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Silver as Money back in Circulation
Sierra Times ^
Posted on 02/13/2003 11:08:05 AM PST by BlackJack
A small company in the Ozarks is offering business the opportunity to bring Silver Money back into circulation, and has chosen NORFEDs Liberty Dollars for its vehicle. Ozark Monetary Services of Berryville, Arkansas, has created a program that ensures that any business that accepts Liberty Dollars cannot lose money for doing so
and its gaining popularity across the country, with some potentially heavy hitters looking it over closely.
OMS Spokesman David Cato confirms that the company has had discussions with a couple of nationally known marketing giants, but declined to offer specifics.
What were doing is promoting the program to all businesses, and its so simple that its basically a no-brainer, says David. Any business that signs up for the program agrees to accept Liberty Dollars, and return them to their customers in change.
This results in two things happening: first, the customer will in all likelihood return to the store to spend the money again, and other customers who hear about the new money will come to learn more and get some for themselves. For each Liberty Dollar given out in change, the merchant retains a dollar in Federal Reserve money, what were all used to.
Asked about the possibility of merchants being overwhelmed by Liberty Dollars, which can be traded with customers, but cant be deposited to most banks or used to pay government debts, David explained, Thats what the OMS Program is all about; anytime they get too many to keep in local circulation, OMS will buy their Liberty Dollars back from them at full face value.
The community benefits, as well, since OMS and others who promote the Liberty Dollar will occasionally offer the local public the opportunity to exchange their regular money for Liberty Dollars at a discount, gaining as much as ten percent in spendable value on the amount they choose to exchange!
Christmas and other holidays, as well as graduation time, are likely candidates for the special exchanges. The result is an increase in sales, and thereby an increase in profits, for those businesses who participate in the program, and there are even ways for merchants to purchase them at discount in order to make even more money while making change.
Liberty Dollars are paper Silver Certificates which are backed by silver, and theres even a solid silver ten-dollar Silver Liberty piece. Merchants subscribing to the program can accept either the Silver Liberty, or the Liberty Dollar Silver Certificate, which is similar to the bills were accustomed to and more easily carried around. Either way, customers are almost certain to return to where they got the new money when they need something that merchant sells, so customer loyalty is a direct result of the program.
As for cost, there isnt any. Merchants can sign up without any cost, and enjoy all of the benefits and guarantees, which are made in writing.
This isnt about making money, says David, although thats one benefit of it, and the merchants who participate will see some pretty impressive increases in their sales and profits. What its really about is getting real value back into the hands of the American People, and making that value an exchangeable commodity in todays marketplace.
Interested businesses can contact OMS at 877-561-7263, or by email at:
alfii@cox-internet.com. OMS is a spin-off and partner of ALFII.com, the online financial-privacy club that offers alternatives to conventional banking, even down to an anonymous MasterCard and a way to replace your existing checking account.
TOPICS: Business/Economy; Extended News
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To: dark_lord
People would want these darn dollars because they are interested in returning the US to a value-backed currency system, instead of a debt-backed one.
Take a look at the annual report of your local Federal Reserve Bank. They have "assets" that back up their issuance of the Federal Reserve Notes, but the vast, vast majority, well over 95%, of those "assets" are interest-bearing debt owed to the bank by the US Government.
We are paying interest to the Federal Reserve Banks for the use of our cash.
21
posted on
02/13/2003 12:56:39 PM PST
by
mvpel
(Michael Pelletier)
To: Centurion2000
Hmmm. This could get very ticklish. Technically, this means that if I borrow a silver coin from you and write you a receipt for it, I've broken the law. That's all that real money is, you know... a receipt for real currency (i.e. coin or bullion) on deposit.
22
posted on
02/13/2003 1:02:48 PM PST
by
Oberon
(I think I need a nap.)
To: Oberon
Our "money" or federal reserve notes, are not backed by anything resembling gold or silver. They are simply monetized debt, backed by the ability of the government to collect taxes in the future (i.e. the full faith and credit of the United States Government). Since there is no way to pay back both the monetized debt (FRNs) and the interest, the Gov't is technically bankrupt and has been since they ended the gold standard.
Aside from that, even if these people evade gov't intervention, they will run smack into Gresham's Law, which will crush them like a bug.
23
posted on
02/13/2003 1:39:07 PM PST
by
IMHO
To: IMHO
Our "money" or federal reserve notes, are not backed by anything resembling gold or silver. That's why I used the term "real money" in the message to which you were replying. I do understand the distinction... but thank you for clarifying.
But what, if I may ask, is Gresham's Law, and how does it apply?
24
posted on
02/13/2003 1:54:48 PM PST
by
Oberon
(I think I need a nap.)
To: Oberon
Greshams Law: The bad money drives out the good.
Example, in 1964 the mint stopped producing silver coins and started producing base-metal coins. People hoarded saved the silver coins and put them away, so they ceased to be in circulation. People will pay with the money of least acceptable value before they pay with the money of most value.
I believe both the first money act of 1792 AND the Constitution proscribes death for anyone who debases the current coin of the United States.
25
posted on
02/13/2003 2:09:19 PM PST
by
Jason_b
To: IMHO
You are correct.
The current US "dollar" is not really constitutional money at all.
If one looks at the paper in their wallet they will see Federal Reserve Note written on the top.
Notes are a promise to pay.
The US was taken off the domestic gold standard in 1933, the domestic silver standard in 1965 (90% silver coins in 1964...1965-1970 were 40% silver half-dollars) and finally the foreign dollar gold redemption in 1971.
All paper money currently issued by the Federal Reserve is backed up by nothing but empty promises and hot air.
Liberty dollars are issued by NORFED.
http://www.norfed.org
Their $10 silver certificates are backed by 1 troy ounce of silver. NORFED therefore declares a dollar to be 1/10 troy oz silver.
The US currently has three different values for what a dollar is.
1.) A federal reserve note. Worthless piece of paper.
2.) Dollar coin. Currently the Sacagawea coin, or "brass buck", the Susan B. Anthony coin, or the Eisenhower dollar. These all have various values for the metal content, but the "brass bucks" are what are currently being issued and the metal content is only worth 1.2 cents.
3.) Silver Eagle dollars. 1 troy oz silver. Current spot market value is $4.56 to sell to the coin dealers, but anywhere from $7-9 to purchase from the coin dealer.
All the above US issued are legal tender money, but only one is Constitutional.
NORFED silver certificates are fully redeemable for the amount of silver they are backed by. If the market value of the silver were to go to $20 troy oz then you could redeem your current $10 certificate for the promised 1 troy oz coin.
You can't say the same for Federal Reserve Note.
To: Grand Old Partisan
Ever heard of e-gold or goldmoney.com? The gold stays in the depository, not your pocket. Members can electronically transfer title to physical gold to one another. If a bank took deposits of gold coin, it would be possible to write checks as before, to account for the coin using the same computers that account for dollars.
27
posted on
02/13/2003 2:17:33 PM PST
by
Jason_b
To: IMHO
Looks like the fedgov has been bankrupt since March 1933 which was around the time Roosevelt seized all the gold. An interesting debate going on in some legal reform groups is whether we even have anything that would be considered "lawful money".
To: Centurion2000
I forget which federalist it was, probably 44 or 69, that talks about why the states are prohibited from coining money. The writer of that federalist said it was more a matter of not wanting to have all sorts of sizes and shapes and weights in circulation. That's all. So the task of coining was left to the federal government that would control the size and shapes of the denominations and keep them uniform. If the states did decide to coin, it would not be a violation of the rights of people as long as the pieces contained the correct amount of silver or gold. For Congress to impose on the people base-metal tokenage, and Federal Reserve Notes has been an unthinkable violation of the people's Constitutional rights. It has resulted in massive wealth transfers and violations of property rights. That is not what the founders intended for us.
29
posted on
02/13/2003 2:24:50 PM PST
by
Jason_b
To: american spirit
Federalist 69 towards the end makes clear that proscribing rules concerning the nation's currency is a power the president does not have. FDR was a tyrant pure and simple and the confiscation was unconstitutional.
30
posted on
02/13/2003 2:28:30 PM PST
by
Jason_b
To: american spirit
Yes we still have lawful money but it trades at a premium to the current paper scam. Just like it did during the Civil War.
Silver Eagle dollar 1 troy oz coins are anywhere from $7-9 each.
Gold Eagle dollar coins are minted as 1/10, 1/4, 1/2 and 1 troy oz coins. The values on the coins are $5, $10 (should be $12.50), $25, and $50. A 1 Troy oz gold eagle can be purchased at about $15-25 over the current spot gold price.
(Smaller coins have higher premium because they can be used in jewelry as necklaces and rings.)
That would put real constitutional money as $1 real money is equal to about $7.25 in Fed Notes. Or a 7.25:1 ratio in exchange.
To: Chewbacca
The 7.25:1 ratio was only for gold at the current spot market gold price.
For silver the market values the spot price at 1:4.56 currently.
Thus silver is undervalued and a screaming buy of a life time for investment purposes!
To: steve50
This ensured the right of anyone who had money coming to him to demand payment in gold and silver coin. You can thank Roger Sherman for this being in the Constitution. He made sure it was put in after some business associate tried to pay a debt to him in depreciated paper money of another state. Roger didn't want depreciated paper money, he wanted the full value and that could only be had in gold and silver. So Sherman secured to all citizens the right to take payment in gold and silver coin. Of course the states took taxes in gold and silver coin, not paper, not banknotes. But not because the Constitution proscribed it, but because paper was never considered as good as gold or silver and it was foolish to take paper when you can have gold. Sherman ensured to the people the same right that the state governments had, to refuse paper. It is very specific. Gold and silver COIN.
33
posted on
02/13/2003 2:40:01 PM PST
by
Jason_b
To: Chewbacca
"All paper money currently issued by the Federal Reserve is backed up by nothing but empty promises..."
Would you please inform me exactly what a Federal Reserve Note promises me, an empty promise though it may be?
34
posted on
02/13/2003 2:46:45 PM PST
by
Jason_b
To: Jason_b
Have you read The Coming Battle by M.W.Walbert?
It was published in 1899.
Dry reading I admit but it is very illuminating in how our forefathers attempted to hold back central banking and the devaluation of our currency.
The day Kennedy was buried the first federal reserve notes were released to start replacing the current, at that time, 1963, the silver certificates that were in circulation. Kennedy and Lincoln both tried to prevent a paper currency, see what happened to them.
Article I section 10 was circumvented by the Federal Reserve Act.
35
posted on
02/13/2003 3:08:39 PM PST
by
BabsC
To: Centurion2000
Correct me if I'm wrong but didn't the Constitution SPECIFICALLY prohibit banks and states from creating their own currencies ?? OK, I'll correct you. The Constitution prohibits states, and only states, from coining money. Ithaca, NY (yes, the City of Evil) has taken advantage of this to coin their own money - it's possible other cities have as well. It used to be fairly common for large companies to pay workers in company scrip - effectively their own money.
So, as long as this company isn't a state, there's no Constitutional problem.
Drew Garrett
36
posted on
02/13/2003 3:13:48 PM PST
by
agarrett
To: BabsC
I actually have had the book for a couple years. Have not found the time to read it though.
Read somewhere that around the time of 1964, as they were phasing out silver, some people were careful to take their silver certificates to the treasury to get the silver dollar. The day came when instead of giving out silver dollars, they gave little envelopes of powder said to contain a dollar's silver. That was a violation of the Constitution's specific reference to COIN but never mind. They were told if they made an attempt to heat the powder to get the silver out, that the substance mixed in with it would chemically combine with and destroy the silver. I don't know if this is true but it sounded like a true story. And I wouldn't put such a thing past those crooks to pass out envelopes of silver no one can use. Now they just tell you to get lost.
37
posted on
02/13/2003 3:26:53 PM PST
by
Jason_b
To: Centurion2000
Correct me if I'm wrong but didn't the Constitution SPECIFICALLY prohibit banks and states from creating their own currencies ??When I was a kid, I can remember that sometimes local merchant groups or Chambers of Commerce would issue tokens (wooden nickels or perhaps some kind of metal coin) that could be used as "money" among participating merchants. Basicly, it's a marketing gimmick.
This sounds kinda like the same deal, only they're using silver.
If I had to guess, it probably means there's 10¢ worth of silver in their dollar token.
To: agarrett
"the City of Evil) has taken advantage of this to coin their own money "
You are confused. Look it up in a law dictionary if you don't believe me. You are mixing up the ideas of printing paper with striking coins.
Some fellow in ithaca prints papers denominated in hours. If it takes an hour to give granny a hairdo, and the salon takes "hours" then granny can pay an "hour" bill. As long as there is a community of people who accept it in business the hours circulate. Granny has hours to spend because of her hobby earns her a few hours.
Coining money is specifically running a mint that produces precious metal coins. This is not what goes on in Ithaca.
Private mints have operated lawfully at various times of US history. Their product was accepted as "trade currency" but when a creditor took someone to court, he was entitled to be paid in US coin.
By the way, to delegate to Congress the power to coin money and regulate the value thereof, is not the same thing as saying they have the power to give us the Federal Reserve System and all that paper. They have the power to strike gold and silver coin. That is all. We (the US) have been chewed up and spit out by the money power. I don't have hope that we will ever be able to make things right again.
39
posted on
02/13/2003 3:42:22 PM PST
by
Jason_b
To: Willie Green
This sounds kinda like the same deal, only they're using silver. If I had to guess, it probably means there's 10¢ worth of silver in their dollar token.I'm holding a $10 NORFED Silver Liberty in my hand right now, and it's one troy ounce of .999 fine silver. No need to make uneducated guesses when you're on FreeRepublic.
40
posted on
02/13/2003 3:49:12 PM PST
by
mvpel
(Michael Pelletier)
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