Show me facts. I have seen none from you. This article is based on what we can see is mostly fact. And that is "Amero". I have seen no other monetary devise mentioned. There is a lot of dots that need some attention to.
That is the beginning, the middle and the end of it.
Now either you're going to accept it or you're going to continue to be mindless.
Ivan
Though there are many other kinds of commodity convertibility, these are, as noted earlier (footnote 3) complicated and hence hard to explain to the public at large. That is one reason why all recent proposals for reforming Canada's monetary order that envisage replacing inflation targets with a system underpinned by convertibility rest, not on a commodity of any sort, but on either a brand new North American currency or the U.S. dollar. Given the Americans' total lack of interest in giving up a shred of control over their own currency, let alone abandoning it for something else, the only proposals among these that are practically possible are those involving either the outright unilateral adoption by Canada of the U.S. dollar as its currency, or the creation of a new Canadian currency linked to the U.S. dollar by way of a currency board.
Read it. Learn. Let the facts penetrate the battleship armour thickness of your skull. I cannot force you not to be stupid, but I damn well will try.
Ivan
You cannot sneak up a monetary change like this in the dead of night. Billions had to be spent preparing people in Europe for it - changing everything from cash registers, ATM machines, to sophisticated systems of accounting. It is not something that can be done in the dead of night or without warning. But you don't think to this level of detail;
Word.