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Federal Court: No, the Government May Not Prevent Further Discovery of the Takeover of AIG
biggovernment.com ^ | 02/05/10 | Frank Gaffney

Posted on 02/05/2010 4:13:23 PM PST by American Dream 246

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To: Buchal
But where the rubber meets the road is in the situation rapidly approaching, wherein the paper which the government demands you take as legal tender is rapidly depreciating in value because the government has issued too much of it.

Did I miss the onset of double digit inflation? You do realize that Fed's balance sheet is basically the same as it was in 2008. IOW, there has been no "printing". And we have suffered a huge deflation due to the crash that destroyed $15 trillion.

This is all about freedom. If you don’t have the freedom to demand to be paid in gold and silver, or to have a contract promising payment in gold and silver enforced, you have lost a vital attribute of freedom.

What about those who prefer the freedom they currently have? I.e. the freedom to not have to pay you in gold or silver. Should their freedom be curtailed?

Or think about what just happened in North Korea: suddenly all the old currency was called in to be exchanged for new currency at a fraction of the former value.

You're going to base your argument on North Korea? That may be even lamer than using Zimbabwe.

141 posted on 02/12/2010 11:08:41 PM PST by 10Ring
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To: 10Ring

You are correct that the Fed’s balance sheet held pretty steady from late 2008 on at just over two trillion dollars, though its quality deteriorated substantially (MBS up, Treasuries down). And you are certainly correct that inflation has not increased commensurate with Fed balance sheet growth at all, because, in part, contracting credit has offset the balance sheet expansion. But the Fed has been whittling away at the money value now for 100 years, and long run inflation seems inevitable. I believe it will be sooner and faster, but credible cases can be made for deflation, at least in the near term.

As to those who prefer the freedom they currently have, if that freedom is gained at the expense of others, it is not “freedom” in any defensible sense. With specific reference to your freedom to pay with paper, if you have entered into a contract that does not specify the medium of payment, so be it. But if you have entered into a contract that requires payment in gold, your “freedom to pay in paper” is freedom to steal. At any time when someone is trying to enforce the obligation to pay in gold, it is because the paper has depreciated.

North Korea is an extreme example, but consider Argentina. A hundred years ago it was the equal of the United States in many respects, and many considered its potential as great. But those who preferred the “freedom” to live at the expense of others came to power sooner. And now we see the Obama Treasury beginning to sniff around retirement accounts just like Argentina: we will protect the people by forcing them (or would you say “giving them the freedom to”?) buy our government debt rather than what they might wish to hold in retirement accounts.


142 posted on 02/13/2010 7:13:00 AM PST by Buchal ("Two wings of the same bird of prey . . .")
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To: Buchal
As to those who prefer the freedom they currently have, if that freedom is gained at the expense of others, it is not “freedom” in any defensible sense.

Sort of like a person who demands the government force his countrymen to use gold/silver in their daily transactions. Whether it's a metal or paper, the government is still using force. Why is the force of gold/silver "freedom"?

But if you have entered into a contract that requires payment in gold, your “freedom to pay in paper” is freedom to steal.

As far as I know, gold clauses have been re-legalized. So, who is doing this? Has anybody entered into a contract since the 70s that had a gold clause and refused to honor it?

And now we see the Obama Treasury beginning to sniff around retirement accounts.

Again with the hyperbole. Obama couldn't get his healthcare plan passed by a Democrat controlled Congress, but somehow he is going to "steal our 401k's". If only we funded our 401k's with gold, they would be safe from Obama.

143 posted on 02/15/2010 8:18:12 AM PST by 10Ring
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To: 10Ring

It is a mystery to me how you can possibly misunderstand this. If the federal government does not possess the power to pass a tender law, as was intended by the Constitution, how can it possibly “force” citizens to use gold and silver in daily transactions? I am for freedom, not tender laws, which are utterly unnecessary, and inherently wrong, hence the Thomas Paine remark quoted above.


144 posted on 02/15/2010 10:20:54 AM PST by Buchal ("Two wings of the same bird of prey . . .")
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To: Buchal
I see, you simply read what you want and skip over the rest -- mystery solved. In post #129 I indicated that the Piece of Eight (otherwise known as the Spanish Dollar) was made legal tender by an Act of Congress. This act was not repealed until 1857.

If you liked Paine's idea about legal tender, you'll love his idea for a welfare state. That way you can enjoy the freedom of giving your gold and silver to your less fortunate countrymen and not have to worry about sticking them with worthless paper.

145 posted on 02/15/2010 11:49:59 AM PST by 10Ring
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To: 10Ring

You are still missing the point. If Congress made Pieces of Eight “legal tender” until 1857, it was still exercising a power not granted by the Constitution, and if it barred their use as legal tender, it was also exercising a power not granted. I am simply advocating a straightforward interpretation of the Constitution that would bar Congress from exercising the power to say what must (or must not) be used as legal tender.

BTW, I am wondering if you have a citation to any statute making the Spanish Dollar legal tender, as opposed to the 1857 statute outlawing it, which I did find (and learned something, thanks). There is supposed to be a definitive work on the subject, The Monetary Powers and Disabilities of the United States Constitution, by Edwin Vieira Jr., which collects this sort of material.

As for Thomas Paine, nobody is perfect. I have never read his Agrarian Justice tract, so I am not too familiar with how far he may have strayed. But I remain mystified by your evident hostility toward gold and silver.


146 posted on 02/15/2010 3:37:02 PM PST by Buchal ("Two wings of the same bird of prey . . .")
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To: Buchal
If Congress made Pieces of Eight “legal tender” until 1857, it was still exercising a power not granted by the Constitution...

Well, Congress started doing this right away (there was no federal currency, and, thus, the U.S. used a variety of foreign coins for a loooong time. Interesting that Congress had to pass new laws regularly, but nobody ever complained, not even those Founders.

Here is a decent source for Monetary Acts over the first 80, or so, years of the Republic.

As for Thomas Paine, nobody is perfect. I have never read his Agrarian Justice tract, so I am not too familiar with how far he may have strayed.

He strayed far enough to advocate a guaranteed wage for all. Paine played an instrumental role in the American revolution. However, his philosphies were in line with the French Revolution (which is where he ended up). Another great force in American history who was basically an economic kook. If you want to cite him as an authority on monetary matters, don't be surprised if someone raises his interesting socialistic ideas.

But I remain mystified by your evident hostility toward gold and silver.

I have no hostility to gold or silver, nor do I have hostility toward paper.

147 posted on 02/15/2010 4:53:30 PM PST by 10Ring
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To: 10Ring

Thanks for the source. All I can say is that declaring that foreign gold and silver coins could pass as legal tender may be construed as some sort of foreigh affairs power properly consigned to the United States, and does not really infringe the remaining power of the States to make nothing but gold and silver coin legal tender in payment of debts.

Of course, under my view, Congress could not have declared that no copper coins but its could pass as legal tender, as it did in 1792. In the Webster quote I provided, he said that “regulate the value thereof” had something to do with foreign coin; I know at one time there was concern about Chinese copper coins, but would be surprised if that were back in 1792.

I still think the Constitution was intended to prevent Congress from issuing paper money and forcing people to take it as legal tender, and I still think that the erosion of this Constitutional limitation is the root of our economic woes.


148 posted on 02/16/2010 6:47:41 AM PST by Buchal ("Two wings of the same bird of prey . . .")
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To: Buchal
Um...no, nothing to do with foreign affairs. A country that has absolutely no monetary system and does not have the resources to build one for many, many years needs a lawful way to legalize an ad-hoc system. This is what the Constitution did.

If the Federal Govt did not have the power to declare a foreign coin as legal tender, there would have been no monetary system in the U.S. As it was it took decades for the U.S. Mint to catch up.

The fact that phrases like "two-bits", "pieces-of-eight" and "picayune" persist to this day stand as a testament of Congress's power to declare a foreign coin as legal tender. Even the NYSE continued to use the "one-eighth" system until very recently.

I assure you that studying monetary history from Columbian time onward will only add to your appreciation of our Republic. Good luck.

149 posted on 02/16/2010 1:01:24 PM PST by 10Ring
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To: 10Ring

What continues to mystify me is your belief that a country sort of inherently needs to “build” a “monetary system” by virtue of passing laws in aid of such a construction. The “magical time” of U.S. history before the most offensive of the tender laws (you must take government paper) seems to prove to me that such is not the case. What is wrong with the free market in this context?


150 posted on 02/16/2010 3:05:26 PM PST by Buchal ("Two wings of the same bird of prey . . .")
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To: Buchal
What continues to mystify me is your belief that a country sort of inherently needs to “build” a “monetary system” by virtue of passing laws in aid of such a construction.

I guess the government could say "Pay your taxes with whatever coin makes you most comfortable." My guess is that country would be a footnote in the history of North America. If you have a real world example of a country that existed for a substantial amount of time without legal tender, provide the example.

The “magical time” of U.S. history before the most offensive of the tender laws (you must take government paper) seems to prove to me that such is not the case.

Plenty of legal tender paper in colonial times. Perhaps if the Continental Congress had the power to tax to support the military, they wouldn't have inflated the paper money. Whatever the case, there was no time of zero legal tender in the Colonies or the U.S.

What is wrong with the free market in this context?

Nothing. You can have the free market now and you could have it in 1792, whether people want your money is another matter.

151 posted on 02/16/2010 5:37:07 PM PST by 10Ring
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To: Buchal

Thought you might be interested in the movement to get the States to return to their Constitutional obligation to ONLY use gold and silver coin in their transactions:

http://www.ConstitutionalTender.com/


152 posted on 02/24/2010 7:26:23 AM PST by profg
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