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We should all just use silver by weight with each other


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2023 Feb 19, 8:00pm   20,530 views  175 comments

by Patrick   ➕follow (59)   💰tip   ignore  

https://coinmill.com/MXN_MXP.html#MXP=5000

The Mexican Peso was revalued on January 1, 1993. Pesos dated before that date (Old Mexican Pesos - MXP) are 1000 times less valuable than the New Mexican Pesos - MXN.


This is kind of funny because "peso" literally means "weight" of silver. But there is no silver in the peso anymore.

The US dollar has lost about 97% of its value from the time the Federal Reserve was created.

Why do we bother with their shit fiat currency at all? There is plenty of silver to use as currency, no shortage. And you can be sure its value won't go to zero like it does with all fiat currency eventually.

Would be nice if there were easily available small weights of pure silver available, but in the meantime, we could just use old US silver coins.

The important thing is to value currency by weight of pure silver, not bullshit pesos or dollars.


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19   Misc   2023 Feb 21, 8:49am  

Obviously, those mythical banks that worked so well under a metal commodity system ---- DID NOT SURVIVE

They can only survive for a limited time before their fraud overwhelms them unless they rely soley on storage fees.
20   NuttBoxer   2023 Feb 21, 8:50am  

Misc says

Futhermore in times of financial stress, such as a war, there would be no ability of the government to raise let's say $4 trillion to pay for the costs of the war as that amount of metal would not exist in the country's treasury. Any country handicapping itself this way would find itself losing to the opposing country.


Oh no, no more war!
21   NuttBoxer   2023 Feb 21, 8:53am  

RWSGFY says

but how do you check the silver content in a typical retail situation?


Weight, and knowledge of common silver coins. It would become second nature eventually. That's why gold and silver work, the weights are very precise.
22   richwicks   2023 Feb 21, 8:55am  

RWSGFY says


but how do you check the silver content in a typical retail situation?


You've never handled a silver or gold coin have you?

Gold can be counterfeited with Tungsten, but if you drop the coin, you'll immediately know it's fake. There's different resonances in the metals. The first thing you'll notice when you handle a gold or silver coin, is its weight. Lead is about 1/2 as dense as gold.
23   Misc   2023 Feb 21, 8:56am  

NuttBoxer says

Misc says


We currently have the best monetary system the world has ever seen. There is little friction in the system between buyers and sellers and if we need a few extra trillion dollars, we can add it to the system at almost zero cost (such as with the Covid lockdowns), or heaven forbid a major war.


Explain record homelessness and unemployment. Explain no food on the shelves. Explain having to order everything ahead to do jobs because parts are missing. Explain why almost everyone lives in debt. If this is your utopia, I shudder.

NuttBoxer says

Misc says


We currently have the best monetary system the world has ever seen. There is little friction in the system between buyers and sellers and if we need a few extra trillion dollars, we can add it to the system at almost zero cost (such as with the Covid lockdowns), or heaven forbid a major war.


Explain record homelessness and unemployment. Explain no food on the shelves. Explain having to order everything ahead to do jobs because parts are missing. Explain why almost everyone lives in debt. If this is your utopia, I shudder.

NuttBoxer says

Misc says


We currently have the best monetary system the world has ever seen. There is little friction in the system between buyers and sellers and if we need a few extra trillion dollars, we can add it to the system at almost zero cost (such as with the Covid lockdowns), or heaven forbid a major war.


Explain record homelessness and unemployment. Explain no food on the shelves. Explain having to order everything ahead to do jobs because parts are missing. Explain why almost everyone lives in debt. If this is your utopia, I shudder.


Uhhhhhhhhhhhh, unemployment is at 3.4% a record low. Homelessness is caused by drugs and/or mental health problems.
24   richwicks   2023 Feb 21, 9:00am  

Misc says

Uhhhhhhhhhhhh, unemployment is at 3.4% a record low. Homelessness is caused by drugs and/or mental health problems.


Sure, and Russia blew up the Nordstream II, and Trump hired hookers to urinate on beds, and Trump is a puppet of Putin, and Ukraine had a revolution, and Assad was gassing his own people, and Qaddafi was about to cause a humanitarian crisis, and Saddam Hussein had a secret weapons of mass destruction program, and the al-Shifa pharmaceutical plant was making chemical weapons precursors, and Iraq was stealing incubators from Kuwaiti hospitals.

You see 3 fingers, or 4, or 5, whatever the state tells you to see. For some people, they can't be as warped and insane.
25   NDrLoR   2023 Feb 21, 9:01am  

NuttBoxer says


common silver coins
Which haven't been minted in almost 60 years! Silver quarters, dimes and half dollars used to be common as dirt until LBJ.
26   Misc   2023 Feb 21, 9:06am  

richwicks says

Misc says


Uhhhhhhhhhhhh, unemployment is at 3.4% a record low. Homelessness is caused by drugs and/or mental health problems.


Sure, and Russia blew up the Nordstream II, and Trump hired hookers to urinate on beds, and Trump is a puppet of Putin, and Ukraine had a revolution, and Assad was gassing his own people, and Qaddafi was about to cause a humanitarian crisis, and Saddam Hussein had a secret weapons of mass destruction program, and the al-Shifa pharmaceutical plant was making chemical weapons precursors, and Iraq was stealing incubators from Kuwaiti hospitals.

You see 3 fingers, or 4, or 5, whatever the state tells you to see. For some people, they can't be as warped and insane.

richwicks says

Misc says


Uhhhhhhhhhhhh, unemployment is at 3.4% a record low. Homelessness is caused by drugs and/or mental health problems.


Sure, and Russia blew up the Nordstream II, and Trump hired hookers to urinate on beds, and Trump is a puppet of Putin, and Ukraine had a revolution, and Assad was gassing his own people, and Qaddafi was about to cause a humanitarian crisis, and Saddam Hussein had a secret weapons of mass destruction program, and the al-Shifa pharmaceutical plant was making chemical weapons precursors, and Iraq was stealing incubators from Kuwaiti hospitals.

You see 3 fingers, or 4, or 5, whatever the state tells you to see. For some people, they can't be as warped and insane.


So you are saying that the evil Central bankers are causing businesses to struggle to find employees, and forcing people to use fentanyl.
27   richwicks   2023 Feb 21, 9:07am  

NDrLoR says

NuttBoxer says


common silver coins
Which haven't been minted in almost 60 years! Silver quarters and half dollars used to be common as dirt until LBJ.


Yeah, well today, it's entirely common to have shortages where the mint simply stops producing them, because they don't have the silver to do it. We are constantly in shortage. The COMEX isn't audited, it's rife with fraud, and the SEC won't do anything about it.

Misc says

So you are saying that the evil Central bankers are causing businesses to struggle to find employees, and forcing people to use fentanyl.


No, I'm saying that businesses are NOT struggling to find employees. I'm saying that's total bullshit.
28   Onvacation   2023 Feb 21, 9:07am  

Misc says

the evil Central bankers are causing businesses to struggle to find employees, and forcing people to use fentanyl.

BASTARDS!
29   Reality   2023 Feb 21, 9:09am  


Exactly my point. If we base our monetary system on a metal commodity, the system by its nature would be deflationary. Whereby prices would decrease as there would be constantly less metal in the system per capita as population increased and metal was removed from the system by people saving it.


That's why the Founding Fathers defined the dollar via Bimetallism: either silver or gold, whichever is more abundant at any given moment. It worked far better than the PhD-PoliticalPressure standards we have now.


Futhermore in times of financial stress, such as a war, there would be no ability of the government to raise let's say $4 trillion to pay for the costs of the war as that amount of metal would not exist in the country's treasury. Any country handicapping itself this way would find itself losing to the opposing country.


You are conflating wars of imperial expansion vs. wars of self-defense. The central-banking money system is conducive to wars of imperial expansion (then impoverish its original citizens by cheap imports from conquests), followed by imperial corruption and collapse due to the empire impoverish the vast majority of its citizens via the transfer of wealth from average citizens to the tiny number ruling elite (the tiny elite reap the benefit of imperial conquest / cheap imports, while the average citizens bear the cost of maintaining empire)


It is easier math-wise for prices and wages to be increasing rather than decreasing.


Tell us what a horrendous collapse the high tech industry has been over the past 50 years as the cost of 8kbytes of storage and 1MegOp/second processing power has decreased from over $10,000 to less than 1/10,000 of a $. If larger numbers were better than smaller numbers, Americans would be crossing borders to Mexico in pursuit of higher numbers in pay stubs as the pesos depreciate faster than the dollar in the past few decades. Stable and sound money enable prosperity. People don't stop buying necessities even if prices go down. Declining prices actually discourage people from speculative nonsense (but banks hate not being able to make loans, pulling money out of thin air, enabled by gullible people in pursuit of FOMO, whether that FOMO is an over priced house or an empire, both shackle the people more than benefit the people).
30   NuttBoxer   2023 Feb 21, 9:14am  

Misc says

Obviously, those mythical banks that worked so well under a metal commodity system ---- DID NOT SURVIVE


Neither did the first three central banks in the United States. Neither did Rome once they went full credit. Zimbabwe, Venezuela, Weimer Germany, etc, etc, etc.

You know what did survive, the value of gold and silver. You can still buy a nice suit for the same amount of gold in Italy you could during Roman times.

Also, mythical means fake. So you either never heard of, or are lying about the banks of Venice, Amsterdam, and Hamburg. While they are no longer around, the bank of Venice existed for nearly 300 years. Longer than this country.
31   Misc   2023 Feb 21, 9:20am  

The price of silver has gone up about 3.3% per year since 1913.

If a person had put that money in an interest bearing account, he would have ended up with about the same purchasing power as holding physical silver.
32   NuttBoxer   2023 Feb 21, 9:21am  

Misc says

Uhhhhhhhhhhhh, unemployment is at 3.4% a record low. Homelessness is caused by drugs and/or mental health problems.


Do you ever look at anything beside government sources? 41% according to the WSJ...
https://www.wyattresearch.com/commodity-prices/the-real-unemployment-numbers/

Drugs and mental health issues aren't new. The amount of shit and homeless in downtown San Diego is. Try again.
33   NuttBoxer   2023 Feb 21, 9:22am  

NDrLoR says

Which haven't been minted in almost 60 years!


American Eagles, Krugerrands, Mexican Silver pesos, Maple Leafs. I believe these are all still commonly minted today.
34   richwicks   2023 Feb 21, 9:22am  


Misc says


If a person had put that money in an interest bearing account, he would have ended up with about the same purchasing power as holding physical silver.


Minus taxation. Everybody goes out of their way to ignore that.
35   NuttBoxer   2023 Feb 21, 9:25am  

Misc says

So you are saying that the evil Central bankers are causing businesses to struggle to find employees, and forcing people to use fentanyl.


Do you understand the nature of the Creature? No, or you'd realize this statement isn't that far fetched. Central banks exist to impoverish and enslave. You have listed two byproducts of these actions above...
36   Misc   2023 Feb 21, 9:27am  

richwicks says


Misc says



If a person had put that money in an interest bearing account, he would have ended up with about the same purchasing power as holding physical silver.


Minus taxation. Everybody goes out of their way to ignore that.

richwicks says


Misc says



If a person had put that money in an interest bearing account, he would have ended up with about the same purchasing power as holding physical silver.


Minus taxation. Everybody goes out of their way to ignore that.


Subtract out storage fees (unless you want to risk robbery) for the physical silver and things even out again.
37   NuttBoxer   2023 Feb 21, 9:54am  

Misc says

The price of silver has gone up about 3.3% per year since 1913.

If a person had put that money in an interest bearing account, he would have ended up with about the same purchasing power as holding physical silver.


No one just holds silver. You swap for gold and vis-versa as the ratio changes over time. If I bough $100 of silver in 1913, at about 50 cents an ounce, I would have 200 ounces. If I exchanged around the first low in the 20's, let's say at 20 rather than 17, I would have 10 ounces of gold. So on until now, I would end up with 6,750 ounces of silver, with a value of nearly $169,000 dollars.
https://sdbullion.com/silver-price-history
https://www.macrotrends.net/1441/gold-to-silver-ratio

I did not use the tops or bottoms, but only near, as most people never hit it on the head. Now as you correctly stated, the real value of silver has changed very little over time. The amount above really reflects how much value the fiat dollar has lost.
38   NuttBoxer   2023 Feb 21, 9:58am  

Misc says

Subtract out storage fees (unless you want to risk robbery) for the physical silver and things even out again.


If you're paying storage fees, you should be rich enough to store it yourself. Small amounts most people hold don't require anything more than a good hiding place. But robbery, good point. What if your savings was held at any of the MANY MANY institutions that went belly up over the past century, leaving their depositors peniless? Home robberies are not very common, percentage wise, the risk again, is with the corrupt fiat banks due to how many people they take down every time a bank goes under/fails.
39   RayAmerica   2023 Feb 21, 10:06am  

Historically, there are over 300 fiat currencies that have failed. Eventually, ours will as well.

For quite a few years now, the world's central banks, along with governments such as China and Russia, have been stockpiling gold and silver. Why do you think they are doing that?
40   Misc   2023 Feb 21, 10:07am  

The 9000 banks that failed during the Great Depression did so when the dollar was convertible to gold.
41   RayAmerica   2023 Feb 21, 10:08am  

The creation of fiat currencies is one of the biggest Ponzi schemes in world history.
42   richwicks   2023 Feb 21, 10:11am  

Misc says

Subtract out storage fees (unless you want to risk robbery) for the physical silver and things even out again.


No. Nobody here knows where I live or ever will. I can talk openly with you with minimal risk.

Nobody should know what you've got. I look and live "poor". I'm not materialistic, I don't flaunt my wealth. Stupid people do that.
43   RWSGFY   2023 Feb 21, 10:12am  

NuttBoxer says


RWSGFY says


but how do you check the silver content in a typical retail situation?


Weight, and knowledge of common silver coins. It would become second nature eventually. That's why gold and silver work, the weights are very precise.



I's wager that with modern metallurgy it won't be hard to create a silver-plated coin which will weight exactly the same as the real one and be cheaper to make. Besides, isn't there a natural variation in the weight of old coins due to wear?

Things that used to be hard to replicate are not that hard anymore. For example the battle scenes engraved on the cylinders of black powder Colt revolvers are there to make the real thing to stand out from fakes. It was reasonably hard to replicate for some time but was dropped once the technollogy became widely accessible and cheaper.
44   Misc   2023 Feb 21, 10:12am  

All the great religious Books have detailed that charging interest leads to the impoverishment of the people along with the slavery that ensues.

With fiat currencies, interest can be charged as there is no limit to the amount that can be printed.
45   RWSGFY   2023 Feb 21, 10:15am  

Misc says

All the great religious Books have detailed that charging interest leads to the impoverishment of the people along with the slavery that ensues.

With fiat currencies, interest can be charged as there is no limit to the amount that can be printed.


And yet, if we compare ourselves with our fathers, grandfathers and grand grand fathers are most of us really impoverished compared to them?
46   RayAmerica   2023 Feb 21, 10:24am  

Misc says


The 9000 banks that failed during the Great Depression did so when the dollar was convertible to gold.

What caused the failure of banks was the fractional reserve banking system, whereby, a very high percentage of actual money that is being held by the bank, is actually loaned out. This system can only operate successfully as long as the demand for withdrawals do not exceed the cash on hand at the bank needed to meet those withdrawals. Once the public catches on that their money isn't actually being 'held by the bank,' bank runs occur, which eventually lead to bank failures.

The 'roaring 20s' saw a massive amount of credit being extended all over the world, including to individuals that wanted to speculate in stock markets. Once the markets began to show signs of instability, the selling ensued which in turn caused the banks to 'call in their margin loans,' which furthered the selling panic.

We have something going on right now that is FAR WORSE than the situation in the 1920s, and that is the derivative market, whereby, loans that are being held are counted as an ASSET rather than a DEBT, allowing the bank to create money to be loaned out digitally. This process is repeated over and over and over again and every LOAN that is derived from another is considered to be an ASSET. All of this is obviously dependent upon an ever expanding economy, precisely why the Fed continues to create money (for the Treasury), in order to keep the entire Ponzi scheme going for as long as possible. It really is a classic house of cards.

That's why when the collapse hits, it will be a financial catastrophe beyond anything ever seen in world history.
47   RayAmerica   2023 Feb 21, 10:32am  

America's so called 'prosperity' has been made available by a mountain of debt.

I'm old enough to recall 'mortgage burning parties,' which were, when I was a very young boy, quite common. Once the borrower paid off their home, they would celebrate with their family and friends by burning the mortgage.

A bit of history ...

Prior to the Great Depression, a very high percentage of 'homeowners' actually had their home paid off. Part of the reason for that was that home mortgages were amortized for a period of 7 years, which of course meant that if you made all of your payments for those 7 years, your home would be free and clear of all debt. You actually OWNED your home.

Property taxes are always the first lien, then the mortgage. If things really get ugly financially, people with mortgages that they are not able to pay off are going to find out real quick who actually 'owns' their home.
48   RayAmerica   2023 Feb 21, 10:35am  

Misc says

With fiat currencies, interest can be charged as there is no limit to the amount that can be printed.

The banksters also successfully lobbied to have the 'Usury Laws' removed, which in turn allowed the banks to charge exorbitant, punitive rates on credit cards.

Jefferson was right when he warned us that 'bankers are to be more feared than standing armies.'
49   Misc   2023 Feb 21, 11:19am  

Still today, a large percentage of people have their houses paid off. It is about 40%. It is about 33% of homeowners with no mortgage in California.

The troubling trend especially in the Blue States/Cities is that the homeownership rate is plummeting. Overall in the US the homeownership rate is about 66%. In California it is about 55%. This trend of lower homeownership seems to be spreading.
50   HeadSet   2023 Feb 21, 11:35am  

Misc says

Still today, a large percentage of people have their houses paid off. It is about 40%. It is about 33% of homeowners with no mortgage in California.

In the 80's, 50% of the homes in America were mortgage free. It should be be the goal to have a mortgage only on your initial house, with the idea of being mortgage free by age 45. Likewise, only the first car should have a loan.
51   komputodo   2023 Feb 21, 11:52am  

RayAmerica says

Prior to the Great Depression, a very high percentage of 'homeowners' actually had their home paid off. Part of the reason for that was that home mortgages were amortized for a period of 7 years, which of course meant that if you made all of your payments for those 7 years, your home would be free and clear of all debt. You actually OWNED your home.

i remember when i was a young man, a girl asked me at a party if it was true that I owned my house. I said NO, the bank owns it, i just make payments on it..she walked away. LOL...i dodged a bullet
52   NuttBoxer   2023 Feb 21, 12:34pm  

Misc says

The 9000 banks that failed during the Great Depression did so when the dollar was convertible to gold.


Funny thing, they were flourishing prior to 1913. If trend had continued without a new central bank, the NY banks would have gone out of business. The Great Depression was caused by government policies, NOT the stock crash as people who don't study history claim. Of course this all benefited the central bank, and it's NY owners. But forget about all of that, and try blaming gold right?
53   NuttBoxer   2023 Feb 21, 12:38pm  

RWSGFY says

I's wager that with modern metallurgy it won't be hard to create a silver-plated coin which will weight exactly the same as the real one and be cheaper to make. Besides, isn't there a natural variation in the weight of old coins due to wear?


Alchemists have tried for centuries. If it's so easy, I'm sure you can find many examples. If not, may want to read up on that subject a little more. Interestingly, alchemy has always had very close ties with Satanism...
54   NuttBoxer   2023 Feb 21, 12:41pm  

RWSGFY says

And yet, if we compare ourselves with our fathers, grandfathers and grand grand fathers are most of us really impoverished compared to them?


Most of them grew their own food, had farms, owned land. And when it comes to health, not even comparable unless you go back to the Dark Ages. In quantity, and quality of life, we are losing. But maybe some of you are more Bread and circus's types? As long as your entertained, you will continue to Eat Ze Bugs.
55   NuttBoxer   2023 Feb 21, 12:47pm  

Misc says

Still today, a large percentage of people have their houses paid off. It is about 40%. It is about 33% of homeowners with no mortgage in California.


You never provide sources for any of your stats, guessing because they all come from government websites? You definitely haven't accounted for people who borrow against the value their home after paying off, which really means, they return to being debtors, not owners. I can see many examples where I live outside the city. People who have multiple cars, toys, etc sitting outside their homes, where they've lived for at least 20 years. This isn't a wealthy area. They just bought when no one was here, and have borrowed against inflationary home values, thinking things won't change. When they do, they'll lose everything. If the average American has no savings, lives check to check, and has debt, how the FUCK would they all have their homes paid off!?
56   Misc   2023 Feb 21, 1:30pm  

NuttBoxer says


Misc says


The 9000 banks that failed during the Great Depression did so when the dollar was convertible to gold.


Funny thing, they were flourishing prior to 1913. If trend had continued without a new central bank, the NY banks would have gone out of business. The Great Depression was caused by government policies, NOT the stock crash as people who don't study history claim. Of course this all benefited the central bank, and it's NY owners. But forget about all of that, and try blaming gold right?



They were not flourishing. They were going through their boom and bust cycles. There was a time when the banks went bust, they hung the bankers.

Here's a bust you can read up on.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panic_of_1873
57   Misc   2023 Feb 21, 1:34pm  

NuttBoxer says

Misc says


Still today, a large percentage of people have their houses paid off. It is about 40%. It is about 33% of homeowners with no mortgage in California.


You never provide sources for any of your stats, guessing because they all come from government websites? You definitely haven't accounted for people who borrow against the value their home after paying off, which really means, they return to being debtors, not owners. I can see many examples where I live outside the city. People who have multiple cars, toys, etc sitting outside their homes, where they've lived for at least 20 years. This isn't a wealthy area. They just bought when no one was here, and have borrowed against inflationary home values, thinking things won't change. When they do, they'll lose everything. If the average American has no savings, lives check to check, and has debt, how the FUCK would they al...


It takes less than 15 seconds to run a check. Here is a google search that lists many sources.

https://www.google.com/search?q=what+percentage+of+homeowners+have+no+mortgage&sxsrf=AJOqlzWdLUMcixrS9VZXv_j7b60rJd2C7g%3A1677015056225&source=hp&ei=EDj1Y8e3C8e7kPIPysmhEA&iflsig=AK50M_UAAAAAY_VGIAcadkjD-tyAa2dERWera-zQIGuF&oq=what+percentage+of+home&gs_lcp=Cgdnd3Mtd2l6EAEYAzIFCAAQgAQyBQgAEIAEMgUIABCABDIFCAAQgAQyBQgAEIAEMgUIABCABDIFCAAQgAQyBQgAEIAEMgUIABCABDIFCAAQgAQ6BwgjEOoCECc6BAgjECc6BQgAEJECOgsIABCABBCxAxCDAToOCC4QgAQQsQMQxwEQ0QM6EQguEIAEELEDEIMBEMcBENEDOgQIABBDOggIABCxAxCDAToNCAAQgAQQsQMQgwEQCjoHCAAQgAQQCjoKCAAQgAQQRhD7AVDkE1i_emC3jgFoAXAAeACAAV-IAb8MkgECMjOYAQCgAQGwAQo&sclient=gws-wiz
58   Misc   2023 Feb 21, 2:12pm  

NuttBoxer says

Misc says


Still today, a large percentage of people have their houses paid off. It is about 40%. It is about 33% of homeowners with no mortgage in California.


You never provide sources for any of your stats, guessing because they all come from government websites? You definitely haven't accounted for people who borrow against the value their home after paying off, which really means, they return to being debtors, not owners. I can see many examples where I live outside the city. People who have multiple cars, toys, etc sitting outside their homes, where they've lived for at least 20 years. This isn't a wealthy area. They just bought when no one was here, and have borrowed against inflationary home values, thinking things won't change. When they do, they'll lose everything. If the average American has no savings, lives check to check, and has debt, how the FUCK would they al...


You have been reading the mainstream propaganda about Americans finances. While it is true that the vast majority of renters have little financial assets. Homeowners have put about $15 trillion dollars set aside in cash (not stocks or bonds or bitcoin ---- cash). They have the other financial assets as well. Yes, with a lot of them having a mortgage free home.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-03-30/americans-added-4-2-trillion-in-pandemic-savings-skewed-to-rich

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