Ron Paul: The World Is Once Again Considering
The Official Use of Gold In The Monetary System
Dr. Paul explains how the financial chaos we see today has brought back
the debate over the exact role for gold. Here’s the details… Introduction: Where We Are
It’s a fallacy to believe the US has a free market economy. The
economy is run by a conglomerate of individuals and special interests, in and
out of government, including the Deep State, which controls central economic
planning.
Rigging the economy is required to prevent market forces from
demanding a halt to the mistakes that planners continuously make. This
deceptive policy can last only for a limited time. Ultimately, the market
proves more powerful than government manipulation of economic events. The longer
the process lasts, the greater the bubble that always bursts. The planners in
charge have many tools to perpetuate confidence in an unstable system, but
common sense should tell us that grave dangers lie ahead.
Their policies strive to convince the unknowing that the dollar
is strong and its status as the world’s reserve currency is secure, no matter
how many new dollars they create of out of thin air. It is claimed that our
foreign debt is always someone else’s fault and never related to our own monetary
and economic mismanagement.
Official government reports inevitably claim inflation is low
and we must work harder to increase it, claiming price increases somehow
mystically indicate economic growth.
The Consumer Price Index is the statistic manipulated to try to
prove this point just as they use misleading GDP numbers to do the same. Many
people now recognizing these reports are nothing more than propaganda. Anybody
who pays the bills to maintain a household knows the truth about inflation.
Ever since the Great Depression, controlling the dollar price of
gold and deciding who gets to hold gold was official policy. This advanced the
Federal Reserve’s original goal of demonetizing precious metals, which was
fully achieved in August 1971. Today, even though the official position of all
central banks is that gold is not money, central bankers constantly rig the
dollar price of gold, pretending the dollar is stronger than it really is. Just
as the market overrode the artificial price of $35 per ounce in the 1970’s,
today’s price will soar when the dollar is dethroned as the king of the world’s
currencies.
In the rigged financial system, stock and bond prices are kept
artificially high for the wealthy on Wall Street. To do this, interest rates
have to be kept below market rates—which is a major contributing factor to
gross economic distortions and financial bubbles.
The false belief setting the stage for an economic crash is the
doctrine of “deficits don’t matter,” endorsed universally in the nation’s
capital, has been going on for decades. We are destined to soon find out that
deficits do matter, and matter very much. Denying economic truth and common
sense for long periods of time always ends badly.
If one were to listen only to the MSM recite government economic
reports, concerns for the future would be minimal. Low unemployment rates,
negligible inflation, no hot war going on, and the US remains the wealthiest
and militarily the most powerful nation in history. Are the worriers
justified in their concerns?
There are a lot of them yet the Fed doesn’t seem to be
concerned, but then again it has never warned of trouble ahead, even when a
major correction was at our doorstep. This is either because the Fed chairmen
don’t know any better, or they don’t want to panic the people into preparing
for a crisis by knowing the truth. My guess is that it’s both.
One thing for sure is that middle class America is not of much
concern to the money managers. What occupies their minds is how to protect Wall
Street from any financial crisis that might arise. The monetary elite are alert
as to who will be blamed, and the Fed in particular, must be protected.
Since 1987, it’s been the responsibility of the Plunge
Protection Team (the president’s Working Group on Financial Markets) to protect
Wall Street from sudden and severe corrections in the stock and bond markets.
There are four powerful agencies that secretly can do just about
anything they care to do to protect the monetary elites. They are: the Federal
Reserve Bank, the US Treasury Department, the Securities and Exchange
Commission, and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. It’s my opinion that
the Treasury’s Exchange Stabilization Fund, which was funded by gold
confiscated in 1934 by FDR at $20 per ounce and immediately repriced at $35, is
still “legally” permitted to be engaged in the gold market and foreign exchange
rates.
The key individuals, involved in any rescue operation during a
financial crisis, are the Fed Chairman, the Treasury Secretary, the Chairman of
the SEC, and the CFTC. We can be assured that they were quite active in the
financial crisis of 2007 and in the years of quantitative easing failures that
followed. Today’s amazing stock market “success” (as of January 2018) is
especially interesting since there is a net outflow of funds from the market.
This means that the PPT has been successful in delaying the major correction
that is required.
Abnormally low interest rates permit buybacks, mergers, and
direct intervention in purchasing stocks and bonds by the PPT or by its allies
around the world, with funds clandestinely provided by the Fed, to prop up the
market and manipulate the gold price. There’s good reason the financial elite
hysterically oppose an audit of the Fed.
If more people knew how fragile the economy is and what is
required to hold things together, there would be a lot less optimism. But the
bigger question is: Do people accept the government’s favorable reports on the
state of the nation’s economy?
Even the mediocre GDP reports overstate economic growth. Since
2008, government debt has grown much faster than GDP, which some claim supports
the notion that the more debt the Congress runs up, the better off the economy
will be, rather than admitting there’s been no overall growth.
The increase in prosperity has been limited to the already
wealthy. It is true that the rich are getting richer and the middle class is
being wiped out. Belief in this fiction is limited, and the seriousness of the
problem, that more than half the population now realizes, explains the anger
and frustration the people feel. Debt may make one feel wealthier on the short
term but it is not wealth.
There are many reasons why Americans should be deeply concerned.
Evidence readily exists that our prosperity and our liberties are threatened.
Our bipartisan foreign policy of interventionism is needlessly driving us
toward a major military conflict. In the last several decades, the US has
engaged in constant military conflict remaking the Middle East and
elsewhere. Whether it’s a Republican or Democrat administration, the policy
remains the same— an obsession to constantly aggravate Russia, China, Iran,
North Korea, Syria, Iraq, and Afghanistan. One of these days we can expect the
victims of our interventions in their internal affairs, to declare “enough is
enough” and gang up against us. The American people will likewise get tired of
financing our senseless warmongering policies and demand that they stop.
Our economy is burdened with multiple problems: unsustainable
government deficits at all levels; unfunded liabilities; student loan debt;
stagnant wages; lingering consequences of the Fed’s QE policy; gross
mal-distribution of wealth which generates huge social conflicts; a broken
educational system; a breakdown of the family unit affecting all races and
classes; and excessive dependence on government benefits and special interest
privileges— all of which contribute to anger, frustration, and concern for the
future.
Corruption in government is epidemic. Few people believe the
lies our officials tell us and most Americans know that the truth-tellers, i.e.
the whistle-blowers, are punished, while the criminals in government are
rewarded. Commissions, special investigations, and prosecutors are set up to
investigate government malfeasance, but instead are used to cover up mistakes
and political crimes and never to seek the truth.
Economic conditions, our disastrous foreign policy, and the
worsening moral chaos all justify the disillusionment of the American People.
Polls show more than 70% of Americans believe the sinister Deep State is in
charge of running our government, not our elected leaders.
Because of the dangerous financial situation in which we find
ourselves, many people now recognize that it’s caused by the massive debt that
results from excessive government spending on war and welfare. It’s becoming
common knowledge that this constant spending beyond our means could not occur
without the Federal Reserve accommodating congressional spendthrifts with
endless monetary inflation. This is why the call for monetary reform is getting
louder. These dangers prompt a growing number of people to plan for an
alternative monetary system. This is good news.
The reason deep concern about monetary policy is so important,
is that it acknowledges how our current political system is failing. It
confirms that the policy of central economic planning, inflationism by central
bankers, the swollen welfare/warfare state, the casual acceptance of deficit
financing, and corporatism has failed. Though it is self-evident, the
politicians remain in denial. The constant and outrageous petty partisan fights
that dominate the news, distracts from the failure of the current policies,
which both parties endorse. They’re “all Keynesians now.”
The struggle is simply over power and whose special interests
are being served. The issue of authoritarianism versus voluntarism is never
considered. The constant political noise we’re exposed to avoids dealing with
the significance of monetary policy. The main purpose of the Federal Reserve is
to finance an immoral and unworkable system. Much can be achieved with a better
understanding of how the monetary system works. A growing interest in
market-driven competing currencies and sound money offers an opportunity to
challenge the relationship of fiat money and government tyranny.
The Case for Gold
For years, as a Member of Congress, I supported the principle of
competing currencies in the market place, offering legislation that would
eliminate the Fed’s monopoly control of monetary policy. This included removing
sales and capital gains taxes on silver and gold, if the market chose to use
them as money. The fraud of counterfeiting US currency, as is routinely
committed by the central bank, would be prohibited. This is consistent with Hayek’s
proposal for the denationalization money, “an idea whose time has come.”
The beneficiaries of the current fiat system will vigorously
resist such a plan. Control over money has been cherished, for thousands of
years by all forms of governments, in collusion with bankers. This partnership
has been destructive to the middle class while enriching the well off. The
unfairness of a fiat monetary system frequently has led to dangerous social and
political upheavals. Our current system is drifting in that direction and has
prompted the current interest in monetary reform.
There are several major efforts being made to replace the fiat
dollar with gold or cryptocurrencies, while other countries are making plans to
challenge the dollar as the world’s reserve currency.
The collapse of the Bretton Woods Agreement in 1971 created
monetary chaos the following decade, with gold going from $35 per ounce to an
astounding $800. Very high price inflation of 15% and interest rates as high as
21% resulted, along with a very weak dollar. In 1980 Congress enacted
legislation directing a commission be set up to study the role of gold in the
monetary system. President Carter signed the bill into law and the “Gold
Commission” met in 1981. I was a member of that 17 member commission, which was
stacked against gold supporters 15 to 2. The establishment easily won the
“debate” to continue and massively expand the fiat dollar standard,
guaranteeing that the problems we now face would be much worse.
My dissenting views, co-signed by Lewis Lehrman, were published
in the book “The Case for Gold.” The only positive outcome
was the Commission’s recommendation that the US Treasury mint gold and silver
eagles. This was another significant step away from FDR’s 1933 executive order
that made it illegal for American citizens to own gold. Legislation passed in
1975 nullified that E.O.
The world now, under very different circumstances, is once again
considering official use of gold in the monetary system. A growing consensus
agrees that a world-wide monetary crisis is fast approaching and once again the
importance of gold as money is being discussed. Those who benefit from the fiat
dollar standard are not pleased with this renewed interest in gold, nor with
the possibilities that blockchain technology may provide a nongovernment
alternative to the current system of money and banking. The principle of gold
as money has been acknowledged for thousands of years and is not going to be
ignored any time soon.
The current financial chaos brought back the debate over the
exact role gold should play in the international monetary system. There are
many signs that various governments are considering using gold as an
alternative to the fiat dollar. China for the past three years has been a net
seller of dollar denominated assets and a major importer of gold. It is making
an effort to popularize a gold Yuan to be used in place of the dollar in
international oil transactions. China may well have more clout in this endeavor
than is generally realized. Other countries like Russia, India and Brazil are
cheering the Chinese on and are net purchasers of gold. The US, picking a fight
in a senseless trade war with China, only adds to that country’s resolve to
stand up to our domineering attitude.
Provoking China with threats over sea lanes isn’t necessary and
provides no benefit. China has near monopoly control over rare earth minerals,
which, if needed by other countries, can be used as leverage against us in a
trade or currency war with them. China has an advantage of being a creditor
nation, while we are the world’s largest debtor nation. As conditions deteriorate
this will become a big problem for us and aid China and others in their efforts
to implement an alternative currency to the dollar.
We’re in a precarious position with China, and the importance of
gold is going to be more beneficial to them than to us when the monetary crisis
hits. We will no longer be in the driver’s seat in world financial matter as we
have been in the past 100 years.
Just figuring out exactly where physical gold sits and who
actually owns it is a challenge. It is believed that essentially all the gold
discovered in human history still exists somewhere. It’s durability and
universal attractiveness are what throughout the ages, has qualified it as the
most unique and desired commodity to be used as money. Approximately 190,000
tons have been mined to date: all of this gold would fit into a cube 23 yards
on each side.
Already the approaching currency crisis has prompted some
countries to repatriate their gold from the safe havens chosen during the
various crises that occurred in the 20th Century. US vaults were especially
popular during the various wars in Europe. The effort today by some countries
to get their gold back reflects a growing loss of confidence in the dollar and
America’s stature around the world to be the “keeper of last resort.” Our weak
financial condition is not being ignored. Government spending and huge deficits
are unsustainable and we’re starting to pay a price for it.
There is now a growing awareness of a problem in locating gold,
identifying exactly who the owners are, and determining how much of it has been
loaned out without its rightful owner’s knowledge. This is now acknowledged as
a common practice. The effort to return some gold has not gone smoothly. Delays
and excuses are common. Germany, Italy, Hungary, Austria and the Netherlands
are asking that their gold be returned from the countries where it has been
stored.
The current Treasury Secretary, Steven Mnuchin, was curious
enough about gold to visit Fort Knox, in Kansas, something only two other
Treasury Secretaries had bothered to do. He joked that: “I assume the gold is
still there,” but added that “the gold was safe.” This is something nobody can
be sure of since the last audit was in 1953.
During the Gold Commission hearings in 1981, I proposed that we
request an audit of US gold holdings. The request was defeated 15 to 2. I
suspect that access to this gold is available only to the “Deep State” and not
to the American People from whom it was taken at $20 per ounce.
Central bankers are coy about gold’s importance as a monetary
metal. Former Fed Chair Benjamin Bernanke, at one of our hearings, claimed
flatly that gold was not money. When I pressed Bernanke on why, then, do
central banks hold gold, he declared that after a long pause that it was merely
“tradition.” He had no interest in my suggestion that the gold could be sold
off to the American people if it’s not money. The point is that due to today’s
impending crisis, many governments are now accumulating more gold—while others
are holding onto what they have with the expectation it will once again be used
in the monetary system.
Even former Chair Alan Greenspan has had an on-again off-again
favorable relationship with gold. Basically, when working within the
establishment he was anti-gold, but as a private citizen he has been much more
sympathetic. This is what he had to say about gold in 1966, in his frequently
quoted article, Gold
and Economic Freedom: “…gold and economic freedom are inseparable
…government deficit spending under a gold standard is severely limited.” And
more: “The abandonment of the gold standard made it possible for the welfare
statists to use the banking system as a means to an unlimited expansion of
credit” (by the Federal Reserve). He closed his article with a couple truisms:
“In the absence of the gold standard, there is no way to protect savings from
confiscation through inflation. There is no store of value…Deficit spending is
simply a scheme for the confiscation of wealth. Gold stands in the way of this
insidious process.”
In private, I asked Greenspan about this article and
surprisingly he said that he had just recently reread it and still totally
agreed with it. When I met with him I had an original copy of the article
(from The Objectivist
Newsletter) with me, which he agreed to autograph. While signing
it, I asked if he’d like to add a disclaimer. He said there would be no need
for that. Since leaving the Fed, he has said a few things that were slightly
favorable to gold. We must remember though, it’s what people do, not what they
say, that reflects the “Truth Standard.” That’s what counts.
Paul Volcker became Chairman of the Fed on August 7, 1979. His
responsibility was to end the economic debacle of the 1970s that resulted from
the breakdown of the Bretton Woods monetary system, established in 1945 after
WWII. Ironically Volcker was involved in Nixon’s decision to close the gold
window and thus usher in the fiat dollar standard which we now find is on its
last legs. At the time, he was the Undersecretary for Monetary Affairs under
Treasury Secretary John Connally.
The task of reversing the 15% inflation rate and interest rates
of 21% was not an easy one. Volcker was well aware of the political
consequences of ratcheting down money growth in a weak economy. During this
time, gold had reacted predictably by going from $35 per ounce in 1971 to over
$800 in 1980. But since the gold price reflects dollar confidence, or the lack
thereof, this was annoying to Volcker. He declared that gold, and those who
“speculated” in it, were the enemy. Actually, the gold price was a helpful
indicator since once the money supply growth was restrained the gold price
drifted back to $300 per ounce. Volcker had a tough job, but the problem was
created by the Fed and the failure of the Bretton Woods pseudo-gold
standard—both of which caused the financial crisis of the 1970’s. It was the
absence of an honest gold standard that was the problem. Gold was not the
enemy.
During this period of turbulence Chairman Volcker invited me to
a private breakfast with him and his aide. Lew Rockwell, my chief of staff at
the time, accompanied me. Lew and I, along with Volcker’s staffer, arrived
first. When Volcker arrived and before any greetings were exchanged, he
immediately went to his aide and with some urgency asked: “What’s the price of
gold”? In reality what he was asking: “How’s the dollar doing? The price was
somewhere in the $700 range. It impressed me how important the gold price was
to him. We had a cordial breakfast, which dealt with some legislation he was anxious
for me to support. Volcker, although part of the establishment, came across as
decent and respectful.
Since leaving the Fed Volcker has indicated that he’s open to
the proposal for a new Bretton Woods type arrangement. He’s always favored a
rule-based system. I believe he now recognizes, due to the mess we’re in today,
we need some central bank rules that incorporate gold. This is a break with the
narrative, and shows that even central bankers are concerned that the current
system needs reformed. It shouldn’t be difficult to convince any reasonable
observer that Bretton Woods was a complete failure— and its replacement, the
fiat dollar standard, has caused a much greater world-wide crisis than we faced
in the 1970’s.
In a private conversation I had with then president Ronald
Reagan, about 10 years after the breakdown of the Bretton Woods Agreement, he
stated flatly that: “any time a great nation went off the gold standard it no
longer would remain great.” This has turned out to be an appropriate statement,
since our “greatness” has been on the wane for quite some time.
Thoughts on the History of
Gold and its Moral Significance
Throughout history, governments have defrauded their people by
debauching the currency. Gold was required time and again to restore confidence
in currencies and to reestablish economic order. If history is any guide, gold
will play a significant role in the monetary system again. This will be met
with stiff resistance from those who are currently in charge of the monetary
system, and from some of those who are offering cryptocurrencies as an option.
The option to use gold or cryptocurrencies requires that governments permit
legal competition to their money monopoly. That will not be achieved easily.
When it comes to competing currencies, gold with its very long
history, has an edge over the recent efforts to devise a currency using
blockchain technology. Gold must first be understood if it’s to be challenged
by advanced technology. Understanding the role of government in monetary affairs,
something that has existed throughout history, is also required. This is true
regardless of whether the replacement for the fiat dollar system is precious
metals, modern technology, or both.
The special nature of gold, its beauty and usefulness, has been
recognized from the beginning of time, even before it was used in trade. The
first evidence of a written language was approximately 3400 BC. There’s
evidence that Egyptian pharaohs valued gold in a special manner, as it was used
in religious ceremonies and incorporated in the ancient pyramids as early as
3000 BC. Purifying gold by smelting was accomplished as early as 3600 BC by the
Egyptians. This enhanced its beauty and value, inviting its use in art and
jewelry.
It took a long time before the first international gold standard
was established by King Croesus of Lydia in 564 BC. This sequence of events is
important for understanding the difference between a market developed commodity
money and a government fiat system. Some modern day anti-gold economists argue
that because Croesus arbitrarily chose to make the first coins out of gold,
others followed until it became a common practice. They claim that if he had
picked any other metal it would have sufficed as money of choice; at least
until the fraud of fiat money could be established.
This is essentially the argument Bernanke made when he dismissed
gold as a monetary metal, arguing that central banks held gold merely out of
“tradition.” Of course, that is complete nonsense. Even before gold coins
were minted, gold was eagerly sought after and was used in trade and for
estimating value. This was awkward because there was no identifiable unit of
account and retail transactions were done with barter. When coins of dependable
weight and purity were introduced, it tremendously enhanced retail
transactions, domestically and internationally.
Interestingly, one of the first things Croesus did was to pass a
law prohibiting private citizens from minting their own coins. Gold, by its
very nature as a precious metal, was chosen by the marketplace as natural
money. Croesus did not pronounce gold as money by edict. The market did it when
the people recognized the special characteristics that a commodity must have to
function efficiently as money. Over the centuries various commodities have been
used as money, many times on a temporary basis in times of emergency, but gold
and silver have survived as the precious metals of choice to be used in
providing a sound currency.
Whether it’s been tobacco, beads, sea shells, bronze, copper,
salt, stones, alcohol, tea, or various grains tested as money, their usefulness
was quite limited compared to precious metals. It was soon understood that for
a currency to be efficient, it must serve as a standard of value.
Direct barter was very inefficient as a means of exchange, yet
it lasted for thousands of years while greatly restraining the advancement of
civilization. Replacing bartering with commodity money gave a great boost to
productivity and the standard of living of average citizens. Like most great
discoveries, the idea of sound money was challenged by governments. Rulers want
to control money as a way to secure wealth and maintain power. It started with
King Croesus when he monopolized the world’s first coinage 2600 years ago, and
it continues today with the Federal Reserve clinging to its authority to manage
the worldwide fiat dollar system, even though it has caused havoc with our
current financial system.
In time, it was acknowledged that lugging heavy bags of gold
around for larger purchases was impractical and that substitutes for the
precious metals would be helpful. Though great benefits were achieved from this
change, it invited abuse and counterfeiting of the certificates representing
claims to actual metals. Even before the introduction of promissory
certificates, impure and false weight coinage was known to be used.
Counterfeiting
Man’s yielding to immorality and temptation has been with us
from the beginning of time, and it has always been a concern when dealing with
the issue of money. Biblical history is explicit in advocating morality and
honesty in all weights and measures. For hundreds of years alchemists searched
for the philosopher’s stone, hoping to convert lead into gold among other
ambitions. They were more like early chemists and didn’t qualify as a typical
modern-day counterfeiter. But their motivation to produce gold showed how they
considered it the number one choice to be used as money.
Egyptian Arabs in the 7th Century were active in this effort to
convert lead into gold. It was not just to have more gold money; they saw gold
as something very special and even spiritual, with many potential uses. If they
had been successful it would have diminished the benefits of gold as money due
to its naturally limited supply. The alchemists believed that it was the
“perfect metal” in general, while all other metals were deemed inferior. It was
believed that gold had medicinal benefits, which turned out to be true in
modern times. It’s interesting that most of the great religions recognized this
uniqueness as did the kings and pharaohs. The Magi, in recognizing Jesus as a
newborn King, brought gold as a gift to celebrate his birth. It’s this special
attitude that also made gold, for thousands of years, the most acceptable of all
items used as money.
Gold and silver frequently are mentioned in the Bible as money.
From Genesis to Revelations there are 417 references to gold and 320 to silver.
Their rarity and beauty were instrumental in achieving this special attention
that helped promote them as monetary metals.
Although gold was used in religious ornaments and recognized as
something special and superior to other metals (and thus became money), it also
motivated crime and corruption. Wars have been fought over gold throughout recorded
history. And power struggles have been resulted over gold stores needed to pay
the expenses of armed conflict. Christ was motivated to throw the corrupt money
changers out of the temple, showing his contempt for dishonest dealing in
money.
Even today we see various countries, fearful of a major
financial crisis, compete in many ways for the world’s gold. Government and
insiders rig gold and silver prices to serve their special interests, which is
currently still a common practice. In spite of a constant effort by the
so-called monetary experts to de-emphasize the importance of gold as universal
money, by holding down the market price of gold for their benefit, it only
works in the short term. Market prices always prove superior to all government
wage and price controls, even if it takes time and an underground market to
sort out real value.
The earliest mentions of honesty in money and the significance
of gold as money were recorded three to four thousand years ago in the Torah,
the first five books of the Bible written by Moses, which recognizes that gold
and silver were early examples of money. Since it represented a weight of a
precious metal, the admonition for “honest weights and measures” was spelled
out early and often in the Bible. Not using an honest weight in any commodity
transaction was considered theft. Today, the deliberate debasement of our
currency by monetary authorities is theft, and equivalent to counterfeiting.
Our Founding Fathers saw counterfeiting as a serious crime, deserving the death
penalty.
Reasons why Gold and Silver
Became the Premiere Money
It has been estimated that primitive bartering was used as early
as 100,000 years ago. The importance of commodity money, especially gold and
silver, started about 6,000 years ago; a comparatively new discovery. Gold and
silver, due to their special qualities, were chosen early on as the money of
choice to replace barter and facilitate more efficient trading of goods and
services. Though gold was accepted quite naturally over time as superior to
barter, we have discovered the reasons why and the unique significance of this
process only over time.
Precious metals were voluntarily chosen as money by the people
and were not designated as such by government force. Very early on though, once
the importance of money became obvious, governments took control of those
metals.
Today, the characteristics of a commodity that make it
acceptable as money are generally agreed upon. When these characteristics are
abandoned and government, for nefarious reasons, forces a fraudulent substitute
on the people, a fiat currency is established. It is then no longer a commodity
money convertible into something tangible.
There are specials characteristics of gold (and silver) that
satisfied the people looking for the most practical metal to be used as money.
1) Beauty; sought after for ornaments and jewelry. 2)Easy to identify; not
difficult for the average person to recognize. 3) Limited supply; work and
effort required to increase the supply, independent of the government. 4)
Easily divisible; can produce coins of precise weights. 5) Portable; convenient
to use in small retail trade. 6) Durable; most gold ever mined is still in
existence. 7) Precise definition; by weight and quality. 8) Difficult to
counterfeit. 9) Tangible; when confidence is questioned in a monetary
substitute, its authenticity can easily be checked by converting it into gold
or silver or whatever substance was promised. This characteristic is the brake
that limits the ability of money managers to debase the currency. History shows
that the temptation to gain wealth and power without work and effort is
overwhelming and must be enthusiastically guarded against. 10)Morality; gold
may be the best choice for a sound monetary system but it is limited by the
moral stature of those who guarantee the system, whether they are in or out of
government.
Closely related to the characteristics of commodity money, that
took years to precisely identify, are its functions that need to be understood.
There are three main functions that should be fulfill: 1) A store of value. 2)
A unit of account to serve as a standard of value, and 3) A medium of exchange.
A store of value makes money useful and conveys confidence that
its purchasing power will not be arbitrarily diminished by the creation of
additional units out of thin air by government authorities. Ships have sunk,
laden with gold and silver coins, only to be recovered hundreds of years later
with the purchasing power of the gold or silver coins intact. This does not
happen with fiat currencies. A 30 year US bond, by contrast, loses value
because the dollar is a fiat currency rather than a sound currency.
A well-defined unit of account, by weight and quality, becomes
the yardstick for measuring economic value. The purchasing power of each unit
can fluctuate, but the definition of the particular unit should be rigid. The
supply and demand for the monetary unit affects prices, just as the supply and
demand for the product or service being purchased does. This understanding
precludes the practical use of bimetallism, which attempts to fix the ratio of
gold to silver.
A practical medium of exchange is the most important function
for a commodity used as money. Hundreds of different items have been tested
over the centuries and their efficiency as money depended on the circumstances
that existed at any one particular time. Water in a desert may be superior to a
gold coin. Emergency conditions that exist with a war or a natural disaster may
provide a temporary incentive to use different commodities as money.
The monetary choice should always be made by the people
themselves and not imposed or prohibited by the government. Fraud in dealing
with the monetary unit should never be tolerated. Promises that substitutes or
certificates issued for a currency are backed by a commodity mean nothing if
there is no guarantee of convertibility. When there is no guarantee, a
commodity backed currency becomes a fiat currency. That is what occurred with
the breakdown of the Bretton Woods Agreement in 1971. The dollar then became a
pure a fiat currency which ushered in the current and worst ever, worldwide
currency and financial crisis.
The Ultimate Consequences of
Fake Money
Various types of fiat currencies have been used for centuries
and they have all ended badly. They not only present a danger to economic
prosperity, but they undermine liberty as well.
The current dollar standard is the largest fiat system the world
has ever seen. Since 1971, when the dollar became a 100% fiat currency, gross
distortions in the international financial and political system have resulted.
Since the current environment has been built on false information, generated by
monetary and interest rate manipulation and made worse by sub-prime lending,
the amount of worldwide debt and mal-investment have reached record highs.
Natural market forces always require the liquidation and correction of the
excesses that the central economic planners cause by monetary manipulation. If
sound economic growth is ever expected to return to the world economy, the
excesses of the past 17 years must be dealt with. The problems that will come
with this adjustment are huge, and will be both economic and geopolitical. How
long and painful the correction is depends on government policy, and how
serious we are about instituting sound money.
Paper money never lasts for long periods of time. Commodity
money like gold and silver can last for thousands of years.
Fiat money is institutionalized by government, which guarantees
its mismanagement.
Fractional reserve banking and its shortcomings are close
companions of fiat money and inflation.
Creating money out of thin air is a politician’s delight and a
powerful tool for incumbents. Paying for extravagant spending can be delayed
for long periods of time and the beneficiaries don’t pay; innocent victims do.
Deficits are facilitated by the Fed’s willingness to monetize
them, which would be impossible with a commodity defined currency.
Subprime interest rates add to the problem of a central bank
assuming it knows how to fix rates better than the market place.
Fiat money opens the doors for government spending that the
endless numbers of special interest groups lobby for. This is the reason both
conservatives and liberals never challenge the Fed. Both sides have their
reasons for spending and neither side shows any concern for deficits.
Being able to create money out of thin air guarantees that
spending will rise, government will grow, deficits will grow, and the nation’s
wealth will shrink.
The longer the fiat system lasts, the greater will be the
sacrifice of liberty which will be maintained with a deception of reality.
Under a fraudulent monetary system, debt in real terms becomes
impossible to pay and the required debt liquidation can be accomplished only by
debasement of the currency.
Fake money rewards the special interests most closely associated
with money managers: The Deep State, the military industrial complex, Wall
Street, and the many beneficiaries of government spending.
Unfair distribution of wealth is a characteristic of a fiat
monetary system and is seen today in its extreme, with the three richest people
in the US owning more than the bottom 50% of world’s population.
This is not a new phenomenon and always leads to social and
civil strife. Authoritarians and demagogues promote tyrannical solutions to an
unnatural inequality that was largely facilitated by dishonest money, false
promises, ignorance of economics, and loss of love for liberty.
Fiat money abhors morality and creates an immoral society. It
requires rejection of a convertible commodity standard, and can be enforced
only with powerful legal tender laws.
Economic bubbles are creatures of fiat currencies and central
bank manipulation of the money supply and interest rates.
A fiat currency eliminates a definable unit of account which is
needed for sound economic calculation.
A world run using fiat currencies, each defined by its
relationship to the US dollar as the world’s reserve fiat currency, guarantees
that competitive devaluations, trade imbalances, and trade wars will occur.
Economic conditions fueled by fiat currencies make wars, black
markets, and bartering all more likely. Legitimate substitutes and other
monetary commodities are not fiat money.
Anyone who thinks that peace and prosperity are worthy goals
must reject fiat currencies.
Recovering from the damage caused by a fiat currency is much
more difficult than rejecting the
temptation to initiate a fiat currency as the unit of account in the first
place.
Honest money is a required ally of LIBERTY
Are Cryptocurrencies the
Answer?
(Analysis is political, economic, historic; not an assessment of
blockchain and distributed ledger technology).
Gold and silver imperfectly served our monetary needs from our early history until 1971, when the last official link of the dollar to gold was severed. Even with the intervals of suspension and abuse, the importance of dollar convertibility was acknowledged, though under Bretton Woods, it was reserved only for foreign holders of dollars. This pseudo-gold standard failed to restrain the Federal Reserve from excessively creating dollars at will, and it accommodated Congress’s march toward the welfare-warfare state, financed by deficits. Predictably, this process led to the total collapse of the Bretton Woods Agreement and ushered in the era of the fiat dollar and its reign as the reserve currency of the world. This literally has provided a license to steal for the US government, and has ushered in the current financial crisis. The dollar is in the process of being dethroned from its special status and the turmoil of finding a replacement has begun.
Gold and silver imperfectly served our monetary needs from our early history until 1971, when the last official link of the dollar to gold was severed. Even with the intervals of suspension and abuse, the importance of dollar convertibility was acknowledged, though under Bretton Woods, it was reserved only for foreign holders of dollars. This pseudo-gold standard failed to restrain the Federal Reserve from excessively creating dollars at will, and it accommodated Congress’s march toward the welfare-warfare state, financed by deficits. Predictably, this process led to the total collapse of the Bretton Woods Agreement and ushered in the era of the fiat dollar and its reign as the reserve currency of the world. This literally has provided a license to steal for the US government, and has ushered in the current financial crisis. The dollar is in the process of being dethroned from its special status and the turmoil of finding a replacement has begun.
Will precious metals return to serve as the foundation to a new
system, or will the recently developed concept of cryptocurrencies participate
in a new monetary order? The proper course is to make certain that free people
in the marketplace make the choice whether the use cryptos, absent the dictates
of government and central banks. This process requires the rejection of the use
of force and fraud for any chance of achieving success.
Competition in seeking an efficient monetary unit is required in
deciding whether or not modern technology, using the blockchain concept, can
create a currency that will challenge the historic acceptance of precious metals
as money. A decision of this magnitude will take a significant amount of time
to achieve a consensus.
In the event of a total economic collapse, spontaneous use of
various dollar substitutes likely would occur. This adaptation has been used
throughout history, especially during wartime and other emergency conditions.
Let’s hope our leaders come to their senses before we have a Venezuela-like
crisis— when the necessary reforms can be accomplished more smoothly, in an
environment of legalized competing currencies. The marketplace is quite capable
of sorting out the advantages and disadvantages of cryptocurrencies and
precious metals. The biggest challenge will be to get the government out of the
way to allow this choice.
It’s conceivable that cryptocurrencies, using blockchain
technology, and a gold standard could exist together, rather than posing an
either-or choice. Different currencies may be used for certain transactions for
efficiency reasons. The desire for storage and speed can make a difference in choosing
a currency. It appears that decentralized ledger technology will also be useful
outside the sphere of digital currencies. A combination of gold and crypto will
prove to be a lot more achievable than getting people to adapt to a totally new
concept of money.
Privacy will always be a concern to those who seek to avoid
constant surveillance by the state, even when it’s for many reasons other than
taxes. Retail trade, under primitive conditions associated with a currency
crisis, will lend itself to using tangible precious metals in preference to a
digital cryptocurrency requiring active networks. Large transactions, at
greater distances, may best be served by a proven and trusted cryptocurrency
however.
The greatest challenge will be satisfying the need to provide a
currency with a precise definition of the unit of account. It cannot be
arbitrary, or confidence will not be achieved with any substitute or proposed
reform of the dollar. It was because a determined effort to maintain a precise
definition of the dollar was abandoned in 1971 that the dollar became fiat and
ushered in the financial/debt crisis that the world now faces.
The challenge today is to look to the knowledge accumulated over
thousands of years about the nature of money and apply it to modern day
technology. A workable currency must convey confidence because that’s
critically important to the average person. A guarantee that the monetary unit
can be easily and reliably exchanged for something of real value is crucial.
Throughout history all currencies, though they were made popular
in the market place, inevitably were taken over by government or a banking
entity. Since that will continue, every effort must be made to keep the
management of the monetary system out of the hands of government officials.
Hopefully, modern technology will help keep financial transactions private.
Cryptocurrencies are designed to keep business activities anonymous, yet
transparent, with blockchain technology that permits rapid transmission and
storage of information.
Because of the aggressive nature of government taxing
authorities, with the power they wield due to the guns they carry, they will
have the upper hand in ignoring our 4th Amendment
rights. This we know is just as true under a commodity standard of money. In
the midst of economic and political chaos or a severe currency crisis, simple
barter and exchange of precious metal coins could end up serving as the
ultimate survival tool. Long term reform of the monetary system needed in order
for society to survive is another matter.
After a very long period in monetary history, primitive
bartering was steadily replaced with precious metal coinage and the use of
substitutes. More rapid forms of communications, used in domestic and
international trade, tremendously improved monetary transactions over the
centuries. Supporters of cryptocurrencies and blockchain technology are
optimistic that such technology will provide faster communications and more
efficient record keeping with modern-day distributed ledger technology. The
goal is to keep all transactions both transparent and anonymous without paying
bank transaction fees. Adapting to the regulators and the taxing authorities,
while curtailing illicit expansion of the currency supply, will prove to be a
challenge.
For society to advance to the point of accepting a truly
denationalized monetary system, a significant amount of energy will be required
to rein in the power of government authoritarians. A modern day currency needs
an enlightened attitude about what the proper role for government ought to be
in a civil society.
Technological advances over the past two centuries were vital in
eliminating the cumbersome system of monetary exchange that existed with
barter, and problems making direct trades with precious metals without the
benefit of substitutes. Technological advances permitted rapid transfers of
monetary assets over great distances.
Many changes have occurred since prehistoric times when human
exchanges were done on foot or with assistance from animals and carts. Water
was transported by sailing ships, for the purposes of exchange and barter for
goods, even before precious metals were used as money. For thousands of years
these exchanges were slow and inefficient.
Travel for the purpose of fighting wars and trading, remained
tedious and slow up until the beginning of the industrial age in the early 19th century.
Sailing across the Atlantic in the 18th century
and the early part of the 19th, using only wind power, would generally take six
weeks. Business transactions and financial activities across the Atlantic in
that period were carried out at a snail’s pace.
The steam engine changed all of that. During almost the whole 18th century
many inventors experimented with steam power. It was first used for pumps that
provided tremendous assistance in the mining industry. The 19th century
was a different matter. Steam power initiated the Industrial Revolution, along
with dramatically increasing the speed of travel, financial transactions, and
trade. This, along with the use of monetary substitutes redeemable for actual
gold, spurred international trade. Instead of lugging heavy bullion around the
world, the use of certificates with a guarantee of convertibility was a great
benefit to trade. But the speed of travel, by land or sea, continued to place
limits on trade and economic growth.
The time to cross the Atlantic, after the advent of steam boats
in the first half of the 19th century, was reduced from six weeks to a little
over one week. But the transmission of information relating to financial
transactions was about to become much faster.
A huge technological development occurred in 1844 that
revolutionized the transmission of information. This benefitted news reporting,
affected vital military strategies, and dramatically improved the transfer of
financial information and monetary assets.
Sending a message via the electric telegraph was successfully
accomplished for the first time on May 24, 1844, between Samuel Morse in
Washington DC and Alfred Vail in Baltimore, Maryland. The memorable message:
“What Hath God Wrought?” was quite appropriate and accurately reflected the
huge significance of the age in which mankind was entering.
Up until that time, transmission of general information and
monetary instruments was tediously slow and cumbersome. The world became much
smaller with this invention. The Western Union Telegraphy Company successfully
laid a transcontinental telegraph line in 1861. The first successful cable to
cross the Atlantic happened in 1866. The spread of this technology worldwide
was swift, dramatically changed the speed of all communications, and was
especially beneficial in the area of banking and commerce. In 1871 Western
Union started an amazingly successful business of wiring money to almost any
place in the world. This represented an astounding improvement over sailboats,
steam ships, and railroads. In the not too distant past, it took weeks to cross
complete financial transactions across the Atlantic. This time was reduced to
days and suddenly to minutes, and greater efficiency was yet to come.
The unbelievable sudden improvement in communication speed that
was accomplished with the electric telegraph has not yet been matched. However,
the quality and choices in transmission technology has continued to make
astounding progress.
Dr. Gary North makes an interesting comparison of travel time
for information. He points out that from the time of Christ to the inauguration
of the electric telegraph, it went from 1.25 miles per hour to 186,000 miles
per second. Even with many magnificent technological improvements in the 20th Century,
none can compare to the degree of speed improvement that the telegraph
achieved. This invention was a major historic event and its speed is relatively
fixed to the speed of light. Although speed of transmission was no longer the
issue, improvements to the quality and flexibility of electronic communication
brought about miraculous developments which continue to this day.
Up until the age of the electric telegraph, the invention of the
printing press in 1454 stood out as the greatest human achievement for
spreading and preserving information.
It didn’t take long for telephone technology, developed in
latter part of the 19th Century,
to push the telegraph aside. In the 20th Century,
new technology constantly became available that improved information
transmission. The telephone was followed by the radio, television, fax
machines, and the internet, all to be used for enhancing the quality of
transfer and storage of information relating to all matters: social, medical,
aeronautical, railroads, military, and financial.
The particular “vehicle” or “process” used for these
improvements varied by wavelength, and complicated electronics and were
recognized as tools to be used to facilitate the transmission of information.
Economic value came from entrepreneurs who provided marketable
services to the public, like AT&T and Western Union, using telegraph
technology. One could not own a unit of “telegraph technology,” or radio or TV
waves. We can’t get a piece of the action by buying a “unit” of internet
transmission. To participate financially in modern day internet technology, we
have to invest in companies like Facebook or Google. The technical vehicle or
process that permitted fantastic technology to be developed, technology like
electricity and the telegraph, cannot be bought and sold like a share of
AT&T stock.
A value for transmission service can be determined, but that is
different than buying and selling a tangible asset. If a technological
process like emailing can’t be bought and sold, it cannot be used as a unit of
account and would not qualify as money. One cannot monetize, with any
precision, the activity that uses technology, but a service, like credit card
transactions, can be provided for a fee. Services, financial assets, and money
are each different from one another.
We can use technical science for advancing civilization, but no
one can “own” it. As valuable as wheel technology was, no one ever bought and
sold this technology as a piece of property. The question that can only be
answered by the market place is whether or not blockchain technology is just
another great scientific breakthrough, or can it, in combination with
cryptography, become a functional currency? The basic question boils down to
this: Do all new currencies need to be based on something tangible?
It appears that blockchain and distributed ledger technology,
like all workable scientific discoveries, is innovative and has a fantastic
future in multiple areas for efficiently transferring, storing, and securing
information. It is not considered “tangible,” in the classical definition of a
monetary unit. Time will tell if the modern ideas on crypto money will be
adaptable to the old line of thinking about the nature of money.
Being able to wire money, as early as 1871, did not make the
electric telegraph a currency— yet the technology used was the greatest
invention up until that time for transmitting financial information and money,
worldwide. The telegraph can best be described as a valuable “tool” in
commercial transactions.
Speed and efficiency of transmission of information remains a
challenge for both cryptocurrencies and banking transactions. According to
Simon Black, banks have been caught flatfooted and are feverishly competing
with the use of distributed ledger technology and cryptocurrencies. The
development of advanced systems like the “New Payments Platform,” is being done
and tested in a few banks in Australia. In the US, work is being done on an
advanced program called “Real-time Payment” (RTP) system in hopes of replacing
the commonly used, much slower process- the ACH (Automated Clearing
House).
An interesting question: how will all this technology affect the
calculation of prices if the velocity of money soars, when fears are driven by
runaway inflation? When the end stages of a fiat currency become evident, and
all confidence is lost, chaos ensues and the need for reform becomes obvious.
The need to carry bags of paper money around and spend it as quickly as
possible to protect against a rapid depreciation and rampant price increases
may never occur. Knowing how to convert rapidly depreciating fiat money
into a sound currency, of reliable value and in a way capable of storing that
value, is crucial. Obviously, being prepared before the crisis gets out of
control is preferable to watching and waiting until it’s too late to act.
Many people are already in the process of doing just that. An
Egyptian billionaire recently put one half of his $5.7 billion into gold to
protect from what he sees coming. As time goes on and the unraveling of the
economy accelerates, a lot more people will be seeking protection from the
monetary crisis.
Summary
Investors and politicians worldwide are waking up to the fact
that the current economic system of debt and fiat money is unsustainable, and
are quietly and secretly preparing for the worst. Governments will do what they
always do in a financial crisis: protect insiders and those close to the Deep
State.
Average middle-class citizens, already suffering from the
corrupt monetary system, are scrambling to find the best way to protect their
wealth and safety in these challenging times. Understanding how we got
ourselves into this mess is key to preparing for the tough times that lie
ahead.
All fiat currencies are self-limiting since they are based on
fraud and are equivalent to counterfeit. Unfortunately, they can last for
prolonged periods of time, only making the economic distortions much greater.
Prior to the establishment of the Federal Reserve in 1913, the
US did reasonably well recognizing gold and silver as legal tender as the
Constitution mandated. The Fed was started for various reasons, none of which
included maintaining a sound currency backed by gold or silver. The fiat dollar
did not arrive immediately after the Fed was established. It came seductively
and slowly in a planned strategy between 1913 and 1971.
The dollar became a total fiat currency on August 15th 1971,
the day Richard Nixon, by executive order, severed all links of the dollar to
gold. This ushered in the radical and dangerous Age of Fiat, which solidified
the American Empire and dollar hegemony. This con-game has been going on for
nearly 50 year and the concern now is about when and how this house of cards
comes down-not if.
Early on, the handwriting on the wall was recognizable when
control of the monetary system was turned over to the Fed and its bank allies
to operate in secret. Even at its inception, many recognized that the Deep
State would be sure to protect their profits and pass their losses onto the
people, and that in the long run a central bank would be devastating to our
economy.
It didn’t happen overnight, but in the past 100 years we have
inexorably marched toward the disaster which we now face. The climatic end to
the fiat dollar standard is now on the horizon.
Major events occurred along the way warning us of the dollar’s
vulnerability. FDR’s confiscation of gold from the American people in 1933 by
executive order was a recognition of our bankruptcy. By this act the US
government refused to honor its commitment to pay gold for the gold
certificates it had issued.
After WW 2 further attempts were made to institute a global fiat
currency, and the US dollar was the currency of choice. The Bretton Woods
agreement created a pseudo-gold standard that was destined to fail, as Henry
Hazlitt predicted at the time.
August 15th, 1971 confirmed
that the fiat dollar would reign for the foreseeable future. Nixon’s order
denying the convertibility of the dollar to gold to foreign holders concluded
our declaration of technical bankruptcy, commenced by FDR in 1933. This act by
Nixon should be known as an atrocious “act of infamy” for the world’s monetary
system, from which we continue to suffer.
The problems that we now face are the predictable consequence of
this experimental system of fiat money. It has been supported by an economic
and political philosophy that promoted the odd idea that “printing” unlimited
amounts of money and ignoring the dangers of debt creates wealth. This effort
to establish a utopian society, managed by a benevolent US empire, was well
received by many patriotic Americans. These well-laid plans for a permanent
“guns and butter” economy have failed, and the piper is now demanding payment.
The unwinding of history’s largest financial bubble is now upon
us, and presents many dangerous unknowns. As it evolves the seriousness of the
challenge, not yet realized by most people throughout the world, will become
readily apparent. Venezuela gives us an idea of what may be in store for those
who are unprepared. Due to the return of primitive bartering in Venezuela, a
haircut has been calculated to be worth five bananas and two eggs. Barter, to
some degree, always returns whenever a nation’s money managers destroy the
currency.
What will the scenario be like when the debt bubble bursts and
dollar supremacy is challenged? What can we do about it? When will it happen?
What is the biggest fear? Will it be limited to one or two countries? How long
will the crisis last?
Unfortunately there are no precise answers to these questions.
No one can anticipate and prepare for every possible problem that might arise.
We all must make an attempt to financially protect ourselves and
our families and know who our true friends are. Providing for personal safety
should be high on our list of concerns. There is no single answer for achieving
these goals, as our circumstances vary from one to another. However, there are
some facts to be aware of.
A government that bankrupts a country and destroys its currency
will not provide for the economic needs of the people. Any promise to do so,
should not be believed. Likewise, a bankrupt government, cannot provide
physical safety. All government efforts will be designed to cling to power, by
expanding it. Paying attention to the current catastrophic mess in Venezuela,
gives us a hint as to what will happen, if we don’t wake up and change our
ways. That’s worth working for, but the odds are very slim that the
American people are going to demand that the politicians in Washington quit
supporting the welfare/warfare state.
The most important responsibility is to restore a love and
understanding of liberty. It was the failure and desire of our government
officials to protect liberty that caused this crisis. Without restoring the
people’s liberty, survivalist efforts will not be enough to achieve peace and
tranquility within the United States.
Our government did not hesitate to “steal” the gold savings of
American citizens in the midst of the Great Depression, which was a consequence
of Federal Reserve policy. This move kept it illegal to own gold in the US for
the next 42 years. And today, there’s even less respect by our government for
liberty than there was in the 1930’s.
We should do whatever we can to protect ourselves, our families,
and our wealth, but we must remember that without liberty our greatest threat
will come from our own government. Look at what has been lost since our leaders
announced that we are in a permanent “Global War on Terrorism.” While our
“foreign enemies” have been created by design, our “domestic enemies” have
proliferated and present an existential threat to our freedom as we know it.
Let me offer some suggestions for what we should be doing to
reform or change the system.
Striving for a voluntarist society should be our goal. This can
be accomplished by:
- Legalizing
competing currencies.
- No
sales or capital gains taxes on money.
- No
tolerance of fraud.
- Repealing
legal tender laws.
- Auditing
the Fed; with an eye to abolishing it.
- Expose
the evil of fractional reserve banking for the fraud that it is.
Be aware, that anyone who promotes a cashless society is not a
friend to freedom of choice in monetary affairs. I’m hoping that blockchain
technology will not be a tool that advocates of the “value added tax” can use
to enhance the power of the state to collect taxes. Technology experts will
need to deal with this concern and reassure us or find an answer to prevent it.
Also:
- Audit
the Pentagon, the CIA and all foreign expenditures.
- No
more bailouts of private or government entities.
- To
get through the crisis consider real estate, precious metals, and crypto
ownership.
- For
some, expatriation may be an option.
But none of this is of any value if the government, at will, is
allowed to expand its authoritarian rule and control our every move, every
expression, every thought, and everything we own.
The most important investment we can make is to do whatever is
humanly possible to protect the liberty of all persons. This is the
responsibility of every one who has discovered the magical value of living in a
free society.
The time has come for us to get engaged in the struggle to
reignite an interest in the principles that motivated the Colonists to separate
themselves from the British Empire.
We can start by talking about the necessity of a sound currency
and the danger of central banking. The fact that Italy, not exactly the
champion of laissez-faire economics, is talking about a parallel currency to
compete with the euro may be telling us something.
We too, should make every effort to legalize competition to the
US dollar and participate in the great debate over the fiat dollar, precious
metals and crypto-blockchain technology. It may sound like only a concern about
“money,” but it has everything to do with living in a free and prosperous
society. Let the competition begin.
Dr. Ron Paul is a former member of Congress and Distinguished
Counselor to the Mises Institute.
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