He took it with him? And now no one else can prove it? Interesting. Did the Feds kill him to keep their little secret?
Go ahead, find me a substantial American-owned hard rock mining company operating in the American West. Just keep yucking it up while China drills of our coast while American companies can't. That deal isn't on paper either. Just keep laughing while Vivendi buys up water companies in California, while having curiously little difficulty getting permits.
Interesting little factoids which have zero to do with US Treasury debt.
Meanwhile, try, just for once, defending your bald faced and ignorant assertion with an example.
My ignorant assertion? My assertion is that your assertion is wrong. Until you show something that proves water and mineral rights somehow collateralize our US Treasury debt, my assertion wins.
I talked with him about it, but he had cancer at the time and was rather distracted. He had one explicitly documented example, but since his death I doubt anyone knows where it is within his records.
Did the Feds kill him to keep their little secret?
Specializing in vicious slurs to back your obviously bogus assertion does you no favor.
Interesting little factoids which have zero to do with US Treasury debt.
The hell they don't.
My ignorant assertion? My assertion is that your assertion is wrong.
Allow me to refresh your memory of what you said: Your assertion was that treaties don't trump the Constitution. They routinely do, providing the unconstitutional authority for the laws that underlie those "interesting little factoids."
Nations are created (as was ours) and surrender by treaty. As far as the "international community" is concerned (you know, our lenders), the "law of nations" trumps any internal document. Hell the genesis of the Constitution itself was to placate those who were going to reschedule the debt left over from the Revolutionary War.
To understand the basis for the ratification debates, one must appreciate the context of the 1780s. Although economic historians have mainly studied it as an example of inflationary war finance, the Revolutionary War itself had significant effects on economic activity. Indeed, the war may be viewed as the first step in the long turn inward towards the opportunities of the domestic economy, as booming markets for farm produce generated new interest in inland transportation.12 The end of the war disrupted this new internal trade, but without restoring access to British imperial markets. The resulting distress caused considerable political turbulence, leading to demands for the remedy with which the colonial legislatures were long familiar, unbacked paper money as a form of debt relief.
In one important respect, however, the history of the US was not fundamentally different from that of European nations, in that financial policies were dictated by the fiscal needs of governments. On this count the Constitution of 1789 left much unsaid, giving the federal government access to tax revenue only implicitly through its control over customs. Of equal importance in defining the US nation-state was the Federalist program enacted during George Washington s first term of office (1789-92), under the leadership of Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton. Hamilton s reports on the public credit, on the Bank of the United States, and on manufactures, are classics of US political economy and national definition. With the exception of the report on manufactures, virtually the entire plan was backed by the President and promptly voted into law by Congress. The immediate results included a sweeping assumption of debt by the federal government ( funding at par the long-depreciated war debts of the states); launching of a banking system based on liabilities convertible into a specie base; and a dramatic improvement in the status of US federal government debt in the capital markets of Europe. Source
If you think for one minute that lenders don't demand collateral from governments, you are smoking something. Such deals trading soverignty for solvency are not popular with the people. Politicians hide them. It's been that way since the beginning.