
[Can
the US Return to a Gold Standard? by Alan Greenspan]
With
the renewed interest in gold by the investment community at large, and
this writer’s personal belief that gold and silver are destined to
play a crucial role in the world’s future, gold and silver as Honest
Money seems to be an issue whose time has come.
A
couple of caveats are in order. Greenspan offered this proposal during
the Reagan administration. A committee was formed to investigate the
feasibility of such a program. The results have never been made public.
Other studies on gold have been done under other administrations as
well, one during Bush 1’s term in office.
As
is obviously apparent, no one seems to take helpful criticism or advice
very well when they are the top dog. Hopefully, the fall to the opposite
position will not be necessary before alternative ways are found out of
today’s monetary, financial, and fiscal mismanagement.
Until
ways and means of Honest Money of gold and silver are finely given their
due chance to shine in the sun.
Sound
decisions require a sound mind grounded in a balanced set of ideals to
flourish to their full potential. It is time for We The People to take a
more direct interest in our own well being, and choose representatives
and leaders that are so grounded with their sight keenly cast upon the
goals ahead.
To
help bring about such a state, we ourselves need to be informed on just
what is in our own best interest, and what is not. If we as citizens do
not know what it is that We The People – the country, needs and wants,
then how can we know if our leaders are making the correct decisions and
choices?
They
are supposed to represent us. We as good and active citizens need to let
them know what it is we want – in what direction we want our country,
and lives therein – to take. Then as our leaders, they can reflect our
goals and aspirations with their actions, truly representing the
people’s will, as our forefathers intended.
One
of the biggest stumbling blocks of both the government and We The People
is that we need to have a basic goal and purpose that the country, and
our lives therein, are seeking to realize and become.
It
is not enough to merely perpetuate existence – we have known how to do
that for a long time, if allowed to freely obtain such. For man to
advance further we need to progress by realizing our raison d’etre for
being, and to then structure our government and lives to facilitate the
actualization of such purpose and being. To take any other course would
be selling out our destiny short, and We The People, and our children
with it.
With
these caveats in mind, let’s take a look at what Sir Alan has to offer
in regards to a gold standard. Do keep in mind that this dude was born
with a silvery tongue, and he has perfected his natural talent quite
well, being able to joust with the best of them, most provide no match,
and fall by the way, as the titled Sir - so clearly distinguishes.
The Tenor
We
will now offer some quotes from Mr. Greenspan’s article. Note if you
will the tenor of the words and message, especially the one between the
lines, as the article proceeds. Carefully observing the use of the
English language so employed is like watching a championship ping-pong
game – that has been fined tuned over the years to the degree of an
art form of sorts.
“The
growing disillusionment with politically controlled monetary policies
has produced an increasing number of advocates for a return to the gold
standard - including at times president Reagan.
In
years past the desire to return to a monetary system based on gold was
perceived as nostalgia for an era when times were simpler, problems less
complex and, the world not threatened with nuclear annihilation.
But
after a decade of destabilizing inflation and economic stagnation, the
restoration of a gold standard has become an issue that is clearly
rising on the economic policy agenda. A commission to study the issue,
with strong support from President Reagan, is in place.” [Can
the US Return to a Gold Standard? by Alan Greenspan]
Not
bad so far, the pitch has been made, the game now underway. We are in
the bottom of the first. Further along we read:
“The
increasingly numerous proponents of a gold standard persuasively argue
that large budget deficits and large federal borrowing requirements
would be difficult to finance under such a standard. Heavy claims
against paper dollars, for the Treasury can legally borrow as many
dollars as Congress authorizes.
But
with unlimited dollar conversion into gold,
the ability to issue dollar claims would be severely limited. Obviously
if you cannot finance federal deficits, you cannot create them. Either
taxes would then have to be raised or expenditures lowered. The
restrictions of gold convertibility would therefore profoundly alter the
politics of fiscal policy that have prevailed for half a century.” [Can
the US Return to a Gold Standard? by Alan Greenspan]
All
in all Mr. Greenspan appears to be looking good. He lays out the
supposed reasoning for a gold standard – “the restrictions of
gold convertibility” that allude to a sense of discipline in
creating federal deficits. Note the first sentence of the second
paragraph, which reads: “But with unlimited dollar conversion into
gold, the ability to issue dollar claims would be severely limited.” It
will be revisited shortly. Next, we find what Sir Alan refers to as
disturbing alternatives:
“Yet
even those of us who are attracted to the prospect of gold
convertibility are confronted with a seemingly impossible obstacle: the
latest claims to gold represented by the huge world overhang of fiat
currency, mainly dollars.
The
immediate problem of restoring a gold standard is fixing a gold price
that is consistent with market forces. Obviously if the offering price
by the Treasury is too low, or subsequently proves to be too low, heavy
demand at the offering price could quickly deplete the total US
government stock of gold, as well as any gold borrowed to thwart the
assault. At that point, with no additional gold available, the US would
be off the gold standard and likely to remain off for decades.”
“Alternatively
if the bid price is initially set too high or subsequently becomes too
high the Treasury would be inundated with gold offerings. The payments
for the gold drawn on the Treasury's account at the Federal Reserve
would add substantially to commercial bank reserves and probably act, at
least temporarily, to expand the money supply with all the inflationary
implications thereof.” [Can
the US Return to a Gold Standard? by Alan Greenspan]
Hmm,
the infamous change up pitch, a.k.a. a change of tenor. Just when
everything was moving along splendidly, we now get a bit of pessimism of
things that might occur, seemingly impossible obstacles even for the
master magus.
The Problem
So
exactly what is the problem? The chairman, or the undertaker as Ayn Rand
referred to him, offers the following possible explanation:
“Monetary
offsets to neutralize or "earmark" gold are, of course,
possible in the short run. But as the West German monetary authorities
soon learned from their past endeavors to support the dollar, there are
limits to monetary countermeasures.
The
only seeming solution is for the US to create a fiscal and monetary
environment which in effect makes the dollar as good as gold, i.e.
stabilizes the general price level and by inference the dollar price of
bullion gold itself. Then a modest reserve of bullion coin could reduce
the remaining narrow gold price fluctuations effectively to zero,
allowing any changes in gold supply and demand to be absorbed in
fluctuations in the Treasury's inventory.” [Can
the US Return to a Gold Standard? by Alan Greenspan]
Bummer
of bummers – a definite change of tenor. We have gone from saving the
world with a gold standard to “the only seeming solution” is
to “stabilize
the general price level and by inference the dollar price of bullion
gold itself.”
Well,
'tis time to get serious, no more mere pretty quotes, now we need to dig
deep to find out exactly what is being said, what is meant, and if any
of it is correct or not – or if it is all the mere clanging of cymbals
in the wind.
Retracing Our Steps
Let’s
begin the hunt by working our way back from whence “the problem”
of returning to a gold standard first reared its ugly head; and to see
and understand the significance thereof. Lo and behold, we only have to
go back to the preceding three paragraphs by Mr. Greenspan:
“Yet
even those of us who are attracted to the prospect of gold
convertibility are confronted with a seemingly impossible obstacle: the
latest claims to gold represented by the huge world overhang of fiat
currency, mainly dollars.
The
immediate problem of restoring a gold standard is fixing a gold price
that is consistent with market forces. Obviously if the offering price
by the Treasury is too low, or subsequently proves to be too low, heavy
demand at the offering price could quickly deplete the total US
government stock of gold, as well as any gold borrowed to thwart the
assault. At that point, with no additional gold available, the US would
be off the gold standard and likely to remain off for decades.”
“Alternatively
if the bid price is initially set too high or subsequently becomes too
high the Treasury would be inundated with gold offerings. The payments
for the gold drawn on the Treasury's account at the Federal Reserve
would add substantially to commercial bank reserves and probably act, at
least temporarily, to expand the money supply with all the inflationary
implications thereof.” [Can
the US Return to a Gold Standard? by Alan Greenspan]
What Did He Say?
The
Master Magus admitted that he was one of “those of us” who
are “attracted to gold convertibility” that are faced with an
almost impossible task. The impossible task is then said to consist of
“the huge world overhang of fiat currency, mainly dollars”
that in a gold standard would all represent “the latest claims to
gold.” Yes, this most undoubtedly would be a tough nut to crack.
But does it have to be cracked? Let’s find out.
Remember
awhile back, we quoted Mr. Greenspan, and said we would return to the
issue involved in the quote? Well, the time has arrived. Let’s return
to the scene of the crime:
“But
with unlimited dollar conversion into gold, the ability to issue
dollar claims would be severely limited.” [Can
the US Return to a Gold Standard? by Alan Greenspan]
Now,
Sir Alan, correct me if I’m wrong here, but doesn’t saying “with
unlimited dollar conversion into gold” pretty much equate with “the
huge world overhang of fiat currency, mainly dollars” that in a
gold standard would all represent “the latest claims to gold.”
Unless
the present “huge world overhang of fiat dollars” is as great
or greater than “unlimited dollar conversion into gold” isn’t
the Chairman contradicting himself by saying that we face an impossible
task of converting the existing supply of dollars into gold?
Well,
perhaps the answer is both yes, on the one hand, and no on the other –
but yes altogether. Here’s why.
From
the initial point we began to trace our steps back from, Mr. Greenspan
also said, “the immediate problem of restoring a gold standard is
fixing a gold price that is consistent with market forces.” He
then gives examples of setting the price too high or too low; and the
problems each scenario could entail.
There
really is no need to go into the problems he alludes to by fixing
the price too high or too low. The potential problems are inherent in
any scheme to fix the price of gold – period.
One
cannot set or fix the price of gold that “is
consistent with market force” unless one is the market, which I
don’t think Chairman Greenspan, or the Federal Reserve – qualify as
such.
Perhaps
in their own minds they may believe they are as omnipotent and
omniscient as the market, but such misguided pride would be nothing more
than a case of illusion and delusion – as “pride
goeth before a fall.”
And
more importantly, fixing the price of anything is the antithesis of free
markets. In a free market price does not get fixed or rigged, the
market determines the market price by the laws of supply and demand,
subjective and objective valuation, and other free market
principles.
Fixing The Price
The
setting or fixing of the price of gold is the stuff of illusion and
delusion, nothing more, and arguably something less. As has been shown
in Honest
Money; GOLD:
Sovereign of Sovereigns
; and in Silver
IS Money – the dollar of the Constitution is a
specific weight of silver, commonly known as the Silver Dollar or 371.25
grains of silver.
Legal
tender decrees by the government are not the workings of free markets.
The fixing of the exchange rate between gold and silver, as was done in
the Original Coinage Act of 1792 was a mistake, whether it was intended
or not.
The
legal tender value between gold and silver was set at a fixed
rate. Yet, at the same time the market price of gold and silver
was not fixed but moved back and forth daily.
Such
a monetary policy is an accident waiting for a time and place to happen.
It is completely opposed to the honest principles of free trade and free
markets.
Go
into the market place and let it tell you what the price
or exchange rate is – not some government decree or fixing.
But
Mr. Greenspan believes that: “the immediate problem of restoring a
gold standard is fixing a gold price that is consistent with market
forces.” How wrong he is – and he knows it.
The
current money of the 18th century was originally a weight of
silver – the silver dollar. Silver and gold were not priced in
dollars; dollars were defined by a specific weight or standard of
silver.
The
circulating unit of money should be both the unit of account, and the
current medium of exchange of the existing monetary system. This
specific issue of the money-unit-of-account and medium-of-exchange, will
be dealt with in much more detail in a soon to be released paper.
Suffice
it to say that Honest Money should only be defined by a specific weight
of silver and gold coin. The precious metals are best left to a floating
exchange rate between the two, to be determined by the market.
The
coins should only be denominated by their weight: as in an ounce of
gold, or a pound of silver, not by any other names or measures – by
weight and weight only. Nothing more, and nothing less: Honest Money.
We
do not daily change the definition of a foot – it is, and remains –
12 inches. We do not daily change the definition of a ton – it is, and
remains – 2000 lbs. Would you buy gas for your car or home by the
gallon if the amount of ounces in the gallon changed daily? Would you
give your child medicine if the numbers of teaspoons in a tablespoon
changed daily?
Then
why do we accept the fact that the measure of value, the purchasing
power, the very definition of our money, is allowed to change daily? Is
this not foolishness? But who is perpetrating such foolishness, and on
whom? What is the intended purpose? Cui Bono?
Greenspan Revisited
If
we now go back to Sir Alan’s previous statement that “the
immediate problem of restoring a gold standard is fixing a gold price
that is consistent with market forces”, we see that the quote not
only goes against free market principles, but it also leaves a minefield
in its wake; and the destructive aftermath caused by such foolish
babble.
Perhaps
the gold standard of foregone days included fixed or rigged markets,
however, it is only within a truly free market that gold and silver can
blossom to their full potential – when left alone, to do their own
thing: the free markets own thing: Honest Money’s own thing.
Whenever
the ratio of monetary values is fixed or set by the government, by legal
decree or tender – free market principles go out the window, the baby
gets tossed out with the bath water.
It
is a questionable and arguable issue as to whether such fixing was by
mistake or design. Once again, the constraints of time and space do not
allow for the exploration of such issues in detail, however, these
issues will be dealt with in depth, as the weeks and months go by – of
that you can rest assured.
The
main point presently being made is that Mr. Greenspan was wrong to think
or say, “The immediate problem of restoring a gold standard is
fixing a gold price that is consistent with market forces.” Perhaps
this is true in the dream world of paper fiat land that the elite
bankers envision and lust for, but such is an anathema to a free society
or market.
If
gold or silver is to be our money, then it is our money. It does not,
and should not, be priced in anything else – it is the value, it is
the price of all other goods – by Honest Weights And Measures alone.
To
put any other additional nametags on money such as dollars, yen, euros,
and renminbi,
only confuses the entire basis of all monetary systems, and hence all
financial systems and economies based upon them as well; especially if
the name also denotes a legal tender or face value different then the
free market price of Honest Weights and Measures alone.
Is
it not enough to call an ounce of gold – an ounce of gold? Is it not
enough to say that the price of a horse is an ounce of gold? The price
of a loaf of bread is a quarter ounce of silver? The price of a house is
so many ounces of gold or silver? Keep it simple: Honest Weights and
Measures. Such will keep them honest as well.
Inflation
I’ll
be damned if I know what Greenspan is talking about when he starts
throwing around terms like inflation; a gold-based monetary system;
price stability; or unlimited dollar conversion into gold. The Greenman
is good at that, using all kinds of terms he never defines, so nobody
really knows exactly what he is talking about or means; and whether any
of it makes sense or cents.
Well,
I’ll let you in on two secrets of the master magus of the temple: he
knows what he is talking about – and what it means. And he knows that
it is WRONG – dead wrong.
He
also speaks like that because that’s what he gets paid to do, to make
it all so unintelligible that nobody questions it or him – except for
Congressman Ron Paul and a few other true patriots. The rest are
sycophantic idol worshippers bowing at the feet of their master.
As I,
and many others before me have written, there are many types of
inflation. Mises has one of the best definitions when he states:
“In
theoretical investigation there is only one meaning that can rationally
be attached to the expression inflation: an increase in the quantity of
money (in the broader sense of the term, so as to include fiduciary
media as well), that is not offset by a corresponding increase in the
need for money (again in the broader sense of the term), so that a fall
in the objective exchange value of money must occur.
Again,
deflation (or restriction, or contraction) signifies a diminution of the
quantity of money (in the broader sense), which is not offset by a
corresponding diminution of the demand for money (in the broader sense),
so that an increase in the objective exchange value of money must occur.
If we so define these concepts, it follows that either inflation or
deflation is constantly going on, for a situation in which the objective
exchange value of money did not alter could hardly ever exist for very
long.” [Ludwig von Mises
– The
Theory of Money and Credit]
But
be it noted: Mises is talking about monetary inflation, which is the
first inflation to rear its ugly head, as the others are born thereof.
There is also price inflation, asset inflation, wage inflation, etc.
Monetary
inflation is a built-in defect of paper fiat debt-money, an inherent
genetic gene of mutation if you will – the seed of its own undoing is
within, an inherent mutated gene of self-destruction.
Many
analysts and writers speak of monetary inflation as in an increase of
the money supply; others speak of price inflation as in the CPI or PPI;
some discuss asset inflation as in the real estate market or the bond
market.
Seldom
is the rider of the pale horse mentioned, all are wary to utter his
name. His name is debasement – the destruction of the purchasing
power or quality of the currency, of Federal Reserve Notes or
dollar bills (note the word bill in the name – as in that which is
owed).
It
is the debasement of the currency by loss of purchasing power that is
the creature born of the beast of paper fiat. By such debasement, a
hidden tax is placed upon our heads, as wealth is siphoned off from us
all by the loss of the value of our money. Debasement is the worst form
of inflation – an abomination that walks the earth by night.
What
would you say if you were taxed 95% of everything you earned? Well,
because the debasement of the currency you have been so taxed – it’s
just that you do not see it, hence you do not realize it. This is the
reason why prices go up – because the value of your money goes down.
Now you know. Vote accordingly.
The
Keynesian mindset has been so entrenched into our schooling and way of
life that seldom are such misguided beliefs ever questioned. And even
when they are, never is the great lie of gold being priced in dollars
understood and explained. Nor is the story of how the debasement of the
currency transfers wealth from We The People to the would- be-rulers of
the universe dare spoken of.
Quantity vs. Quality Theory
The
quantity theory of money portrays an illusion of false beliefs. One such
belief is that having more units of the currency makes one wealthier.
Another
false belief is that to be in the possession of houses, and cars, and
boats, and all are other things, makes us wealthier. Does it really?
Do
we truly own all of the things we have? Or does the banker who holds the
title to all the property really own it all? This makes us
wealthier? To be indebted is wealth?
If
we do not hold the title free and unencumbered, do we truly own the
things, or do we own the debt of the loan that allows us to take
possession of those things?
Are
we not really “leasing” or “renting” that which
appears to be ours, but until the entire mortgage and loans are paid off
in full the banker really owns? By accumulating more and more debt, are
we becoming wealthier, or deeper in debt – deeper in servitude? And
just whom are we serving? Cui Bono?
It
is a lie. It is a delusion. It is not wealth. It is debt. We do not own
the stuff – the bankers own the stuff. The bankers hold title. We hold
the bill, the promise to pay – the obligation to be fulfilled by our
labor, our life’s work; and perhaps even the life’s work of our
children and their children.
And
Greenspan knows this all too well. For whatever the reason he has turned
his back on that which he knows.
He
knows that what many call price inflation is simply the debasement of
the purchasing power or quality of our money to such a degree that no
increase in the quantity makes up for the loss in the quality or value
of our money.
He
knows that debasement is what causes prices to go up, and the value of
our currency to go down.
The
fact that the value of our money is going down is the evil curse that
makes it take more units of our hard earned money to buy the same amount
of goods – thus other goods are said to cost more. To cost more means
it takes more units or quantity of money to purchase the same amount of
goods.
Why,
because the quality or value of the money has been debased. As the
Chairman has written:
“In
the absence of the gold standard, there is no way to protect savings
from confiscation through inflation. There is no safe store of value. If
there were, the government would have to make its holding illegal, as
was done in the case of gold. If everyone decided, for example, to
convert all his bank deposits to silver, copper, or any other good, and
thereafter declined to accept checks as payment for goods, bank deposits
would lose their purchasing power and government-created bank credit
would be worthless as a claim on goods. The financial policy of the
welfare state requires that there be no way for the owners of wealth to
protect themselves.
This
is the shabby secret of the welfare statists' tirades against gold.
Deficit spending is simply a scheme for the confiscation of wealth. Gold
stands in the way of this insidious process. It stands as a protector of
property rights. If one grasps this, one has no difficulty in
understanding the statists' antagonism toward the gold standard.” [Alan
Greenspan, Gold and Economic Freedom (1966)]
Wealth
Although
Greenspan speaks much truth in the above, there are still some delusions
running amuck. He makes the very honest assertion that “Deficit
spending is simply a scheme for the confiscation of wealth.” This
is most honest for a political beast or for the undertaker to admit.
Yet
a few sentences earlier he states that if citizens “declined to
accept checks as payment for goods, bank deposits would lose their
purchasing power and government-created bank credit would be worthless
as a claim on goods” and that
“the welfare state requires that there be no way for the owners of
wealth to protect themselves.”
Yes
– it is the Truth. If confidence in the currency disappears, bank
deposits would lose all of their purchasing power, becoming worth less
and less, until worthless as claims on goods. It is the creature named
hyperinflation – of runaway inflation.
But
what of the statement that there would be no way for owners of wealth to
protect themselves. Protect them from what – thieves and vandals,
creatures of the night?
Yes,
in an odd sort of way. It is the creature of currency debasement that
scours the earth searching for its next meal of wealth, which it devours
and brings back to its master – at least it did when under the control
of the master. But now the beast is out of control, it no longer obeys
its handlers – now it only obeys a greater creature – the god of
Lucre.
The
beast of a higher order of the left hand path is now leading the order
of Lucre. They who worship at the altar of Lucre – a false god that
will turn on them when the time comes, and come it will. It is called
the reckoning – the weighing in the balance. The abyss is waiting
below. Behold the rider on the white horse – when night will be no
more.
Roadblocks
So,
the maestro – the master magus – sees some roadblocks ahead in
restoring the gold standard of days gone by. Let’s peek closer at the
tenor of the tune being sung:
“The
major roadblock to restoring the gold standard is the problem of
re-entry. With the vast quantity of dollars worldwide laying
claim to the US Treasury’s 264 million ounces of gold, an overnight
transition to gold convertibility would create a major discontinuity for
the US financial system. But there is no need for the whole block of
current dollar obligations to become an immediate claim.” [Greenspan]
This
is true. There is an ocean of paper fiat dollars floating about the
world – claims, as Mr. Greenspan alluded to – to our wealth. Does
that sound like the function of money, to be a claim or bill upon our
wealth? That sounds more like a debt or obligation upon our wealth.
An
overnight transition to gold convertibility would indeed create a major
discontinuity for not only the U.S. financial system, but the world
financial system as well. Lest we forget, we have conned the world into
accepting Federal Reserve Notes as the world’s reserve currency.
Such
was the fatal stroke d’egras that can only be wielded by a master
magus of the highest order of Lucre - the sword of Damocles swinging
down hard.
Ah,
but he isn’t Sir Maestro for nothing, for the undertaker, as Ayn Rand
called him, speaks quite clearly when he says, “But there is no
need for the whole block of current dollar obligations to become an
immediate claim.” In deed, there is no reason at all. It can be
done slowly over time. But according to what speed?
By
whatever speed the free market dictates. Go into the free market, there
you will find whatever means are best suited for the workings of free
market principles – of honest supply and demand factors; of honest
export trade factors; of honest foreign exchange factors; of honest
balance of trade factors.
As
many others and I have advocated: there is no need for all paper fiat
obligations to be converted into gold immediately – in fact, there is
No
need for any paper fiat dollar obligations to be converted into gold.
Restoration vs. Replacement
What
Mr. Greenspan proposes is a restoration of the monetary system –
restoring it by what he calls a return to the gold standard, which to
him means that Federal Reserve Notes or dollar bills are to be
convertible into gold.
But
why should FRN’s be convertible into gold? Are all of the notes to be
so converted? According to what price or exchange will a dollar bill for
gold take place? And who decides all such particulars – the
undertaker, the same as who got us here to begin with. I think not. I
for one will pass.
For
a full in depth, studies of the issue see: Honest
Money, GOLD:
Sovereign of Sovereigns, and
Silver
IS Money.
There
is a way out of this mess, however. The Foundation For The Advancement
of Monetary Education [FAME - About
FAME | What's
New], along with many others,
advocate the return to the hard money system of our Constitution, where
silver and gold coin was our money – not paper claims that were
fractionally backed by it.
Open
the mint to the free minting of silver and gold bullion brought there by
the citizens of the country – minting of bullion into coin according
to Honest Weights and Measures. Let the gold and silver coin circulate
alongside of the present day Federal Reserve Notes. Then let the free
market of We The People decide which they prefer to use.
The
original use and intent of the mint when first founded was to mint
silver and gold bought in by the citizens, the citizens held title to
the silver and gold – not the government or the mint.
The
United States Government was never vested with any powers by the
Constitution
to hold title to all of the money of the country and its citizens.
This
most questionable policy came about through the debasement and
devolution of the monetary system through the various monetary acts,
some of which are arguably unconstitutional.
The
present day U.S. Code and Uniform Commercial Code have lent their two
cents worth of nonsense regarding such issues. Where else can you find a
statute that states that Federal Reserve Notes are redeemable in lawful
money, which means the FRN’s must not be lawful money, otherwise why
would they need to be redeemed in lawful money, if they already are
such? For a more detailed analysis see Honest
Money, Part I: The Constitution and Honest Money.
To
even consider backing today’s near worthless Federal Reserve Notes
with gold and silver based on the amount of purchasing power retained by
such notes (5%) since 1913, is but another step down the slippery road
of monetary debasement, headed directly towards perdition.
They
are not worth backing – it would be throwing good money after bad
money.
Either
Greenspan isn’t as smart as I think he is, or he is still towing the
political line – anchor, ship, and all. If he doesn’t soon cut bait
– he may find the anchor dragging him down. Tis an expensive price
exacted to do the Sir Lordship gig.
Lest
We Forget
Chairman
Greenspan ends his paper with the following admonition:
“Those
who advocate a return to a gold standard should be aware that returning
our monetary system to gold convertibility is no mere technical,
financial restructuring. It is a basic change in our economic processes.
However, considering where the policies of the last 50 years eventually
led us, perhaps these are the lessons to be learned from our more
distant golden past.” [Greenspan]
The
ironies that a silvery smooth tongue can utter without choking are a
wonder to behold. So Mr. Greenspan believes, or at least he states –
that to “return
our monetary system to gold convertibility is no mere technical,
financial restructuring. It is a basic change in our economic
processes.”
Well
of course, it is – and so it has been. The change from a gold standard
to a gold exchange system was one of significance. And now the present
monetary system, which is based on debt and more debt, represents at
least a basic change to our economic processes, if not to the very
fabric and soul of our country.
And
lest we forget, there was another system prior to any gold
convertibility system or gold standard: the original hard money system
of The Constitution and the Original Coinage Act of 1792 –
The
Silver Standard, coupled with a bimetallic coinage system
of silver and gold coin, and no bills of credit.
A
gold convertible monetary system or gold standard
IS
NOT THE MONETARY SYSTEM VESTED BY THE CONSTITUTION.
Be
not deceived by all the smooth talk and rhetoric, it is nothing more
than sophisticated babble, meant to confuse and distort the Truth. The
Truth is written in our Constitution – go there in search thereof.
Apparently,
Mr. Greenspan has not studied our most glorious piece of literature, or
he has forgotten his lessons, or no longer believes in them. Congressman
Ron Paul has, and does, and says so all the time. He even asks Mr.
Greenspan questions before Congress about such matters. How is he
answered? By the speaking in tongues of babble – Greenspeak some dare
call it.
It
is time for straight talk. It is time for Honest Money. It is time that.
Night
Shall Be No More.

© 2005 Douglas V. Gnazzo
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