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#31 | |
Navy Seal
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#32 |
Soaring
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Says the great monopolised looter and crminal, the state. I say: natural law: finders, keepers. They can get it from me if it is so precious to them. They will need to pay me for it, however, and I will set the price at what it is worth to them, and me. Either a price can be agreed on, or not. The minimum is the material price of the gold, and then plus X.
The only exception is that the previous owner still lives and can be found. Then it is his. But a state never is a legitmised owner of anything. Whatever a state claims to own, it has plundered and stolen and expropriated. Land. claims for what is on the land, and within the ground. So in the end even archeological findings come down to: property rights again. Anything else is just a mixture of sentimentality and vague dreaming about something one does not wish to define precisely, living by the illusion that the naming a material value of something would devalue its attributed immaterial value, which is a very subjective quality. But you do not and cannot sell the memory you link to and the emotional value you therefore attribute to that gold coin that has been possessed by your family since long, you only can demand price for the material value of the gold and the value the collector attributes to it, for whatever his reasons may be.
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#33 | ||||
Stowaway
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I did, but I was very very happy they did. What about that idiot who tried to corner the silver market recently? that was funny. Quote:
Do you somehow think the diamond racket works on a voluntary basis too? You seem to labour under the illusion that governments and institutions are unable to manipulate markets. Funnily enough the trade for porcelain played a major role in one of the massive failures of the silver standard. I would have thought someone who is such a fan of metal standards would be aware of the patterns it produces. Then again if they was aware of it they wouldn't be such a massive fan would they? ![]() Quote:
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#34 | |||||||||||||||||
Lucky Jack
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![]() Those are more than reasonable scenarios, essentially focusing on the collapse of communications and infrastructure which leads to the collapse of the current economic system and social order. I'll come back to these scenarios later. ![]() Quote:
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In this aftermath, will come the die-offs, first the elderly, infirm and those who rely on medications, such as diabetes and the like, then those who are unable to adapt to the new situation, and then finally those who the surrounding infrastructure is unable to support. A recent investigation by a Washington think tank, the 'Center for Security Policy' predicted that nine out of ten Americans will die within the first year following an EMP event across the continental US. During this period, gold will be worthless, absolutely worthless to anyone who is looking to survive. Food, water, and medicine will be worth much much more than even an ingot of gold. If there is any form of trade it will be done via the barter system, not through any form of currency. Quote:
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![]() Skybird, you read books fairly frequently I imagine. Have you read "One Second After" by William Forstchen? If you haven't then I really suggest you give it a go, it's one of the more realistic of the doomsday scenarios I have read, and although it takes place in America, I imagine that the situation could be transplanted into any real country that's bigger than Heligoland. We both know how far civilization would fall back in the event of an asteroid impact or pandemic, we both know how many would die, and we both probably realise that we would be amongst the casualties. You because, IIRC you are living in an urban area, and me because of health reasons. Both our odds are reduced by these facts, you would likely become one of the 'Golden horde', being forced to loot your way out of the city and having to try to buy your way into a surviving commune by offering yourself as manual labour or a militia member, and I would probably starve to death or commit suicide. Either way, gold is not going to do jack for us. ![]() |
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#35 |
Navy Seal
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No, says a person interested in history that sees beauty in the craft of our ancestors, the proof that they were able to manually produce things as accurately as a modern CNC machine, the story behind it and the simple romantic idea that perhaps it belonged to a direct ancestor of mine.
A person like me, that believes that life has a little more to offer than just live until you die. Now leave artifacts alone because I will not tolerate the destruction of a work of art just because you yourself believe that the only value to an object is the weight of the material. So no, the state didn't say that, I said it belongs in a museum |
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#36 |
Lucky Jack
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#37 |
Navy Seal
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#38 | |
Soaring
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That you claim it belongs into a museum, is no argument, because your interest does not allow you to loot my possessions or to expropriate me. Else you could declare an jnterest to examine my living place so that I could be kicked out and get expropriated for free. You see that l have a problem with that. I also refuse to be payed less than the material value of the item, as a minimum, because the museum has not sufficient money, or you. Have private sponsors then, donating money into a foundation, for example. I do not owe you or anybody else to accept material losses at my cost just because you do not have the money to maintain your interest, and when a public foundation cannot bring up the needed money for that museum, then the interest you claim obviously is not that high. Of course, a wallet I find on the streets, must be assumed by me to have a living legal owner, and therefore I would not take it for myself, but I would pick it up and give it to the police, or call the person myself if there are ID Papers. Morally I do not feel like beeing in the position to claim a reward, although now the law says that I can. But I wouldnt. Its not my wallet, and sl I have no claim for it or compensations, only for the costs it may have caused me to find the owner, if he wants it back, that is. If he does not want it back, and I had costs from finding it, It is my bad luck (if the found item poses no threat to others, because then it would be a case of originator principle). a
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If you feel nuts, consult an expert. Last edited by Skybird; 04-09-14 at 02:50 PM. |
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#39 |
Soaring
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![]() Oberon, I come back later. They are playing again.
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If you feel nuts, consult an expert. |
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#40 |
Lucky Jack
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#41 | |
Stowaway
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So you would refuse the payment on the market value of the particular item, but would be happy to accept the scrap value. ![]() |
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#42 | |||||||||||||
Soaring
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Also, let'S say there were two or three hundred people interested in the auction at Sothebys, some in the hall, some others via telephone. These are met by several dozen million people in Britain alone who simply do not care one bit about that soup cup. Quote:
FIAT money was created when gold items were stored in safes inside banks, and the receipts then were handed around instea dogf the (heavier gold). Banks then learned that they could strart to make deals with the stored gold, because they saw that normally not all customers simultaneously demanded their gold back. By taking interests for leasing gold around, additional abstract value was created for which no material basis existed. By this additional value, the existing currency however was devalued already, sinc ehtis pratcice led to a rai8se in ciurculating paper receipts. The fractional reservre banking wasborn and installed by politicians. They saw that by this mechanism they could spend more money than there was existing, and that they could control and manipulate the price relations on the market by the amount of paper money money they created. Receipts for gold stored in safes were turned into banknotes, and the state secured a monopoly for printing these receipts/banknotes. Et voilá, there you are. Its the principle mechanism. Of course there were individual exceptions from this blueprint model. In America for example one or two states could not pay their tropps they sent into the civil war, they had run out of gold, and so the troops were payed with written bond certifications that the state owed the soldier so and so much, combined with the promise that after the war he would be able to change this sheet of paper for pure gold dollars. But it did not happen, instead said state(s) abandoned the former gold or silver dollar completely and introduced central banks and paper money. That way, the state could left it to not paying the troops with gold. I do not know what led the Chines ein the 12 century to start experimenting with paper money, thy usually are seen as the first to have tried it - but they failed, like all others after them failed as well. Probably the ruling elites wanted to spent more than their realms could economically afford, and so they looked for ways to get rid of solid currencies and replace it with a cheat money. Later, we saw the same with medieval kings who notoriously lowered the amount of gold and silver in their coins, for which it was prerequisite of course that before they had secured a monopoly on minting, because until then, just anybody could mint coins - it did not matter and had not to be controlled, since a coin of gold is a coin of gold, and its value was negotiated by market participants basing on its weight (in ounces) and the purity of the gold in it. Like consumers avoid bad producers today and their products, forgers faced problems to barter their inferior coins as well. Quote:
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Take a 1 ounce gold coin, and you see they give you the material value for it (plus minting costs, thats' why buying old in bars is cheaper: no minting), around 960 Euros in fiat currency. Melt it or brake it into pieces, and seer what you get for them. It will be around 960 Euros. With bars, the value tends to stay the same, with coins, if some collector sees a sentimental desire in wanting to possess it, the trading price can be higher then. But it is stupid to buy special coins and rare collection coins as a reserve to save for disaster times, because in a TSHTF scenario, when you need to barter them for other items you need, the additional costs you had to pay for and that reflected their colelctor'S value and special rarity will not be hionoured: you payed for it, but will not get payed for them in bad times, people will only give you what the gold itself is worth to them. You are totally wrong about that the amount of gold available decides whether it is practical to use it as a currency. You can intoruce a gold stanard even if there is only one ton of gold. You only need to leave the fixing of the prices to the market, then the market will correct prices that way that the value relations of all trading goods to each others remain the same, more or less. It is the state messing this up, because politicians would loose importance if they do not make people believe that they must control the amount of money circulating, and controling inflation to not have it to low or too high. Criminal braindead idiots! If the amount of currency triples over night, in the following days prices will triple as well. If the amount of circulating currency drops to one tenth of its former volume, in prices the decimal will move one digit to the left. Ther eis nothing wrong in having a reserve banking system, and storign your gold in their safes for a fee, and getting receipts, and trading these receipts. Do it, it does no harm. The arch-sin lies in the FRACTIONAL reserve keeping. As long as there are no more receipts in circulation then there is gold covering them located in the banks ALL TE TIME, and the gold not being traded around parallel to the receipts (which would mean an increase of the circulating currency but prices NOT ADAPTING to that and no additional material value being present in the world), as long as you keep it this way, it nevertheless is effectively a gold standard currency, and when you stored ten ounces of gold in the bank's safe, in no way does it matter whether you have one receipt for ten ounces of gold, or five receipts for 2 ounces of gold each. Think about it, the very monent a bank does not maintain full reserves for all receipts it gave out, but keeps only 99 ounces of gold where receipts for 100 ounces of gold had been given out, this bank is BANCRUPT. It cannot honour all it'S payback obligations, if the owners of those ten ounces of gold demand back all the 100 ounces they had agreed to store in that safe. On an earlier opportunity I illustrated that the real world math is much much worse, and that banks must maintain only tiny fractions in reserve assets, and fractions of fractions, and fractions of fractions of fractions and so on. That is the reason why our fisacla systenm is destroying all the weklath and wonderful things we have build. We build it in super-speed except of letting it grow, and we build on quicksand. For these two reasons, our creation will not last. [quote] It all depends on the worth of the object in the situation. Although the reusability of gold does give it an advantage over paper and composite metal coins, I won't argue that. However, it would need to be a relatively minor disaster in order for gold to not initially lose its value. The history of mankind over the past thousands of years have judged over that already. By empirical experience we can say that the probability is most in our favour if we need to barter for items, help, food, shelter, escape in a state of emergency. Not iron coins. I can only reiterate: gold has not been given the wide acceptance to serve as a value safe for no reason. Gold and silver showed to be better qualified to serve that purpose, than any other items being used before. In the cosmos, indication are that gold is anything but a rare element out there. If we would run space travel programs worth the name, and would have access to other world'S rssoucesd, we probablöy would be drowning in gold, and today would use it to piant toys for children with it. Then , something else would take over the bartering function of it. But that is science fiction, and does not lead us anywhere, for us there only is that gold that were have access to. Also we find no value in recalling that the Indians in Central and South America had so much gold that it was nothing precious for them at all, whereas for the Spaniards, it was, obviously. Not mkly where the Indians drowning in gold, they also had a different and less developed, economic system, which was part of why their society already were in trouble when the Spaniards arrived. I follow those theoreticians claiming that their society would have collapsed anyway even without the Spaniards, the Spaniards only were a catalysator speeding up the development. Now some people want to spank me again, I can imagine. ![]() We live in the global world of today, and we have had the global hsitory of people int he way it has been. And that is why gold for us is what it is. . Quote:
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In fiscal downbreaks, gold is easier to hiden, than huge quantities of big things. It also can be traded on the black market with less attention-raising, than a big painting by Monet. Quote:
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From some point on, gold will be worthless more or less, and a knife is precious. But that describes a state of civilisation that has so ow a development level that associated qualities of higher development level do n ot play a role anymore anyway. So what do you want to tell me here? that becasue from some point, if thigns really get bad, gold will be of no use anymore and thus it is of no use already right now and also not of any use on the way from now to then? Ypou can barter your gold for ammunition, or medications. but when you have run out of both - what then? And is there any argument in this to not buying ammunition or medication before? Hardly. Quote:
But a nice hyperinflation, a breakdown of the EU and a growing hostility between european states again. Maybe the need to flee. A continetal pandemic spreading so fast that states' authority collapse and people all by themsleves must try to flee and get through to somewhere. That are the kind of scenarios I think about, not the overtkill monsters that will just crack up this planet in overkill and render all and everything useless effort in vein anyway. Quote:
To use your nice word again: Money is nothing else than one commodity amongst many others that get traded and bartered, the only thing that sets it apart is that it is agreed to be used as an intermediary more often than other goods, resources or commodities. Its price and value gets and MUST BE negotiated by free people on a free market. Not by a state, that destroys the meaning of money only.
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#43 | ||
Stowaway
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![]() CAPSLOCK definitely struck there. Both are exactly the same thing, both are a gamble based on possible future fluctuations in value. Quote:
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#44 |
Navy Seal
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It's not like you worked for it.
You found it. There was no expedition with a plane ticket and a team of mercenaries. You were planting lettuce in the garden and you were lucky. If you get €1000 for it it's my monthly wage but it took you only 5min to earn it. So tell me again how the state is trying to swindle you by giving you money for something you only stumbled upon. |
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#45 | |
Soaring
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Did I work for it? Well - does it matter? Even more, I may be a treasure hunter, I may have made invetsments into a search, buying equipment and such. But againb, that also is not important. That you work for a loan does not give you any claim for something that I own, because you do not work for me and I do not owe you a wage. And when i find something and there is no legal owner who owns it since before (like my example with the wallet), then it is mine, no matter whether you have a job or not. If the owner of the wallet died after loosing it, and he had kids or a wife or next of kin, then it is part of their heritage, and it belongs to them when I find it. But if there is no such people, in case of the owner having died the wallet then is mine. That's life, Betonov, and things could as well happen the other way around. We are not all the same, life owes us not to treat everybody the same. The moment you stumble over a piece of unowned, unclaimed land, and put a fence around it and by that act alone turn it into somethign that has been changed from its natural state - it is yours. Finders, keepers. And just in case you think so, the terms "justice" and "social solidarity" have no room in all this. Both are only overkill battle terms to silence resistence to socialist collectivism. But that can only be had at the cost of eroding the meaning of both terms. It is not soldiariuty by me if I get forced to it, then it is just force and pressure, not solidarity, because solidarity must be voluntarily decided upon by me: I decide and nobody else with whom I want to show solidarity or not. Justice has something to do with the causality in linking deed and consequence by a concept of responsibility. It is not just if somebody makes a claim for somebody else and what he latter allegedly "owes" to the first (in transfer payments, in taxes,m in social solidarity). That is not justice, but declaring slavery and ownership by one man over the other. You want the gold statue I found in the woods and that is 2000 years old? Well, buy it from me. It weighs 120 ounces, so I calculate around 3600 Euros, and since I see it is dear to you, I add 200 Euros, because I think you will pay it, since that statue's form is of more interest for you, than for me. If you do not buy it for 3800 Euros, I melt it and sell it to somebody else for 3600 Euros. that will make you think twice about those 200 Euros. Nothing immoral there, Betonov. Nothing that I would owe you because of your job. I was lucky when finding that statue (if not having systematically searched for it), I must not be proud since I accomplished nothing - but I can enjoy my luck. ![]()
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If you feel nuts, consult an expert. Last edited by Skybird; 04-10-14 at 05:43 AM. |
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