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The History of the Federal Reserve

Michael J. Ross writes "Money plays a key role in modern life; in fact, for some people, nothing is more important than acquiring more of it. Yet most people do not know what money really is, how it is created, how its supply is expanded and contracted, and who benefits from those changes. In the United States, the central figure in this ongoing drama, is our central bank, the Federal Reserve, whose history, power, and effects are explored in G. Edward Griffin's fascinating book The Creature from Jekyll Island: A Second Look at the Federal Reserve." Read on for the rest of Michael's review. The Creature from Jekyll Island author G. Edward Griffin pages 624 publisher American Media rating 9 reviewer Michael J. Ross ISBN 0912986212 summary A compelling history and indictment of the Federal Reserve system For the citizens of the United States and several Latin American countries, the "coin of the realm" is the US dollar, which is, in simple terms, created by the Federal Reserve, a.k.a., the Fed. But who created the Federal Reserve, and why? The subjects of banking in general, and the Federal Reserve in particular, would be considered by most Americans to be dry, boring, and of little importance to their day-to-day life. But those same people are endlessly fascinated by how to make more money (with minimal effort, such as the lottery), how to spend as little of it as possible (coupons never go out of style), and how to maximize one's investment returns. Why this disconnect? Why do Americans care so little about the origins of that which they spend a third of their time pursuing, and seemingly another third spending?

Some of these "salary slaves" may understand that their money serves as a store of wealth and a medium of commercial exchange, which makes possible their daily financial transactions without the need for bartering. But, for the most part, they do not understand the critical importance of what is backing that money, if anything; how that money comes into existence, and what debt offsets it; what entities control the supply and distribution of that money; and how those changes can be used to legally steal purchasing power from victims who may not be entirely unsuspecting, but do not truly comprehend how they are getting ripped off.

The typical American, if he or she has given any thought to the matter, would consider the following statements to be true: The Federal Reserve is federal, i.e., a part of the US government. The Federal Reserve is a reserve, i.e., it has monetary savings of real value. The Federal Reserve serves the public, and is not a cartel of private banks serving itself. The US dollar has real value, i.e., it represents tangible wealth, such as gold securely stored at Fort Knox. Inflation is an increase in prices. Inflation is caused by greedy companies, not the US government or the Federal Reserve.

As G. Edward Griffin makes clear in his book, none of these beliefs are true — regardless of how well entrenched they are in our conventional "wisdom." He also explains why the US government and the Federal Reserve have their own reasons for being in no hurry to eliminate this ignorance. Yet these topics are just a small portion of what is covered in his far-ranging discussion of the theory and history of money and banking, particularly within the United States.

Spanning 624 pages, the material is organized into 26 chapters, which are grouped into six sections: "What Creature Is This?" (the Federal Reserve's shameful birth, and the shenanigans of the Fed, S&Ls, the IMF, and the World Bank), "A Crash Course on Money" (money, gold, debasement, fiat money, fractional-reserve banking, and money creation), "The New Alchemy" (the Rothschilds, J.P. Morgan, and banker financing of wars and revolutions), "A Tale of Three Banks" (America's failed experiments with central banking, and the American Civil War), "The Harvest" (the unconstitutional creation of the Federal Reserve, and its dreadful effects, including the Crash of 1929), "Time Travel into the Future" (current crises caused by central banking, how they can be reversed, future scenarios, and what the individual can do regardless). Every one of the six sections begins with a brief summary, as does every chapter, with every chapter wrapped up with a more extensive summary.

The section summaries also appear in the table of contents, which precedes a preface and the author's acknowledgments. These are followed by a delightful introduction — a piece from the British humor magazine Punch, comprising a rather telling exchange between an unusually honest banker and a soon-to-be-disillusioned bank customer. The book contains three appendices: a summary of the structure and function of the Federal Reserve system; natural laws of human behavior in economics; and whether the M-1 measure of money is subtractive or accumulative. The author also provides an index, as well as an impressive bibliography, reflecting his extensive research on the topics. In addition, the author invites readers to join Freedom Force, an organization dedicated to increasing liberty in the United States, curbing federal totalitarianism, and abolishing the Federal Reserve — all through peaceful participation in government, and the shaping of public policy starting at the grassroots level.

The Creature from Jekyll Island is published by American Media, under the ISBNs 0912986212 and 978-0912986210. It first came out in July 1994, and is now in its fourth edition, and its 19th printing. It also has Japanese and German editions, published in February 2005 and August 2006, respectively. On the book's Web page, visitors will find testimonials and comments from readers, updates to the book, a review of the book by Jane H. Ingraham of The New American, and G. Edward Griffin's response to a critique of his book by Edward Flaherty, who holds a Ph.D. in Economics. On that Web page, interested readers can order audio cassettes or CDs of the author's lecture, based upon this book, and produced in 1998.

My only criticisms of the book concern not the material itself, but its production — more specifically, the printing and layout, presumably chosen and thus fixable in the future by the publisher. The generous font size used throughout the volume, makes it easy to read; but the bold text, such as the subheads found in every chapter, is a bit rough-edged — on some pages worse than others. The subheads, already bolded, do not need to be in all uppercase; the publisher should choose one or the other. In addition, the inside margin length is a bit too small, forcing the reader to crack open the book more than should be needed, in order to comfortably read the text closest to the binding. In future editions, some of the space in the outer margin could be used to solve the problem, without any change to the words on each page, and thus the length of the book.

But aside from these minor flaws, this book is to be highly recommended. The Creature from Jekyll Island is a remarkably thorough, detailed, and challenging critique of central banking and America's latest incarnation of it, the Federal Reserve. G. Edward Griffin's precision of language, and his interweaving of the major players and their motives, makes for a most compelling historical study.

Michael J. Ross is a Web developer, freelance writer, and the editor of PristinePlanet.com's free newsletter.

You can purchase The Creature from Jekyll Island from amazon.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.

514 comments

  1. My review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Step 1. Take away the gold standard.

    Step 2. ???

    Step 3. Somebody Profits! (And it ain't me)

    But seriously, here is a nice interview with the author:

    http://www.financialsense.com/transcriptions/2006/1018griffin.html

    1. Re:My review by eln · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The gold standard was not all that some people make it out to be either. Bankers have been profiting like crazy ever since they gained the ability to create money, meaning to lend money backed by nothing more than the borrower's promise to pay it back. This has been going on since well before the gold standard.

      Bankers are able to create money to lend far in excess of what is actually backed by real assets, meaning money from depositors, gold, silver, goats, or whatever. They have been doing this for a long, long time though. They were doing it during the gold standard as well. These days, the vast majority of money in circulation is backed only by a debtor's promise to pay it back to the bank.

      This is a video that attempts to explain this in plain terms. It is long (around 45 minutes) but informative.

    2. Re:My review by Kadin2048 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Bankers are able to create money to lend far in excess of what is actually backed by real assets, meaning money from depositors, gold, silver, goats, or whatever. When a bank lends money that's backed by someone's mortgage, it's backed by a very "real asset": the mortgaged property.

      It's not an asset that the bank can keep in its vault (how would you fit it in there, exactly?), but it's a bank asset nonetheless. If the borrower fails to repay the loan, the bank gets the house.

      As long as the government is around and is willing to enforce liens, those are all very real assets, and I don't see a problem in using them as a basis for a currency.

      The only reason you need a precious-metal currency is when you don't have a functional government that enforces contracts. If you have doubts in the government's ability or willingness to enforce the lien and throw a defaulting borrower out so that the bank can take their house, then you have a problem, and the bank ought not to consider that loan as an asset anymore. (But without a functional government you have some other fairly serious problems, to the point where I'd suggest that the best currency is probably 5.56mm rifle rounds, not silver certificates.)
      --
      "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
    3. Re:My review by king-manic · · Score: 2, Informative

      When a bank lends money that's backed by someone's mortgage, it's backed by a very "real asset": the mortgaged property.

      IANAE, The corollary is that the mortgage must be for an amount that is very close to the value of that asset. If you have massive over estimates of property values due to something like a real estate bubble, once the bubble burst the revaluation throws the system out of whack. Banks says they have X dollars but due to over valuation they actually only have Y% of X dollars where Y is 100. If there is a crash like that and a simultaneous extreme cash call from the banks actual creditors (their customers) then the whole system collapses.

      Gold backed currencies aren't subject to this rare circumstance but Gold standards have a lot of draw backs. Thus even with the known failure conditions of the current system it's still better then the gold standard.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    4. Re:My review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's the Jooooooooooooooz!

    5. Re:My review by Kadin2048 · · Score: 1

      IANAE, The corollary is that the mortgage must be for an amount that is very close to the value of that asset. If you have massive over estimates of property values due to something like a real estate bubble, once the bubble burst the revaluation throws the system out of whack. Banks says they have X dollars but due to over valuation they actually only have Y% of X dollars where Y is 100. If there is a crash like that and a simultaneous extreme cash call from the banks actual creditors (their customers) then the whole system collapses. Completely agree, and I definitely did not mean to in any way defend current lending practices. If a bank allows someone to borrow money without sufficient collateral (either in terms of real, liquidable assets, or in an income stream), they are creating money with nothing behind it. That is very bad.

      However I think a return to full-reserve banking would be a treatment that's worse than the disease, at least as it currently stands. We need to banks more responsible for the loans they write, and strongly discourage them from lending out money to people who can't repay it. We need to accept, as a society, that not everyone has a right to a huge house financed with an even bigger mortgage. And we need to take a very hard look at the unsecured-loan industry that's financing much of the nation's consumer debt (in the form of either straightforward loans or credit cards).

      But a return to full-cash-reserve banking would probably just dry up the supply of capital that the economy needs, and unless it was done worldwide and at once (not a chance), it would probably just result in a further influx of foreign capital.
      --
      "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
    6. Re:My review by king-manic · · Score: 1

      However I think a return to full-reserve banking would be a treatment that's worse than the disease, at least as it currently stands. We need to banks more responsible for the loans they write, and strongly discourage them from lending out money to people who can't repay it. We need to accept, as a society, that not everyone has a right to a huge house financed with an even bigger mortgage. And we need to take a very hard look at the unsecured-loan industry that's financing much of the nation's consumer debt (in the form of either straightforward loans or credit cards).


      I think we need to stop white collar criminals from getting off with a wrist slap. Although not directly tied into the bank system the collapse of Enron and World com and the continued pseudo criminal nature some of the corporation's should be more transparently punished. Perhaps tie jail sentences to how many of millions your fraud cost as well as expenses incurred investigating. And perhaps extend some personal liability to the Directors and upper management of corporations for misdeeds done under their direction.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    7. Re:My review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you have massive over estimates of property values due to something like a real estate bubble, once the bubble burst the revaluation throws the system out of whack. Very perceptive. But realize there is absolutely nothing which can prevent a "bubble" or any significant change in subjective valuation for anything. No government regulation, no enforced "standard", can change the fundamental economic fact that all valuation is extrinsically subjective, dependent upon human actors, and not any any alleged "intrinsic use" value of any objects. Value changes constantly, and nothing can prevent mass hysteria changes in subjective valuation (even for government fiat currency).

      It is however, much more likely that the supply of gold through time is vastly more stable than any other commodity (especially compared to fiat paper currency). Think there's a correlation between the real estate bubble and the supply of fiat currency?

      Thus,

      Gold backed currencies aren't subject to this rare circumstance is false. And

      but Gold standards have a lot of draw backs. Thus even with the known failure conditions of the current system it's still better then the gold standard. is not demonstrated.
    8. Re:My review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      If a bank allows someone to borrow money without sufficient collateral (either in terms of real, liquidable assets, or in an income stream), they are creating money with nothing behind it. That is very bad.

      No. Promises have value. Credit has value. That's why identity thieves target unsuspecting individuals' credit. Some promises are worth more than others; and some promises aren't worth anything. What you must never lose focus of though is that an exchange occurs when you use the term "borrow". The bank values the credit + interest, the bank values the promise + collateral (and uses many tools with which to value that promise, such as credit "ratings") more than the amount they loan. This is always *good* as both parties always increase their subjective wealth from trade. The borrower obtains a loan to buy a house; the banks obtains a presently valued promise of future payments. That something can be subjectively valued drastically differently in the future is a risk that exists for absolutely every exchange which occurs, with more or less consciousness, and nothing can remove that risk as nobody is omniscient and knowledge is always imperfectly and unevenly distributed.

      However I think a return to full-reserve banking would be a treatment that's worse than the disease, at least as it currently stands.

      You are correct. I would always put "fractional-reserve" in quotes. In the world, there only always exists a finite supply of all that exists. No matter how much money is printed, that supply of all which exists can only be distributed among 100% of the population. Two people can't be lent the same house; nor can two people be lent the same amount of money to purchase the same house. This is something which the major economic schools, including the Austrians, overlook. They all fail to account that the only thing which has changed in the world is the supply of money has increased. As that money is first printed, then distributed through exchange, price signals that the supply of money has increased. But all valuation is simultaneously in a state of constantly changing flux, including valuation for all the different supplies of things which exist, including money and credit promises. And these changing subjective valuations are also occurring simultaneously and independently in addition to because of changes in the supply of money. Money is just another "good" in the economy; subjectively valued just as any other good or service.

      We need to accept, as a society, that not everyone has a right to a huge house financed with an even bigger mortgage.

      No we need to accept, as a society, that if two people voluntarily finance a huge house with an even bigger mortgage, that is nobody else's business except the banker and the borrower. And no bailouts for either if the venture fails.

      And we need to take a very hard look at the unsecured-loan industry that's financing much of the nation's consumer debt (in the form of either straightforward loans or credit cards).

      Businesses should be held liable for identity left and subject to class action suits by those who have their credit ruined by complicit business accessories to identify theft. Improper security measures and lax identity identification systems that cause economic damage to consumers should be burdened completely by the thieves caught and the businesses burned. That is all.

      But a return to full-cash-reserve banking would probably just dry up the supply of capital that the economy needs, and unless it was done worldwide and at once (not a chance), it would probably just result in a further influx of foreign capital.

      No real goods and services can be fractionally purchased (unknowingly unless by fraud). All that occurs is an increase in fiat currency supply. Credit can naturally grow as credit has real subjective value. Credit can decline as credit has real subjective value. It doesn't matter that new IPod nanos cause people to subjectively v

  2. Another good read... by dada21 · · Score: 4, Informative

    ...and a free e-book download is What has Government done to our money? by the esteemed Murray N. Rothbard.

    I've read dozens of books (over 30, for sure) on central banking theory, and none of them have given a completely clear and transparent picture of what the Fed really is, what is does, and what it is supposed to do. In the end, all central banks have one customer: member banks (the banks you and I go to), and the central banks have one policy: save their buddies in the member banks against any malinvestment or market change.

    The Fed isn't here to protect the value of OUR money (in fact, since the Fed's creation in 1913, the US dollar is about 95-96% devalued), and it isn't here to protect our investments or savings.

    1. Re:Another good read... by RealGrouchy · · Score: 2, Interesting

      For those who prefer audio/video, I suggest the video "Money As Debt", which can be viewed on Google Video.

      The animation is cheap, but the meat of it is in the audio, which puts in pretty clear terms where money comes from.

      - RG>

      --
      Hey pal, this isn't a pleasantforest, so don't waste my time with pleasantries!
    2. Re:Another good read... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're crazy! Do you know how the dollar devalued before the Federal Reserve existed? One US dollar in 1980 was worth the equivalent of eleven cents in 1790. One hundred twenty years later in 1910 it was worth, eh, um, still eleven cents. Okay, maybe you have a point!

    3. Re:Another good read... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Part of the job of the Fed is to increase the money supply at an appropriate rate, since mild inflation tends to be good for the economy and deflation tends to be disastrous.

      Add up mild inflation over the course of a century, and yes, you will find that the dollar has lost 95% of its value - but you'll also find the largest, most impressive economic expansion in the history of the world.

    4. Re:Another good read... by rskbrkr · · Score: 1

      Everyone who has been keeping their money under their mattress since 1913 should be outraged over the depreciation of the US dollar. For someone who doesn't have a good idea of "what the Fed really is, what is does, and what it is supposed to do", you are exceptionally critical of the Fed. If British government didn't promise to guarantee all deposits at Northern Rock, it would likely have failed. But was it a bailout of the bank, or were they simply protecting the banking system? And while member banks hold shares of the Federal Reserve Banks, they and the Board of Governors remain under the oversight of the President and Congress.

    5. Re:Another good read... by CodeBuster · · Score: 1

      in fact, since the Fed's creation in 1913, the US dollar is about 95-96% devalued

      With almost all of that devaluation beginning with the closure of the gold window by Nixon in 1971 and the creation of political fiat money (money with no commodity backing) in its place. The problem with political money is that it creates a tremendous incentive for people to engage in risky behaviors because they believe that the government will use its power over the money supply to "ease the pain" or bail them out of tight financial situations by debasing the currency. This phenomenon is an example of what economists call the Moral Hazard problem. The result of the monetary policy of our nation has been nearly continuous punishment of savers through inflation (mild though it may be at times) while rewarding spenders and encouraging more reckless financial risk taking.

      Take the recent interest rate cutes and promises of credit by government backed mortgage lenders to over-extended sub prime borrowers so that they wont "lose their homes", but why should the taxpayers take on risky mortgage obligations with "sweet heart" interest rates to sub prime borrowers with terrible credit? Taxpayers never share in gains, but somehow we are expected to "take one for the team" when there are loses? How many of these people knew that they wouldn't be able to make the payments when they took the loan several years ago (because prices were going up on homes and they had to "get into the market or be left out") counting on the government to rescue them from their financial predicament when the adjustable rate, no money down, voodoo loan kicked the payments into high gear. If the government bails these people out for political reasons then it once again makes the savers and financially prudent people (who didn't rush into an overheated housing market) look like schmucks while the prodigal sons are rewarded for their profligacy.

    6. Re:Another good read... by nuzak · · Score: 1

      > Everyone who has been keeping their money under their mattress

      Is a god damned idiot. Inflation happens even in mercantile systems like the gold standard.

      --
      Done with slashdot, done with nerds, getting a life.
    7. Re:Another good read... by dada21 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Everyone who has been keeping their money under their mattress since 1913 should be outraged over the depreciation of the US dollar.

      So should anyone who has been trying to save their money safely to invest in a home (say towards a 20% down payment), prepare for a future business, or leave money for their heirs. All central banks discourage savings and encourage "investments" when not everyone should be taking a hefty risk on their savings.

      For someone who doesn't have a good idea of "what the Fed really is, what is does, and what it is supposed to do", you are exceptionally critical of the Fed.

      Oh, I know what the Fed does, I meant to say that no books I've read explain a central bank properly. They're legally mandated thieves, to put it lightly.

      If British government didn't promise to guarantee all deposits at Northern Rock, it would likely have failed. But was it a bailout of the bank, or were they simply protecting the banking system? And while member banks hold shares of the Federal Reserve Banks, they and the Board of Governors remain under the oversight of the President and Congress.

      The depositors at Northern Rock were, sorry to say, idiots. I would _never_ put my money into a fractional reserve bank.

      In a full-reserve bank (which currently does not really exist), you put your money into a bank as a non-loanable deposit for security. You trade maybe 0.5% a year in losses to secure that wealth from theft. If you felt like you wanted to take some risk, you could give the bank a desired risk environment to invest your money into (or loan into, as it is), and you could accept a chance of gain but also a chance of loss.

      Fractional reserve banking is fraudulent, it is theft, and it should be criminal. The idea is criminal for anyone to perform except for banks licensed by the State or Federal governments. Just because "everyone is doing it" does not mean it is good nor moral.

      All banks are bankrupt -- if each person that visits Slashdot this week was to withdraw all their savings, checking accounts, money markets and CDs (even at a penalty), many banks in the U.S. would be insolvent. They don't have the funds that they tell you they have, because they're only legally supposed to keep a tiny reserve (8-11% generally). The Central Bank enables them to appear solvent by loaning them money "overnight" (even though the new overnight regulations can last 30 days, and can be renewed indefinitely) in case of depositors demanding _their_ money.

      Sorry, not me. I don't partake in the fiat monetary system you call a bank.

    8. Re:Another good read... by Kadin2048 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's an interesting video, and not a bad introduction to how the banking system actually works (as opposed to the oversimplified "they lend out your deposits..." view that most people get as youngsters and never really question). However, I'm not sure that its attempt to spin 'money as debt' as a bad thing is really true.

      If we were stuck on a gold or silver standard, we'd be in real trouble: there just isn't that much gold or silver around to make a a very good currency. We need a currency that can grow as the amount of real assets in circulation grows -- as we as a society and civilization create more valuable stuff, we need a way to pay for it. The debt money system uses all those real assets as the basis for its value, rather than an arbitrarily chosen precious metal.

      In effect, the debt money system, though complicated, is a lot more 'real' than a gold standard. Gold is only valuable because it's shiny and pleasant to look at and you can beat it into useful shapes and it's been used as money for a long time. You can't eat it, you can't live in it, you can't plow a field with it -- aside from some applications in the jewelry and electronics industries, you can't do much of anything with it. But a house, that has real value. A factory has value. A John Deere tractor has value. When people borrow money to pay for these things, the money is created and the newly-created money is backed by the pledged asset. So when I buy a house for $250k, two hundred and fifty thousand new dollars are created, but those dollars are backed by my house; they are, in one sense, actually my house, floating around out there. And then I work, and pay the loan principle back, and basically suck those 'house-dollars' back out of the market and put them back into my house.

      Once you get around the mental shock of realizing that the system doesn't work the way you thought it did, there's a certain elegance to the system. Money is created and destroyed as it's needed to pay for things, rather than there being some fixed amount of it floating around. When we need a lot of capital, it appears; when we don't (and pay off our loans), it goes away. With a fixed amount of gold, you'd have massive inflation/deflation cycles as prices changed in response to the amount of available currency.

      Where you run into serious problems are when banks start making loans to people who don't have enough real assets behind them to cover the amount of money that's being created. IMO, this should be illegal, or at the very least the banks should be held directly responsible for ensuring that the loans they're making are backed by something (real property, or an income stream). If they don't, then they're magicking money into existence that has nothing behind it, and letting it out into the market. That's dangerous business, and the source of our current credit problems.

      --
      "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
    9. Re:Another good read... by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Part of the job of the Fed is to increase the money supply at an appropriate rate, since mild inflation tends to be good for the economy and deflation tends to be disastrous.

      The _real_ economy also tends to increase by a few percent each year, so the money supply needs to be increased a few percent each year to compensate for this (or else there would be deflationary pressure because of real growth).

    10. Re:Another good read... by Colin+Smith · · Score: 1

      Part of the job of the Fed is to increase the money supply at an appropriate rate, since mild inflation tends to be good for the economy and deflation tends to be disastrous. Mild inflation and disastrous deflation are a feature of fractional reserve banking. The system expands gradually until it reaches a peak, then collapses over a short period. It's the fractional reserve system which makes deflation disastrous. You're right that is the job of the Fed. However. There's no need for inflation or deflation.

      but you'll also find the largest, most impressive economic expansion in the history of the world. You're aware the monetary system hasn't changed since the Bank of England was created in 1694? Or the fact that fractional reserve banking was practised for centuries before that? How do you explain the lack of "the largest most impressive expansion" during those times?

      We have the largest most impressive economic expansion in history because we discovered how to harness the energy in water then coal, then oil and the resources were there to do it. Nothing to do with the monetary system itself. Systems other than fractional reserve would have had exactly the same effect.

      --
      Deleted
    11. Re:Another good read... by BunnyClaws · · Score: 1

      Is a god damned idiot. Inflation happens even in mercantile systems like the gold standard


      The gold standard is a mercantile system?
      --
      "Anything tastes good if you deep fry it."
    12. Re:Another good read... by dada21 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If we were stuck on a gold or silver standard, we'd be in real trouble: there just isn't that much gold or silver around to make a a very good currency. We need a currency that can grow as the amount of real assets in circulation grows -- as we as a society and civilization create more valuable stuff, we need a way to pay for it. The debt money system uses all those real assets as the basis for its value, rather than an arbitrarily chosen precious metal.

      We don't need something that can grow with the economic growth of the country. If we fixed to a gold standard, prices (in gold ounces or grains) would fall softly over time -- soft price declines. This encourages people to save rather than overspend, and only spend on things they need or are sure they want. Soft price declines are GOOD and happened for thousands of years when people used gold as a medium of exchange. This also allows for proper investment as people are not pushed to invest and can watch their savings grow in value even if they hoard their gold in the mattress.

      Instead, we have fiat currency inflation (which just means more money is created than destroyed) which caused soft price increases -- this gives people incentive to spend and not save, even if they don't need or are sure they want something. It also creates malinvestment as people invest "just to protect their savings."

      But a house, that has real value.

      No it doesn't. Buy a home and ignore it for 5 years. The yard gets destroyed, pests and mold destroy the inside, roofs fall apart, windows need replacing, carpet goes stale, dust collects. A house has declining value.

      A factory has value.

      I'm sure all those horse-shoe manufacturing factories in 1889 are still valuable today. I'd say they weren't valuable within 30 years.

      A John Deere tractor has value.

      For about 7 years, at which point it is more costly to buy used than new in terms of lost productivity.

      When people borrow money to pay for these things, the money is created and the newly-created money is backed by the pledged asset. So when I buy a house for $250k, two hundred and fifty thousand new dollars are created, but those dollars are backed by my house; they are, in one sense, actually my house, floating around out there. And then I work, and pay the loan principle back, and basically suck those 'house-dollars' back out of the market and put them back into my house.

      Not quite, because when you have an inflationary fiat economy, people malinvest -- they take the easy new money as quickly as it comes, and that causes prices to rise extravagently. Your $250,000 house bought in 2005 may only be worth $175,000 today -- and if it is in Southern Florda, it may be worth only $125,000. Add to that your property taxes, maintenance, utility cost, and general upkeep, and the house is a terrible investment.

      With a fixed amount of gold, you'd have massive inflation/deflation cycles as prices changed in response to the amount of available currency.

      Inflation just means an increase in the money supply, deflation means a decrease in the money supply. You mean price rise/price decrease. This is _good_, actually, because it benefits the non-hoarders to pick up newly repriced assets that have dropped in value when they need them most, and it benefits hoarders in watching their money become more valuable even without investing.

      Where you run into serious problems are when banks start making loans to people who don't have enough real assets behind them to cover the amount of money that's being created. IMO, this should be illegal, or at the very least the banks should be held directly responsible for ensuring that the loans they're making are backed by something (real property, or an income stream). If they don't, then they're magicking money into existence that has nothing behind it, and letting it out into the market

    13. Re:Another good read... by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 1

      Taxpayers never share in gains, but somehow we are expected to "take one for the team" when there are loses?

      Yes yes yes...I'd put this along side people who insist on building in areas known to be extremely risky (i.e. frequently flood prone areas, weak hillsides) yet expect the other taxpayers to bail them out if they get hit. The prudent get stuck with the bill. Fine, you can use my tax dollars to cover your ass as long as I get to use your beach house occasionally.

      The result of the monetary policy of our nation has been nearly continuous punishment of savers through inflation

      I love how they make sure they discourage you by taxing the interest on savings.

      --
      It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
    14. Re:Another good read... by Colin+Smith · · Score: 1

      The _real_ economy also tends to increase by a few percent each year, so the money supply needs to be increased a few percent each year to compensate for this (or else there would be deflationary pressure because of real growth). Exactly... The UK money supply: 14% per year at the moment. The US supply? 10%? 20% 30% Who knows just now. There's a general theory that they dropped the figures so they could "monetise" the US debt, and there's trillions of that to go through.

      Whatever it is, it's much higher than real growth.
      --
      Deleted
    15. Re:Another good read... by Dan+Ferguson · · Score: 1

      The privately owned member banks receive 6% of the profit from the Federal Reserve in Dividends paid out by the Fed every year. One year alone that exceeded $350 Billion in profit.

      Keep in mind that the money the Fed loans out is "made up" and doesn't have any backing. When our Government needs $100 Billion to go to war they get it from the Fed. When they get the 100 Billion from the Fed our Government receives that money with interest attached. So the $100 B that they get from the Fed is actually costing us $100 billion plus additional interest (national debt). The profit (6%) from interest is getting paid to private bankers and not the Government.

      This system supports the elite and helps them keep control of our Government. This is also a massive profit center for private bankers that most Americans seem to be completely unaware of. You can never get out of debt if every dollar you spend comes with interest attached from some foreign entity (not part of the Government).

      Mayar Amschel Rothschild's famous quote goes 'I care not who controls the country, so long as I can control it's money'. (AND THEY DO)

      The Federal Reserve is the brainchild of some of the largest bankers in the world at that time. They paid for congressman on both sides and introduced similar bills on both sides in competition with each other. Both bills be designed to set the Federal Reserve in motion. A centralized private banking system like this was tried two times previously in the USA (First Bank US, and Second Bank US) but both were shut down later.

      If you ever wanted to identify the monkey on our countries back then this is it. This is the rich milking the economy due to a Government imposed profit center for private bankers. The shares of ownership of the Federal Reserve can never be sold and and only be inherited, not like any other share you have heard of.

      "The stock may not be sold or traded or pledged as security for a loan; dividends are, by law, limited to 6% per year.[23]"
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Federal_Reserve

      It's a scam and it needs to be exposed as such!

      Vote for someone who is going to get rid of the monkey on our back!

    16. Re:Another good read... by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 1

      It would be very dangerous to go back to the gold standard. Do you really want to risk having Pussy Galore destroying our monetary system?

      --
      It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
    17. Re:Another good read... by malsdavis · · Score: 1

      "impressive economic expansion in the history of the world"

      That is an extremely subjective statement if ever I saw one!

      How can you say it is more impressive than say the Roman Empire's utter transformation of Europe and Asia Minor, or the British Empire's transformation of world trade. After all, it was their empire which combined with the industrial revolution is what started this whole globalization thing - which is what you appear to be referring to (otherwise the dollar's valuation is meaningless).

      In reality the different ages are completely incomparable, it simply makes absolutely no sense comparing them.

    18. Re:Another good read... by natedubbya · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The Fed isn't here to protect the value of OUR money

      And if that gets your interest piqued, search for the Council on Foreign Relations and their role in the Fed. Then ask yourself why the head of the Secretary of State has been a CFR member for the past several decades. And why presidential candidates (both rep and dem) are *almost* always members of the CFR. Ahh it's a whole new world of elitism nobody seems to know about.


    19. Re:Another good read... by nuzak · · Score: 1

      Yep, hoard more stuff for more wealth. That's mercantilism in a nutshell.

      --
      Done with slashdot, done with nerds, getting a life.
    20. Re:Another good read... by Kadin2048 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I agree with you on some of the dangers of inflation; however, I disagree about the nature of "value" in an asset.

      Something can have substantial value, even if it's not the sort of thing you can leave sitting around idle and come back to later.

      A tractor has substantial value not in the same way a pile of gold bricks does, but because it performs a function. It represents a potential income stream to a farmer, which is why a farmer might want to own one. Thus the farmer goes to a bank and takes out a loan against the tractor, in order to purchase it. For the bank to make this loan, they want to ensure that the farmer isn't an idiot, and that he'll pay back the value of the tractor either faster than it depreciates (or he has some other assets that won't depreciate as quickly, in order to secure the loan). If they think this is the case, they can then go and create a pile of 'tractor-dollars', dollars that are backed by that tractor. Those dollars only stay in the system until the farmer pays off the loan, and assuming the loan was intelligently made, there should never be more tractor-dollars sloshing around than the tractor is actually worth (either in literal terms or as an income stream).

      The same holds true for a factory, or anything else that helps create an income stream. Just because it's not a stable asset doesn't mean it's valueless; as long as you can predict the depreciation, you can still use it as collateral, and if you can use it as collateral, you can use it as the basis for new money. (As long as you trust the government to enforce the lien and let the bank repossess it, of course -- the real basis for debt banking is the threat of force by people with guns.)

      I also agree that banks have been supremely irresponsible with their lending practices, but I don't think that full-reserve banking is really the best solution. There are rules that need substantial tightening, but there's nothing inherently wrong with letting a bank use mortgaged assets as part of its reserves, as long as the value of those assets over time is computed, the loans made accordingly, and there's a iron-hard willingness by the government to liquidate those assets in the event of a default by the borrower.

      --
      "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
    21. Re:Another good read... by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      Deflation is actually BAD for economy (look at Japan) because it tends to reduce economic growth ("Why should I buy a new TV? I'd better wait unitl it costs less").

      Most economists believe that a healthy 2-3% inflation is the optimum.

    22. Re:Another good read... by dada21 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I agree with you on some of the dangers of inflation; however, I disagree about the nature of "value" in an asset.

      Oh, I definitely agree that some of the assets you listed have value to SOME individuals, but there is generally NO asset that is valuable to all individuals -- except for gold, which I can not believe that another individual would not covet or desire if offered in trade for a profitable outcome (for both parties). Tools, to me, are not positive-income assets for all. Houses can be tools (for landlords), tractors can be tools (for farmers), but they're not universal.

      A tractor has substantial value not in the same way a pile of gold bricks does, but because it performs a function.

      As does gold -- as a unique, and historically safe, store of wealth. I am not sure that you can pick any one generation (from beginning to end, lets say 40 years) and see gold as dropping in value from the beginning to the end of that generation. I also believe you could pick any half generation and get the same solidity, and this is over 6000 years, including multiple gold rushes.

      It represents a potential income stream to a farmer, which is why a farmer might want to own one. Thus the farmer goes to a bank and takes out a loan against the tractor, in order to purchase it. For the bank to make this loan, they want to ensure that the farmer isn't an idiot, and that he'll pay back the value of the tractor either faster than it depreciates (or he has some other assets that won't depreciate as quickly, in order to secure the loan). If they think this is the case, they can then go and create a pile of 'tractor-dollars', dollars that are backed by that tractor. Those dollars only stay in the system until the farmer pays off the loan, and assuming the loan was intelligently made, there should never be more tractor-dollars sloshing around than the tractor is actually worth (either in literal terms or as an income stream).

      So they loan these tractor-dollars out to the farmer, who buys said tractor from a manufacturer. Who does the manufacturer redeem said tractor-dollars to? Or are we just saying they're dollars that say "secured by a tractor" on them versus fiat?

      The same holds true for a factory, or anything else that helps create an income stream. Just because it's not a stable asset doesn't mean it's valueless; as long as you can predict the depreciation, you can still use it as collateral, and if you can use it as collateral, you can use it as the basis for new money. (As long as you trust the government to enforce the lien and let the bank repossess it, of course -- the real basis for debt banking is the threat of force by people with guns.)

      Sure, this is why you need to have skin in the game -- something of your own that you also put in, and not just future labor. To loan against future labor with no consequence to previous labor makes little sense if you want your investment protected.

      I also agree that banks have been supremely irresponsible with their lending practices, but I don't think that full-reserve banking is really the best solution. There are rules that need substantial tightening, but there's nothing inherently wrong with letting a bank use mortgaged assets as part of its reserves, as long as the value of those assets over time is computed, the loans made accordingly, and there's a iron-hard willingness by the government to liquidate those assets in the event of a default by the borrower.

      So we need MORE regulation, which will make the banking monopoly even more exclusive? I definitely don't agree.

      Loaning massive funds in a full reserve banking system is quite simple, and safe, and malinvestment resistant. For example, if you wanted to buy a $150,000 house with a 30 year loan, in a full reserve banking system, not many banks would be interested in giving you money for 30 years -- this is why fractional reserve banking with the MBS/CDO investment market is so culpable in the housing bubble.

      Instead, i

    23. Re:Another good read... by nate+nice · · Score: 1

      Generally it's the government that increases money. The US government asks the fed for money which the Fed will create. At this time a bond is created and someone buys it.

      The Fed is essentially at the will of the administration seeing over the country. When the administration wants money, the Fed creates it out of thin air.

      Consider this, the current administration has cut "real" taxes. That is, most of us pay lower income tax. However, they have increased inflation at such a rate that our money is now worth less, and less. So they have in effect taxed us silently by making the money you earn every week worth less.

      Wait until the run on the dollar. With the dollar dropping in value so much so fast, there is a theory that (mainly Asian, our biggest importers) will eventually sell their holdings in the dollar (t-bonds into cash into another currency) at a loss now and create a domino effect. This would flood the world with worthless dollars. Who ends up paying at the end? We do because we get paid in dollars. And it usually takes awhile for the typical persons salary to catch up with inflation. That is, working people are usually a crucial step behind this game of inflation.

      Also, inflation is a trick that can be used to buy assets cheaply. A wealthy, influential organization could buy a lot of things on credit and then convince the administration to print a lot more money, creating an inflation. Now what they have paid is suddenly a discount since things are bought in dollars, not in value. Money is loaned in dollars with interest considering inflation. But when inflation out paces the interest, "free money" is created to those who have loans.

      --
      "If you are a dreamer, a wisher, a liar, A hope-er, a pray-er, a magic bean buyer ..."
    24. Re:Another good read... by Dr+Caleb · · Score: 1
      Another good and free read is The Economicon. (PDF!). Illustrated for Mac users. (Kidding!)

      To understand what money is, you need to know what it does.

      --
      "History doesn't repeat itself, but it does rhyme." Mark Twain
    25. Re:Another good read... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are correct in that there may be a correlation between having a gold standard and military imperialism.

    26. Re:Another good read... by Harmonious+Botch · · Score: 1

      Part of the job of the Fed is to increase the money supply at an appropriate rate, since mild inflation tends to be good for the economy and deflation tends to be disastrous. The _real_ economy also tends to increase by a few percent each year, so the money supply needs to be increased a few percent each year to compensate for this (or else there would be deflationary pressure because of real growth).
      Deflation only tends to be disasterous because it is an exception that people are not prepared for. As another poster pointed out earlier in these comments, one of the features of fractional banking is mild inflation and horrible deflation.

      The natural state ofthe economy is minor deflation This is an inevitable byproduct of industialization. Look at all the things that people made 20, 50, 100 years ago. Most of them are worth less because we make better ones today, and we make more of the new ones further lowering the value of the older stuff. Deflation is an indication of material progress. ( A correlary of this is that land prices ought to stay more or less the same, since the ammount of land almost never changes. A good way to determine if your bankers/govt is fucking with you is to check to see if land prices are changing over the long term.)

      Even if it is natural, is mild deflation a good thing? People wiser than I have debated this one. But one thing is for certain: if artificial measures are used to maintain mild inflation when there should be mild deflation, all this does is dam up the deflationary pressure. It does not make it go away. And when the dam breaks, the major deflation is devastating.

      Mild overeating is yummy until one has a heart attack.
    27. Re:Another good read... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Read the book Rich Dad Poor Dad.. gives an excellent explanation about how money really works, and why the rich and richer, and the poor get poorer...

    28. Re:Another good read... by Harmonious+Botch · · Score: 1

      Most economists believe that a healthy 2-3% inflation is the optimum for bankers.

      There, fixed that for you.

    29. Re:Another good read... by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "So when I buy a house for $250k, two hundred and fifty thousand new dollars are created, but those dollars are backed by my house; they are, in one sense, actually my house, floating around out there. And then I work, and pay the loan principle back, and basically suck those 'house-dollars' back out of the market and put them back into my house."

      That does explain a bit to me. I've been confused why the housing slump, cause in large part to the default on sub-prime mortgages....has been causing such a fuss other than being tough luck for housing owners.

      I'd seen people on the economics shows saying people thought of their houses as 'extra money'...and some how connected lowered housing values to people lowering their spending...and I just didn't get the connection?

      This does clear it up a 'little'. I really have not background with economics classes...so, I don't understand all this, but, I'm starting now to try to learn.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    30. Re:Another good read... by himurabattousai · · Score: 1

      Gold is only valuable because it's shiny and pleasant to look at and you can beat it into useful shapes and it's been used as money for a long time. You can't eat it, you can't live in it, you can't plow a field with it -- aside from some applications in the jewelry and electronics industries, you can't do much of anything with it.

      This is a part of why gold has historically made such good money. One ounce of gold is always one ounce of gold. One pound of food gets eaten. One house rots and becomes inhabitable. One plow gets worn beyond usefulness. Making consumables the basis of a monetary system means that the money supply will always be in flux.

      Money is NOT wealth. Ask someone in Zimbabwe how it feels to be a millionaire. He'd say it's not that great because his money is all but worthless, and all his millions can't even buy a day's worth of food for his family. He may have millions, but he's not wealthy because true wealth is, in part, the ability to acquire necessities and luxuries. By the way, true wealth means these necessities and luxuries are paid for in full, not on credit. Remember, the key is the ability to acquire without debt, not the posessions themselves.

      --
      "osake no hou ga, biiru yori ii" to omotteiru.
    31. Re:Another good read... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If we were stuck on a gold or silver standard, we'd be in real trouble: there just isn't that much gold or silver around to make a a very good currency. Wrong. Trade only occurs when that which is received is valued more than that which is given away in exchange. It doesn't matter what the objects exchanged are: land, labor, commodities, "money", promises, entertaining dances, anything. Individual subjective demand valuations of scarcely valued things determine the relative value of different things: supply and demand. It wouldn't matter one iota for the relative value of all other things except gold (ceteris paribus) if the supply of gold was one thousand times greater in supply or one thousand times less in supply.

      I can't imagine a more ignorant economic theory than one that implies production or wealth has anything to do whatsoever to a government monopoly "currency".

      The US dollar is absolutely no different than a box of pretend Monopoly money. It started to have value because people with guns violently enforced its acceptance as "legal tender". If the US government were to fail, the dollar would likely be almost instantaneously worthless. But everything else would still have relatively the same value, so much food would be traded for a house, so many cars would be traded for an education degree certificate, so many blank cd discs would be traded for a computer, etc, and these would be expressed in terms of the most commonly traded thing, whether gold, oil, diamonds, water, whatever. But money can and does have value in exactly the same way as everything else which is valued. Just drop a $100 bill on the ground and observe if anyone picks it up. But value is not constant for any thing; value changes for individuals constantly.

      There's no economic difference between borrowing your neighbor's lawn mower (trading a promise to return it for the use of it) and trading $10 for a dvd. Both parties always only voluntarily agree to exchange if they are better off from doing so, i.e. your neighbor builds good will from you and increases his expectations of borrowing from you, or prefers lending the mower rather than being seen as a miser). Whatever the subjective valuation reasons for valuation are, no exchange ever occurs unless both parties agree to the exchange. And both parties only agree to an exchange when that exchange benefits both parties. And of course nobody is omniscient, and information is imperfect for everybody. And nothing, including government regulation, can change that.

      Enforcing any "standard" of money whatsoever is by definition less economically beneficial than letting markets determine voluntary standards for precisely the reason that wealth is created from trade whereas wealth is destroyed from violence.

      Now for people with a more advanced understanding of economics, such as /. readers that understand the economic implications of P2P COPYING of ideas, fiat paper currency is economically essentially no different than a .mp3 song. One_Dollar.mp3 has just basically been COPIED X billions of times.
    32. Re:Another good read... by The+One+and+Only · · Score: 3, Informative

      The depositors at Northern Rock were, sorry to say, idiots. I would _never_ put my money into a fractional reserve bank. ... Fractional reserve banking is fraudulent, it is theft, and it should be criminal. The idea is criminal for anyone to perform except for banks licensed by the State or Federal governments.

      People who die from surgical errors are, sorry to say, idiots. I would _never_ undergo surgery. Surgery is physical assault, it is mutilation, and it should be criminal. The idea is criminal for anyone to perform except for physicians licensed by the state or federal governments. Did you see the fallacy? There's two: first, you severely mischaracterize why and how fractional reserve banking is legally controlled. If you act as a bank (in some strictly-defined ways) without being licensed, you're guilty of banking without a license, just as I would be guilty of performing medicine without a license if I tried giving people open-heart surgery. It doesn't mean that fractional-reserve banking (or surgery for that matter) are inherently bad things, just that they are high-risk endeavors that are considered deserving of licensing and control.

      Your second fallacy is your apparent belief that, since fractional-reserve banking involves a degree of risk, it shouldn't be done at all. That's absurd. Risks can be controlled and mitigated, and in the decades of experience we have with fractional-reserve banking, the risks in question have been mitigated. The biggest failure in fractional-reserve banking was the monetary contraction towards the beginning of the Depression, which was caused by a combination of poor banking regulation and poor monetary policy (including what remained of the Gold Standard at the time).

      All banks are bankrupt -- if each person that visits Slashdot this week was to withdraw all their savings, checking accounts, money markets and CDs (even at a penalty), many banks in the U.S. would be insolvent.

      No, the bank would not be insolvent. Uncollected debts that are owed to you are still assets, and insolvency only occurs when your liabilities exceed your assets--not when your short-term liabilities exceed your cash on hand. (That's a cashflow problem. And yes, they borrow funds from the Fed to cover that cashflow problem, but once they collect their debts they pay the Fed back with interest--part of the cost of doing business.) And yes, the percentage of uncollected debt that never ends up being collected due to deadbeats is already accounted for--that's one of the purposes of interest, to mitigate risk. In any case, I enjoy living in a society where I can collect interest and borrow money without too much difficulty, and where the risk is spread out sufficiently. If you want to bury gold in your backyard instead, that's up to you.

      --
      In Repressive Burma, it's not just your connection that dies. slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=314547&cid=20819199
    33. Re:Another good read... by bytesex · · Score: 1

      ]] Inflation just means an increase in the money supply, deflation means a decrease in the money supply.

      Inflation is caused by an increase in money supply, or a decrease in the amount of goods produced/services delivered. Deflation is caused by a decrease in the money supply, or an increase in the amount of goods produced/services delivered. Leaving that part out conveniently loses the point: Gold may be mined at a 3% increase every year, which is managable enough as an inflation figure. However, goods and services have spikes in them that are caused by innovation, disaster and whatnot - capable of turning your humming little 3% economic motor into complete standstill. This is where a central overseer who can create and destroy money comes in real handy.

      --
      Religion is what happens when nature strikes and groupthink goes wrong.
    34. Re:Another good read... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US supply? 10%? 20% 30% Who knows just now. There's a general theory that they dropped the figures so they could "monetise" the US debt, and there's trillions of that to go through.

      From what I can tell, the way things work is that the federal government spends more than it receives in tax revenue so it needs to borrow money. When the federal government borrows money, that causes the interest rates to go up. The federal reserve wants to keep interest rates stable so the federal reserve creates money (out of thin air) that it "loans" to the government. In practice, this process occurs through "open market transactions" where the federal government borrows money from the general public by issuing "treasury-bills" but then the federal reserve buys these treasury bills on the public market.

      The net result is that the federal reserve has created some money and loaned that money to the federal government. At some point, the federal government imposes just enough "taxes" on the federal reserve cancel out its loan from the federal reserve. Fundamentally, it's a complicated system by which the federal reserve is printing money and giving it to the federal government (so the federal government can pay off some of it's debt).

      Naively, I would imagine that it should be fairly straightforward to figure out how much money the federal reserve has created and given to the federal government. All that would need to be done would be to look at how much government debt has been purchased with money created by the federal reserve. Interestingly, though, I've done a bunch of google searches and it's amazingly hard to find that information. I suppose that, in part, the system is complicated and I don't know what I'm looking for. On the other hand, I have to wonder if that information is something that a lot of politicians don't really want people to know.

    35. Re:Another good read... by yoha · · Score: 1


      The Federal Reserve has three mandates - Price Stability, Full Employment, and moderate long-term interest rates.

      http://www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/fract/sect02a.htm

    36. Re:Another good read... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is that to pay back the $250,000 house, it sucks more than the "house-dollars" out of your wallet, it sucks the "interest-dollars" out too. Where did the interest dollars come from, and where do they go?

      The $250,000 was not "created", in truth, the "house-dollars" are actually other people's "savings-account-dollars", "rainy-day-dollars" and "retirement-dollars". The bank gives you some of those other people's dollars, and in turn, gives those other people "interest-dollars" from you and others.

      The problem is that if everyone wants their "retirement-dollars" and their "rainy-day-dollars" all at the same time, and people are still using them for "house-dollars", the banks have to borrow more cash to pay back all those dollars. THAT money is newly created "fed-dollars". Now, when the banks borrow cash, they have to pay back "interest-dollars" too... where do those "interest-dollars" go?

    37. Re:Another good read... by Colin+Smith · · Score: 1

      Not quite. You have to add to what you have above.

      The Fractional Reserve Banking system.

      that is, the banks take deposits and are then allowed to loan out 90% (97% in the UK)of the value of those deposits and charge interest on them. This has the effect of inflating the money supply because all the money loaned out, ends up in another bank as a deposit, which can then be loaned out again. This is where 95% of the money comes from.

      Anyway, the interest rates define how many loans get made by manipulating the supply and demand for loans.

      The total money supply is that provided by the fed to the government plus what all the banks loan out to us. The Fed collects the figures from the member banks but stopped publishing them last year. It was the M3 money supply figure.

      --
      Deleted
    38. Re:Another good read... by marcello_dl · · Score: 1

      > If we were stuck on a gold or silver standard, we'd be in real trouble: there just isn't that much gold or silver around to make a a very good currency.

      But the present situation is not the only solution. Think http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_Credit

      Besides getting back to a gold or silver backed standard would involve getting back it from the banks, which is not easy to do without committing injustice.

      Another thing that I consider important is: through fractional reserve banking flows of money that "isn't there" are created. It's not a US-only problem. It's something that started centuries ago with modern banking. Those are weapons that seems to be used not only to increase the banks power, but to create a philosophy of life that justifies the situation. Managers now resort to financing successful enterprise to further improve their position. Win, win, win. Except that if everybody does that, the only winner are the banks. They can decide who gets financed under which terms. In a society where everything has been monetized (another facet of that philosophy above) the inferior enterprise with proper financing will win no matter what.

      And the system buries these dynamics under multiple strata of ideology (i.e. complacent economic theories, media hyping discussions about whatever has no effect on how money and debt flows, mistaking this arbitrary process with "progress" and so on) and doesn't stress out a simple fact: money is fairly omnipotent, virtual, anonymous and travel at the light of speed. It is a weapon in the hands of who? Behind all this banking system people see conspiracies and secret societies... but this banking system IS the conspiracy. Whoever is behind it is a side issue.

      --
      ---- MISSING MISCELLANEOUS DATA SEGMENT --- [sigdash] trolololol
    39. Re:Another good read... by Watson+Ladd · · Score: 1

      The problem with deflation is it makes investment not worth it, and hence limits economic growth.

      --
      Inventions have long since reached their limit, and I see no hope for further development.-- Frontinus, 1st cent. AD
    40. Re:Another good read... by myowntrueself · · Score: 1

      If we were stuck on a gold or silver standard, we'd be in real trouble: there just isn't that much gold or silver around to make a a very good currency.

      As I understand it, there is enough gold and silver out in the asteroids, even near-earth ones, to make gold and silver pretty well worthless should even one of them be mined.

      --
      In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
    41. Re:Another good read... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would land prices remain the same? Seems to me that:
      Population increases
      Quality of life increases (more space for entertainment and living)
      More industrialisation (this one might not be relevant, I suppose, since industry has improved in efficiency, even farming)

      Would all cause pressures on availability of land.
      Seems that when availability drops, prices climb.
      And that's not even taking into account, say, a situation like New York. You would expect the cost of land to stay the same as the overall
      wealth density of the island climbed ever higher over the centuries?

    42. Re:Another good read... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The total money supply is that provided by the fed to the government plus what all the banks loan out to us.

      OK, so here's a thought experiment.

      Print up a huge pile of cash denominated in US dollars (say $100 trillion). Now, have every single entity in the world that owes a debt denominated in US dollars take cash out of the huge pile and use that cash to pay the debt. Then, have every entity that has money denominated in US dollars convert that money to cash and put it in the huge pile. Finally, compare the starting amount of cash in the pile to the ending amount of cash in the pile.

      Naively, I would call that the money supply. If you started with $100 trillion and ended with $102 trillion then the money supply would be $2 trillion.

      I would assume that the only way this money supply could change would be if the government either created money and put it into circulation or destroyed money and took it out of circulation. Even if it's somehow not possible to figure out an absolute value for this money supply, it should at least be possible to know how this amount is changes. Just look at how much federal government debt is being bought by the federal reserve (and subsequently taxed back to the federal government).

    43. Re:Another good read... by Colin+Smith · · Score: 1

      I would assume that the only way this money supply could change would be if the government either created money and put it into circulation or destroyed money and took it out of circulation. No, because it's the private banks (citibank, bank of america, lone star bank etc etc) are the ones creating the money, NOT the government or the federal reserve.

      --
      Deleted
    44. Re:Another good read... by rossifer · · Score: 1

      Another thing that I consider important is: through fractional reserve banking flows of money that "isn't there" are created. It's not a US-only problem.
      It's only a problem if you confuse currency with money. They aren't the same. Banks (outside of central banks) don't create currency. What normal banks do is separate the supply of money from the supply of currency by determining the wealth/value of other assets (making the supply of asset-backed money much bigger than the supply of currency). This isn't a mistake or even slightly shady. This process (along with the central bank's benevolent control over the currency supply) is largely responsible for the enormous economic growth of the 20th century.

      Banks aren't allowed to loan out more than they accept as deposits, so they always have assets on the books that are worth more than their debts. If all of the depositors to a bank head over and demand their deposits, the bank would have to borrow cash from other banks to meet those demands. But it could do it. The other banks would accept the loans as assets against which they're willing to temporarily provide cash. Everyone from that bank has their money back, the loans are still being collected against, etc. Now, the bank is probably in trouble, but it's depositors are just fine.

      Inflation and deflation are measures of changes between the amount of money in an economy and the quantity of wealth, sometimes called value or utility, available for exchange. This change happens no matter what the kind of currency. Even precious metal money supplies can't be kept exactly aligned with the quantity of wealth and you usually have slow deflation as the supply of wealth grows slightly faster than the supply of currency. Economists have (very publically) determined that a steady state of low inflation results in the highest levels of both investment and economic growth, so our money supply is controlled such that it grows slightly faster than the underlying value/wealth in the economy. The result? Much faster economic growth.

      Fundamentally, in an economy, there are three huge concepts: currency, money, and wealth. They're all different and whenever you see people getting their panties in a twist about banking, you can be certain someone thinks you can't (or shouldn't) separate the concepts of money and currency, with disastrous consequences for the resulting conclusions.
    45. Re:Another good read... by saider · · Score: 2, Informative

      land prices ought to stay more or less the same, since the ammount of land almost never changes

      But the demand for land does increase as the population increases, pushing up the price.

      Supply and Demand. Not just one or the other.

      --


      Remember, You are unique...just like everyone else.
    46. Re:Another good read... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wasn't there that tally stick system in england, that effectively wrested control of money from the central banks, and was used during one of the largest expansions of British empire?

    47. Re:Another good read... by slas6654 · · Score: 0

      I don't want to offend you, but you are really confused about how the economics of money work (at least in the US). I highly recommend an introductory Economics class.

      By administration I assume you mean the executive branch of the government. The executive branch of the government does not dictate the amount of money in the US money supply. The money supply is determined primarily by the national wealth and the gross national product (among other factors). Printed money (M1) actually represents less than 20% of money in the entire money supply. The total money supply (M1 + M2 + M3) is a function the national wealth and the gross national product. M2 and M3 are what are "managed" by the Federal Reserve system. The Federal Reserve and its member banks reviews statistics of GNP, determines the appropriate amount of M2 and M3 money that should be made available to member banks and then buys and sells government debt on behalf of the member banks to approximate that specific amount of M2 and M3 money. Interest rates and federal funds rates are merely the tools to regulate the amount of M2 and M3 made avaible to member banks. The executive branch is limited in how they may influence the Fed's money supply decision-making.

      Congress (the US legislative branch) on the other hand authorizes the selling and purchasing of US debt to facilitate expenditures and the financing of US debt. Congress authorizes the creation of debt which directly effects the amount of money in the money supply.

    48. Re:Another good read... by gronofer · · Score: 1

      The Federal Reserve has three mandates - Price Stability, Full Employment, and moderate long-term interest rates.
      In a free market economy, interest rates would be set by supply and demand for saving vs borrowing. Full employment is a fantasy, hardly anybody wants to work 16 hours a day, leisure time is a valued resource. Price stability simply depends on the supply of money, and is perhaps not as important as some believe.
    49. Re:Another good read... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Oh, I definitely agree that some of the assets you listed have value to SOME individuals, but there is generally NO asset that is valuable to all individuals -- except for gold, which I can not believe that another individual would not covet or desire if offered in trade for a profitable outcome (for both parties). Tools, to me, are not positive-income assets for all. Houses can be tools (for landlords), tractors can be tools (for farmers), but they're not universal.

      Gold has no inherent value to me. I don't really want it for anything. Now, as a means of exchange, okay. But US dollars also work for that, and I greatly prefer them to having to lug around x grams of gold, so I don't see an advantage.

      Also, while a tractor might not be worth much to me personally, so long as there are enough people to whom it IS worth something, that's good enough. We don't use cars as an exchange of value, but you can certainly resell them.

      Now if society collapses to the point where dollars go bad, frankly, gold won't be worth a damn to me and I can't see it being worth much to anyone else in danger of starvation, but the means of survival (food, shelter, clothing, safety and the means to acquire them) sure will be.

      And I'm willing to bet you that gold won't be among those means. You can't eat it and it won't protect you from the elements. Might be nice to hang on to for later, but it sure as hell wouldn't be one of my immediate concerns.

    50. Re:Another good read... by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

      This book is SOOOOOO much better than Griffin's load of tripe. Yes, Rothbard never passes up an opportunity to promote the gold standard, bash government, and ridicule Friedman, but at least he sticks genuine history, and doesn't make up wild conspiracy tales.

      The Federal Reserve is a severly flawed system, but we should attack the reality that it is, and not the fantasies that Griffin imagines.

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    51. Re:Another good read... by N3Bruce · · Score: 1

      As long as the population is increasing, all other things being equal then the value of land will rise. Rising per capita incomes will also tend to increase the value of land, as now wealthier people will demand more of it. Turn it around and have a population reducing event, such as a plague or regional economic catastrophe which causes people to move away, then there is surplus land, which drives down the price.

    52. Re:Another good read... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That does explain a bit to me. I've been confused why the housing slump, cause in large part to the default on sub-prime mortgages....has been causing such a fuss other than being tough luck for housing owners.

      It's because Mortgage-Backed Securities are the backing for something like half of commercial credit. Now there's a huge loss of confidence in MBS's, and businesses simply aren't getting credit. When businesses don't get credit, the economy virtually stops. And that's A Bad Thing.

    53. Re:Another good read... by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

      since mild inflation tends to be good for the economy and deflation tends to be disastrous.

      Inflation encourages misinvestments, and leads to the boom/bust cycle. It's only better than a mild deflation only if you consider production to be better than consumption. But they're both equally important, so that a mild inflation is no better or worse than a mild deflation. The reason inflation seems good for the economy, is that most government economic indicators are skewed towards production. (Also, Keynes and his disciples spent decades promoting inflation as a cure-all). The horror stories of deflation have all been large deflations, but the large hyperinflations of history have all been just as bad.

      In a perfect world, I would prefer a 100% commodity backed currency, as I don't consider a natural and gradual deflation to be a problem. But it ain't going to happen. A good compromise though is Friedman's indexed monetary supply. We need to get human fingers off the knobs of monetary policy.

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    54. Re:Another good read... by dh003i · · Score: 1

      Great post. Rothbard was the most brilliant & prescient economist of the last century, rivaled only by his mentor, Mises.

      Before he died, Friedman -- who had been critical of a real gold standard & in favor pf fiat money -- said that in retrospect, we'd have been better with a gold standard. At least he admitted his tragic mistake; Samuelson never admitted grave idiocy in predicting the USSR overtaking the US in GDP.

      Wealth can't be created by printing out more money. That's just inflation, w/c causes non-uniform price-increases, redistributes wealth, and misallocates resources (malinvestment); this is what causes the business cycle. If inflation -- the printing of money, & expansion by fractional reserve -- created wealth, the countries in Latin America would be the richest in the world.

      More wealth -- that is, increased living standards -- can only be created by savings, productive investment, and innovation; also the increasing of the division of labor internationally, and the reduction in international barter (different fiat currencies, instead of a universal gold standard).

    55. Re:Another good read... by Rocketship+Underpant · · Score: 1

      "Inflation encourages misinvestments, and leads to the boom/bust cycle. It's only better than a mild deflation only if you consider production to be better than consumption. But they're both equally important, so that a mild inflation is no better or worse than a mild deflation."

      Not only that, but with unpredictable inflation of unbacked currencies, it's harder to make sound financial calculations. If the actual inflation rate is anywhere between 2% and 7% this year, how do you calculate whether an investment with a 5% return is making or losing you money?

      Besides, the computer industry shows that gradually *declining* prices is a very robust economic model, excellent in promoting technological development while rapidly increasing the options and wealth of customers.

      --
      He who lights his taper at mine, receives light without darkening me.
    56. Re:Another good read... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This process (along with the central bank's benevolent control over the currency supply) is largely responsible for the enormous economic growth of the 20th century Economic "growth" measured in terms of an inflated "legal tender" money supply? If printing money, if creating "money" out of thin air was in any way productive economic growth, we could achieve near infinite economic growth by turning up the speed of creating money to a near infinite rate. And that is just wishful thinking which would result in hyper inflation collapse of the currency.

      Inflation and deflation are measures of changes between the amount of money in an economy and the quantity of wealth, sometimes called value or utility, available for exchange. Everything which has value to others is available for exchange. "Wealth" is just the sum total of all subjective value. "Money" is just the most commonly traded thing of subjective value. Currently, that would be CREDIT. And of course M3 *dwarfs* M1 (and has been stricken from the Federal Reserve publication record. Now why would that be, if as you allege, such a conception is "important" to understanding the economy?

      Fundamentally, in an economy, there are three huge concepts: currency, money, and wealth. They're all different and whenever you see people getting their panties in a twist about banking, you can be certain someone thinks you can't (or shouldn't) separate the concepts of money and currency, with disastrous consequences for the resulting conclusions. Nope, I would say people who embrace such a tri-conception are ignorant of the basic concept of TRADE: that which is received is valued more than that which is given away in exchange. That's a fundamental economic law and epistemological truism, which when ignored results in erroneous conclusions and conceptions. People who talk about "money" commit a fundamental error of false equivocation of value in exchange, rather than strict greater than and less than mathematical signs (so simple, yet enormous in implication). If fiat currency is only valued not at all for itself and only as a means to exchange, it's nothing more than a ticking hot potato nobody wants to be stuck with when the music stops, unlike other real goods and services.

      That's why there are strict copyright prohibitions against "counterfeiting" which fly in the face of solid economic analysis of real wealth production. If fiat money was really valuable then producing more of it by any means (including everybody running their own personal xerox machines 24/7) would increase wealth. And yet such mass P2P copying of ideas actually does create wealth in every instance in strict economic analysis terms. And of course such increased (copied) production in all other goods and services would similarly result in increased wealth.

      No, what has occurred through fiat currency is the biggest mass robbery ever which has transferred a huge portion of the fruit of economic wealth creation and technological innovation to specific individuals operating under the guise of the label "government", or in this case "Federal Reserve" bank shareholders.

      Why should we believe your naive declaration that the Federal Reserve acts out of "benevolence" for the common individual when that is not the case for every action of unnecessary government force?
    57. Re:Another good read... by pugugly · · Score: 2, Interesting

      More precisely, inflation means the money supply is increasing more quickly than the actual goods and services available in the economy, and vice versa - You can increase the money supply as much as you want as long as the underlying economy is (in reality) expanding at the same rate.

      Any kind of hard standard however means that the money supply is disconnected from the actual underlying economy - it's linked to the actual reserve - a quickly expanding economy means, perforce, deflation and vice versa, which in turn causes an economy to fluctuate between deflationary and inflationary cycles far more quickly and dangerously - deflation being worse because there are no built in economic safeguards to preventing it once started - holding your money instead of spending it means it's *more* valuable tomorrow than today, which cause further deflation. rinse, repeat.

      Moreover, since the access to the reserves influences the local money supply, the economy doesn't achieve equilibrium automatically over different areas (even with the same currency)) creating arbitrary opportunities for arbitrage, which, by definition, means that some economic energy is being drained off as people make money off the inefficiency (Albeit, while correcting it).

      Lastly, you can, in theory, corner the market on *any* commodity (It was nearly done during the Grant administration). I always find it interesting that the very libertarian influences that tend to like the concept of a gold standard are the people philosophically opposed to the very regulations that would make it difficult to corner the gold market once implemented.

      Pug (Again, my layman's views)

      --
      An Invisible Entity of Vast Power whose existence must be taken on faith alone: Liberal Media
    58. Re:Another good read... by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

      Besides, the computer industry shows that gradually *declining* prices is a very robust economic model, excellent in promoting technological development while rapidly increasing the options and wealth of customers.

      Of course. But that is not deflation. Do not confuse deflation with a specific drop in prices. Deflation is the shrinkage of the money supply itself.

      The fear of the deflation doomsayers is not the drop in prices, but widespread disinvestments. The biggest deflation we've had was at the start of the Great Depression. We were on a nominal gold standard at the time, but it was coupled with easy money fractional reserve banking, leading to inflation. As the banks busted in during the inevitable market correction, the money supply contracted sharply. People took their investments out of the market, and jobs dried up.

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    59. Re:Another good read... by BitGeek · · Score: 1

      This is simply not true.

      Deflation is good. Deflation is what happens when you have productivity increases reduce the cost of production, resulting in higher profits for the corporations and lower prices for the consumers.

      Basically, productivity increases are real economic growth.

      When the government inflates the currency to "fight deflation" what it is literally doing is printing money to devalue the earnings of everyone in the country.

      It is literally stealing the results of productivity growth.

      Of course, its a lot easier to steal when nobody realizes that's what you're doing, and so Keynes was a big fan of inflationary policies saying "not a man in a hundred will realize what's been done to him".

      The reality is, the vast majority of people believe such falsehoods as "deflation is bad"... in fact, such a belief is so asinine that one should be embarrassed to say it-- but there is no shame in saying it because so many people have been taught to be ignorant of economic matters and uninterested in them.

      As a result we have the government foisting literaly ponzi schemes on us and calling it "social security" and claiming to fight poverty while increasing it... and people fall for it.

      Griffens book is a brilliant analysis of this situation-- and you really should read it. Especially if you think "deflation" is bad.

      --
      Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    60. Re:Another good read... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From:

      Silent Weapons for Quiet Wars
      http://www.lawfulpath.com/ref/sw4qw/index.shtml

      "...In this structure, credit, presented as a pure element called "currency," has the appearance of capital, but is in effect negative capital. Hence, it has the appearance of service, but is in fact, indebtedness or debt. It is therefore an economic inductance instead of an economic capacitance, and if balanced in no other way, will be balanced by the negation of population (war, genocide). The total goods and services represent real capital called the gross national product, and currency may be printed up to this level and still represent economic capacitance; but currency printed beyond this level is subtractive, represents the introduction of economic inductance, and constitutes notes of indebtedness.

      War is therefore the balancing of the system by killing the true creditors (the public which we have taught to exchange true value for inflated currency) and falling back on whatever is left of the resources of nature and regeneration of those resources.

      Mr. Rothschild had discovered that currency gave him the power to rearrange the economic structure to his own advantage, to shift economic inductance to those economic positions which would encourage the greatest economic instability and oscillation.

      The final key to economic control had to wait until there was sufficient data and high-speed computing equipment to keep close watch on the economic oscillations created by price shocking and excess paper energy credits - paper inductance/inflation."

    61. Re:Another good read... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) Would you care to explain why deflation is bad - but put it in the context of every buyer is also a seller.

      Also

      2) Why those on fixed incomes should have to suffer a loss in the value of their incomes because the central banks like to print money (for their own benifit)?

      A clever chap once wrote something along the lines of wealth and claims to wealth are two different things, increasing claims to wealth doesn't make everyone richer it only transfers wealth from one group to another.

    62. Re:Another good read... by nasor · · Score: 1

      Uh...what would be wrong with deflation, exactly? You can have things cost less, or you can have things cost the same but increase the money supply so that you pay everyone more. Why is one better than the other?

    63. Re:Another good read... by nate+nice · · Score: 1

      Fair enough, I've never studied economics on any level really at all. I've only read things here and there.

      What I meant by the USG creating money via the Fed was they can at any time declare debt and it is constructed in the form of a bond by the Fed. This bond is then sold to someone which creates the money the government needs. This money is then loaned out (10% of it so is kept in reserve) to a bank, which in turn loans out that money (of which 10% is kept in reserve) and so on and so fourth. It gets to the point where all this imaginary money is lent out due to the creation and selling of a bond that for every $1.00 the government creates in debt/bond, there is $10.00 now in the system, e.g. inflation.

      That is what I meant by the government creating money at will. I didn't realize it was congress and not the executive branch. I'd imagine the executive branch has a lot of influence, especially when its part controls congress.

      --
      "If you are a dreamer, a wisher, a liar, A hope-er, a pray-er, a magic bean buyer ..."
    64. Re:Another good read... by MagikSlinger · · Score: 1

      Short Answer: Why is deflation bad? Ask the Japanese.

      Long answer:
      Are you willing to take a cut in your pay? Would you be willing to stay with an employer who cuts your wages? Would you take a lower paying job even IF the price of your "basket of goods" was falling? For most people, the answer is no. Or in the words of a famous economist: "wages are sticky downwards". Deflation causes tremendous problems for employers because their employees and execs won't accept pay cuts.

      Also: You bought a house for $500,000. You got a mortgage for $500,000. Your house is now worth $400,000 with no certainty when you'd recoup your loss. In situations like that, people simply abandon their house and let the bank foreclose on it. The property can no longer fetch $500,000 so the bank loses $100,000. A thousand other people do this. Very quickly, banks start to collapse (ala Japan) and the terror it generates in the populace causes them to take their money from the banks or simply not deposit them there making the problem worse (which can be partially blamed on fractional-reserve banking as mentioned in an earlier post in this thread). Without assets to lend, banks can't give out credit. Economy goes pear shaped.

      Inflation, most economists now believe, is a necessary evil to fight wage stickiness. People are less likely to join the communist party or vote Democrat if they see their income remain flat but prices go up. But if you were to take away some of their income, even if prices were going down, you'd get a general revolt.

      --
      The bitter lessons of a veteran coder: http://bitterprogrammer.blogspot.com
    65. Re:Another good read... by Knara · · Score: 1

      IANAE, but, essentially what was going on was banks/mortagage lenders decided that in order to make more money, they would use what were previously rather exotic lending methods to get people to buy houses. These lending methods included the ARMs. They also lowered the bar significantly for how credit-worthy a borrower had to be to get a loan, in addition to allowing a huge increase in "stated income" mortgage loans, along with somewhat unholy alliances between lenders, appraisers, and home builders. As a result, house values got to insane valuations, resulting in huge loans. A number (not insigificant in count) were ARMs, which began resetting July-August of this year, resulting in foreclosures. As the markets hit a point where people were no longer rapidly shuffling through houses year after year (a saturation point where prices were far too high and supply was still very large), coupled with the ARM resets, resulted in a huge slowdown of home purchases.

      Now, the added bit here is where the loans were going. The banks/lenders would take those loans and repackage them as investment vehicles. Traditionally, banks used to service loans internally, but many now sold them to other organizations and the loans ended up in investment vehicles such as collateralized debt obligations (CDOs), which as far as I can understand is a group of various asset-backed debts that are split up in a mystic fashion to allow people to gain investment profits from them.

      So, what happens when people a) stop buying new houses, and/or b) stop paying their mortgages because they can't afford the payment after the ARM adjusts or the taxes on their now insanely overvalued (in a historical sense) house? The money current moving through to those investment vehicles begins to wane, and since people aren't buying new houses, the banks/lenders have no loans to sell to other organizations, and since they aren't servicing the loans themselves, they don't even get the money from the performing mortgages.

      Since these CDOs (and other such investment vehicles) were bought in large numbers by huge numbers of investment houses and other such entities, its suddenly apparent that the true value of these investments is highly uncertain. As a result, their net worths and fund valuations are in doubt, and anything they base against that becomes iffy. This makes banks and markets nervous, which (in a way I admit I don't entirely understand) makes them reluctant to lend money to eachother, and mid-August we get some overnight bank lending interest rates going nutty, and the central banks of the EU, US, and Japan pushing money into the system to keep it from locking up (this is part of what they're talking about with the "credit crunch" or the "liquidity problem", the other part is down below about borrowers).

      Now, since banks seem to overreact in cases like this, credit/lending for home purchases gets tight-sphinctered in a matter of days, alongside elimination of those exotic 2/28, 5/25/- whatever ARM products (a good thing by and large). Unfortunately, at least for a while, the credit score needed for traditional loans increases even more,andpeople with "good" credit histories have a harder time getting prime rate conventional (under ~415k$) home loans.

      Valuations drop on houses (which eventually can lead to less tax revenue), resulting in people owing far more on their loans than their house perhaps will ever be worth again (or at the least it will take ~10 years to recover at historical rates), causing some owners who are significant upside down to seriously consider walking away (the current bailing-water trend seems to be a surge in home rentals).

      As a result, an already slow housing market gets slower, and real estate agents begin needing new jobs.

      And home builders suddenly have a lot less to build, which leads to layoffs (an undetermined number of subcontractors, though in some areas likely there's a sigificant # of migrant workers, so they won't be reflected in unemployment increases) and held inventory, plus lawsuits if they decide to cut their losses and not build what will surely be money-losing new developments.

      I probably missed some stuff and got some details wrong, but that's the general gist of it.

    66. Re:Another good read... by Knara · · Score: 1

      Oh, about the "extra money" bit.

      Often this is a reference to people taking out home equity loans, basically loans that are based on the difference between the amount one owes in principle on their mortgage and an assessment of their house's current value. As peoples' houses rapidly increased in value, they could take out more and more in loans. Now that the value is going back down (in most places), they end up owing more than their house is worth. A lot of people got in trouble here, too, as they used the home equity loans to pay off credit card debts (sometimes an ok idea, since they often were paying 15%+ on the cc debt, but probably much less on the home equity loans), but then proceeded to run the CC's up again afterwards. Now they're stuck with big credit card bills, and shrinking housing prices.

      There's also people who have been refinancing their mortgage into ARMs, IOs, etc., since the lower monthly payment (for the first few years, at least) "puts more money in their pocket". So, they spend all that money they save, and then the ARM resets or the IO term expires, and they're at the least back where they started, or now potentially paying more in interest than they were with their previous fixed rate loan.

    67. Re:Another good read... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe that is good for Bankers? But is it good for my personal wealth that I've worked hard to achieve?

    68. Re:Another good read... by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      A correlary of this is that land prices ought to stay more or less the same, since the ammount of land almost never changes. A good way to determine if your bankers/govt is fucking with you is to check to see if land prices are changing over the long term.

      Then you are an idiot. Are there more or fewer people now than in 1907? If there are more people, wouldn't that mean less land per person? If supply is decreasing, then what does that do to the prices? I'll give you a hint, staying the same isn't the answer. When you can't get something like "supply and demand" down, we can gladly dismiss anything else coming out of your mouth as black-helicopters-are-out-to-get-us ranting. But thanks for sharing, we need the laugh.

    69. Re:Another good read... by Copid · · Score: 1

      What I meant by the USG creating money via the Fed was they can at any time declare debt and it is constructed in the form of a bond by the Fed.
      That's simply not true. It confuses the job of the Fed and the Treasury. They're very different organizations with very different jobs. When the government issues debt, it does so through the Treasury department. The bonds are auctioned off on the open market. The Fed does transact open market operations by buying and selling bonds, but that's a different matter, and it clearly confuses people on a massive scale. People assume that the Fed just has to buy whatever debt Congress is selling. It doesn't. This assumption leads to the invalid conclusion that Congress essentially "prints money" whenever it issues debt. It doesn't.

      This bond is then sold to someone which creates the money the government needs. This money is then loaned out (10% of it so is kept in reserve) to a bank, which in turn loans out that money (of which 10% is kept in reserve) and so on and so fourth. It gets to the point where all this imaginary money is lent out due to the creation and selling of a bond that for every $1.00 the government creates in debt/bond, there is $10.00 now in the system, e.g. inflation.
      I think you're misunderstanding the money multiplier effect. You're close, but not right in this case. If the government issues a $1 bond, there's no increase in the money supply. The $1 was already out in the system and already multiplied out to its maximum value if it came out of private hands. UNLESS... the Fed buys it. The Fed's bank account has a little "infinity" next to the balance, and when the Fed buys and sells bonds, it really does change the amount of money in the system--and that effect is multiplied out using the money multiplier as you pointed out. Under those circumstances, the debt is in fact "monetized" and is financed in the form of inflation. The key thing to remember is that it's the Fed's decision to do that, not Congress or the President. It's done with an eye toward stable inflation rather than budgetary convenience.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
  3. in 4, 3, 2, 1... by niloroth · · Score: 2, Informative

    Waiting for some idiot to post a link to the Zeitgeist movie's section on the federal reserve. Seriously hoping it doesn't happen, but i have a strange feeling that at least one person on here has fallen victim to the allure of spooky music mixed with insane and unfounded assertions.

    --
    09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    1. Re:in 4, 3, 2, 1... by zzsmirkzz · · Score: 1

      insane and unfounded assertions. Such as....?

    2. Re:in 4, 3, 2, 1... by Colin+Smith · · Score: 1

      Well, there's a point about 2 1/2 hours into that documentary where it's like stepping into the twilight zone. All of a sudden it's a massive century spanning conspiracy theory. The economic basics are fair enough, and the effects of the system are pretty much as described in the documentary, however the conclusion that it's all a massive world wide conspiracy is a bit far fetched.

      All that's required is bog standard greed. It doesn't require a conspiracy.

      --
      Deleted
    3. Re:in 4, 3, 2, 1... by zzsmirkzz · · Score: 1

      Well I'll admit is does expand quite a bit further down the line than most theorists would, but I didn't find any of it that far-fetched. I mean we do have people having their children implanted with tracking chips. We are being required to have them in our driver's licenses and passports. They are passing laws left and right that would somehow allow the government to take complete and utter control over anything and everything that matters. There is talk about the North American Union and the Amero, whether we are fully committed to it yet or not I'm not entirely clear on. About the only thing that seems really far-fetched is that it was thought of and planned this way from the very beginning. That is a little unbelievable. But, those same people (or their decendents) expending and evolving their way of thinking over the years isn't.

    4. Re:in 4, 3, 2, 1... by nate+nice · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't say it's that far fetched. I haven';t seen what you're talking about, but a lot of people don't sit easy with the idea of the Fed.

      The facts are it was founded by a group of very wealthy families worldwide with the idea of overtaking the governments ability to print money. So they met (in what would be considered anti-trust) secretly to plot this and convinced Wilson (the president at the time) to sign it into law. Even though it is considered unconstitutional by some, as the constitution states that ONLY the USA Government can create money in the USA, essentially.

      What's more is the USA government could buy the Fed right now, saving billions of dollars owed in debt to it. It can be argued it doesn't make sense we don't. We would save a lot of money (the country) we would then owe to ourselves. It can also be argued it isn't a good idea to let the government run anything.

      So, is it so crazy to think there is something wrong with a private company that is secretive (they can't be audited) that has the right to print money at will, loan it out and charge interest? Is it crazy to think there is something wrong with a system that features a government asking them for money and then taxing its citizen to pay them back?

      I'm not against the Fed, per se. But I can see why someone would be against them morally. They do in fact create a false economic system that preys on the fact most people are too ignorant to even have a clue what's going on. And those that do are able to exploit it enough.

      --
      "If you are a dreamer, a wisher, a liar, A hope-er, a pray-er, a magic bean buyer ..."
    5. Re:in 4, 3, 2, 1... by Colin+Smith · · Score: 1

      I'm not disagreeing about the system. It's a ponzi scheme of biblical proportions, but the documentary makes out that it was all managed by a cadre of conspirators over several centuries. I just don't see it. Simple greed, looking over the water at the Bank of England seems more plausible.

      --
      Deleted
    6. Re:in 4, 3, 2, 1... by nate+nice · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I'd agree it was hardly some old world scheme. It's more or less wealthy bankers getting together and determining they could create a monopoly on money, pay off the politicians to make it law and profit. The beauty of the system is it took convincing the government to accept this and it's not hard to do when you also give the government the ability to in essence print money at will.

      It can be argued it's simply a modern economic system designed to handle modern economic needs. After all, everything else advances due to new ideas, etc.

      I'm of the belief that fiat economic systems can work, but they shouldn't be managed by a private organization with the goal of profiting and holding permanent economic power. Especially when the USG can buy the Fed and actually profit from buying it. So it doesn't really make sense not to.

      However, being an American there is something comforting knowing the worlds most powerful (and no one is really even close) economic group, which has global interests, has an interest in American being successful. That, more or less, is the balance.

      However, there is still plenty of room for corruption.

      --
      "If you are a dreamer, a wisher, a liar, A hope-er, a pray-er, a magic bean buyer ..."
    7. Re:in 4, 3, 2, 1... by rossifer · · Score: 1

      a lot of people don't sit easy with the idea of the Fed.
      A lot of people who don't understand economics. Not to say that they're stupid for not knowing, but they are pretty silly for criticizing the experts without really understanding what they're criticizing.

      Currency -- Money -- Wealth

      Three completely separate, interrelated, and incredibly important measures in an economy. If you think any two of these things are the same, you need to learn more.
    8. Re:in 4, 3, 2, 1... by sgt_doom · · Score: 1

      Far better would be for you to spend that precious time while waiting to research past congressional legislation shifting funds to the Federal Reserve, then try finding out what became of said funds. (Blackstone Group, Carlyle Group, etc., etc., etc.)

  4. wow. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    "Money plays a key role in modern life"

    Thanks for the heads-up. Very captivating introductory sentence; it really made me want to dive into the rest of the article.

  5. Money as Debt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anybody interested in the Money As Debt should see the documentary:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cy-fD78zyvI&feature=PlayList&p=D8B8EAC323DC2524&index=0&playnext=1

    You can skip the ending, where the author propose magical bullshit solutions, but the first half is food for thought.

    And if you connect the dots with the subprime crisis (credit crunch, aka no new debt, aka no new money, aka not enough money for pending payment, etc, etc), it have some potential scary consequences.

    Cheers,

    --fred

    1. Re:Money as Debt by QuantumPion · · Score: 1

      I watched that series and found it mostly informative. The parts explaining the basics of banking and how our debt money system came to be is accurate I think. However, his conclusions about exponential growth being unsustainable and citing a need to control natural resources and population growth sounded like socialist FUD to me. I agree that having immensely powerful bank CEO's using their influence to manipulate society (e.g. not lending money to a auto manufacturer that wants to build an electric car, or something like that) would be bad, but whether that sort of thing really goes on starts to get into kook conspiracy theory territory. Also, his call for an end to all interest on loans, saying usury was immoral, and suggesting making the government the sole lender of money sounded like communist tripe to me as well. At least he didn't get totally whacky and start blaming the Jews or the Freemasons or something.

      I would like to hear the opinion of an actual economist give their opinion on our money system to get an alternate point of view before making any conclusions of my own. It's hard to sort out the FUD from the propaganda and would be nice to hear both sides of the issue.

    2. Re:Money as Debt by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      start blaming the Jews or the Freemasons or something.

      Damn those free masons, putting us hard-working stone workers out of a job. All I wanted to do was have a nice house and feed my kids!

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    3. Re:Money as Debt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I fully agree. But the idea that money is created by debt is a very powerful one. I work in the risk management banking sector, and I always had troubles figuring out exactly what money was, on a macroscoping scale. And I can tell you that most top-level analyst I talked with just babble bullshit.

      But looking at money as debt helped me to understand a few things...

    4. Re:Money as Debt by king-manic · · Score: 1

      I watched that series and found it mostly informative. The parts explaining the basics of banking and how our debt money system came to be is accurate I think. However, his conclusions about exponential growth being unsustainable and citing a need to control natural resources and population growth sounded like socialist FUD to me. I agree that having immensely powerful bank CEO's using their influence to manipulate society (e.g. not lending money to a auto manufacturer that wants to build an electric car, or something like that) would be bad, but whether that sort of thing really goes on starts to get into kook conspiracy theory territory. Also, his call for an end to all interest on loans, saying usury was immoral, and suggesting making the government the sole lender of money sounded like communist tripe to me as well. At least he didn't get totally whacky and start blaming the Jews or the Freemasons or something.

      Thats not actually totally FUD. It's a universal rule of thumb that nothing in this universe grow exponentially forever (except the size of the universe maybe). They are probably over stating our proximity to the limit of such growth but we need to be aware that a limit exists. If you whole system is build on the notions we'll always be growing.. when we hit the plateau of the logarithm we may face some issues. Population tends to be self regulating but the mechanisms are sometimes unpleasant. So at some point in the future we need to weigh the evils of active artificial regulations of it or a Malthusian dystopia.

      If our population has a natural self regulating limit that doesn't involve unpleasantness, when we hit that limit the economy may not grow anymore. Much of the west has stopped growing due to changes in social variables. These include the spread of legalized abortion, the spread of contraception, the delay in procreation, the shifting of the economic value of children from positive to negative, etc.. these factors may not catch on with the rest of the world and we may still get unpleasantness from those who do not curb their growth.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    5. Re:Money as Debt by Sciryl+Llort · · Score: 1

      Damn those free masons
      # Who controls the British crown, who keeps the metric system down? We do, we do!
    6. Re:Money as Debt by Colin+Smith · · Score: 1

      is conclusions about exponential growth being unsustainable and citing a need to control natural resources and population growth sounded like socialist FUD to me. Well. Exponential growth isn't sustainable in the real world, there are limits to potable water, limits to oil, limits to land area etc and debt is an exponential function, it requires exponential growth to service it. Which is why the economy collapses every so often.

      Having said that, the end of the video was rather "socialist paradise". What I find interesting and ironic is that while the left and right wings are coming to similar conclusions about the existing monetary system and basically want similar characteristics from anything which replaces it. The more left leaning people still want the government to manage the replacement while the right leaning people prefer the market to decide on whatever replaces it.

      Perhaps left/right is wrong, liberal/authoritarian might be better.

      I would like to hear the opinion of an actual economist give their opinion on our money system to get an alternate point of view before making any conclusions of my own http://www.mises.org/money.asp

      --
      Deleted
    7. Re:Money as Debt by nate+nice · · Score: 1

      Well, once argument often made against the Fed is every fractional banking system in the history of man has failed, by most accounts. The idea is, it's a matter of "when", not "if".

      How long can they just keep printing money at will for us (creating debt) before the system collapses. It's their goal to teeter this fine line, no doubt, but it would only take a miscalculation or the presence of something unexpected to screw things up.

      Interesting trends are the fact that Americans don't save money any longer. Around 7% of income was put to savings in the 1950's. Now something like -5% is. That is, we create debt.

      Eventually this debt has to be paid. And when people die or default and don't have savings, how is this debt going to get paid? By tax payers or bad loans? It can add up fast and it's a problem we haven't faced before.

      --
      "If you are a dreamer, a wisher, a liar, A hope-er, a pray-er, a magic bean buyer ..."
    8. Re:Money as Debt by Rick17JJ · · Score: 1

      I have run across several good documentary DVDs and video links that are critical of the Federal Reserve. I am not an expert and I have not yet heard from experts on both sides of the issue, so I have not drawn any final conclusions on the issue. What I have heard so far is quite thought provoking and gives me great concern for our financial future. In general I am slightly uncomfortable with conspiracy theories, so I am not sure what to believe. But, in my non-expert opinion, what they say about history and economics makes sense and is probably actually true.

      Here are the books, DVDs and video links on the subject that I have run across so far:

      Also closely related, but written back in 1899 well before the creation of the Federal Reserve is this book:

      The Coming Battle

      I hope to eventually find a more balanced, unbiased, two sided discussion of the subject by experts on both sides. So far I have only heard from the conspiracy theorists, because the mainstream press has never even mentioned the subject. I try to keep my mind open to what both sides might have to say about the subject. I would also like to hear what an actual economist has to say. Any good links for an opposing view?

      By the way, I have not yet actually finished looking at all those DVDs and books yet, but the ones that I have seen were quite interesting. How do I decide what to believe and what not to believe with all this conspiracy stuff, especially when the mainstream press refuses to give an opposing viewpoint or even touch the subject.

    9. Re:Money as Debt by tolomea · · Score: 1

      That's a nifty piece of propaganda, the way it distorts the situation is both subtle and compelling.

    10. Re:Money as Debt by Colin+Smith · · Score: 1

      Look up the Austrian or Chicago Schools of economics. Less hand waving, more hard monetarism.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicago_school_(economics)
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Austrian_School

      Oh and I don't believe there's a conspiracy. It's just greed. The effects are the same anyway.

      --
      Deleted
    11. Re:Money as Debt by butlerdi · · Score: 1

      Why does loaning money at no interest sound so socialist ? Did you not know that the muslim banks are not able to charge interest. This is why high street banks struggle to get into the market in those countries. Here is a piece by the BBC http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/5064058.stm

      --
      "If the King's English was good enough for Jesus, it's good enough for me!" -- "Ma" Ferguson, Governor of Texas (circa
    12. Re:Money as Debt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (I am the OP)

      That is what I said. Food for thought... :-)

  6. One small quibble by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Jekyll Island is in fact a peninsula.

    1. Re:One small quibble by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try again... its surrounded by water on all sides.

      http://maps.google.com/maps?q=Jekyll+Island,+GA,+USA&sa=X&oi=map&ct=title

  7. Obligitory money banking and the federal reserve by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  8. A Better Reference is by rnicey · · Score: 2, Funny
    1. Re:A Better Reference is by rucs_hack · · Score: 1

      speaking as someone waiting for Audible to add it to their catalog, I can certainly fall asleep waiting for it.

      Its been several days, and its still not out, dammit.

    2. Re:A Better Reference is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's out on the pirate bay.

    3. Re:A Better Reference is by Colin+Smith · · Score: 1

      Austrian Economist: Ludwig Von Mises.

      Terry Pratchett's protagonist: Moist von Lipwig

      --
      Deleted
  9. Bah! Who needs history when there's ADVENTURE! by ScentCone · · Score: 4, Informative

    No nerdly discussion about the history of money would be complete without a slavish recommendation to read Neal Stephenson's Baroque Cycle. Which, indeed, one should. ADHD raised-on-MTV types needn't bother, but it's pure gold. (+5 self-referental humor!)

    --
    Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    1. Re:Bah! Who needs history when there's ADVENTURE! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      feconded. Everyone should commit themfelves to the reading of thefe fine volumes.

      Also, in the olden dayf, why is S so very often replaced by f? WTF is that?

      (Yes, I realize that Stephenson did not actually write the BC in the early or even not-so-recent ADs. Thank you, so informative, thanks, and thanks again in advance for that essential and hitherto totally unknown fact. Fuck slashdot.)

    2. Re:Bah! Who needs history when there's ADVENTURE! by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Also, in the olden dayf, why is S so very often replaced by f? WTF is that?

      At that time, it wasn't unusual to write the long medial "s" as an "f". Somewhat randomly, here's some quick reading on the subject .

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    3. Re:Bah! Who needs history when there's ADVENTURE! by Knara · · Score: 1

      Hmmm. Is this in any way related to the "B" in German that represents "ss"?

  10. You asked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  11. You want the negatives on this book? by brundlefly · · Score: 4, Informative

    There are plenty. Many people do not consider this book to be a balanced discussion of the subject matter at hand. This type of controversy should be mentioned in any prominent book review.

    1. Re:You want the negatives on this book? by benzapp · · Score: 1
      Most of those negative reviews are written by people who don't understand how the federal reserve works, and they probably didn't read the book. I'll summarize their complaints here

      Take the complaint by David Blacklock from Waco Texas: "There is a strong consensus among economists - our author is not one of these - that business cycles are best managed by monetary policy."

      The author isn't saying there shouldn't be monetary policy. The entire point of the book is that the Fed has NOT managed the monetary system properly, best evidenced by the fact the value of the US dollar has declined by 98% since the Fed was created.

      Let's take an anonymous poster who said "The author has not worked in banking and has no comprehension of the basic money supply. I was a banker for over 28 years and have no love for the Federal Reserve. However, the book gives so much bad information, readers will lose sight of the real danger of the Fed. That danger is the ability to increase interest rates to a point our economy could collapse. The author blames the Fed for the expansion of the money supply. This is not correct. The money supply has been extended to over 5 trillion dollars by the Congress of the United States."

      This is actually false. The money supply is increased by ONE WAY and ONE WAY ONLY! When a bank issues a loan, the loan itself is money "created" with the debt ultimately reported to the Fed. There are various mechanisms that restrict how many loans banks can create as a ratio of their liquid holdings, but the simple fact of the matter the US government is but one entity that takes out loans. Most debt creation is NOT to the US government. This poster may work in a bank, but as a teller or some low level position that really doesn't understand what it means to issue a loan. It's not like the bank had the money beforehand. In all actuality, anyone with a brain who sits down and thinks about this knows that it's true. There wasn't enough money in the world to lend trillions of dollars to every government entity in the country, as well as every homeowner. If tomorrow we banned money lending, the money supply could never increase. It's that simple.

      A great one is from BooksEverywhereAtHome who said: "I've read a number of books on the Fed, including Greider's excellent book. I also like certain of the "conspiracy" works. This book, however, is juvenille in both respects. I knew I was in trouble when the author breaks the news that banks don't have money, they're lending out money from other people and making money on it. I thought everyone who saw It's A Wonderful Life knew that one already. I'd save your money, there's nothing earthshattering here for anyone who understands anything about the banking system."

      Again, this is another poster who apparently doesn't even understand what they are saying. Banks issue loans by stealing part of the value of your money, then they collect interest on it. The author knows this, but doesn't seem to find anything wrong with it. It would be one thing if the government did this directly - a power the constitution clearly gives it - and returns the interest to the public coffers. Instead, it goes into the hands of a ruling elite. This is how they survive. They are parasites and this was at the heart of it all, the reason for World War II and for every major conflict since then. The conflict is not over. Yeah, the greatest war in human history. That's not earthshattering.

      Then there is Ken Waters who stated "The Federal Reserve is a financial system manager, plain and simple. "

      That is the most comical statement of all. Sure, all they do is "manage" the economy. Again, why then do they have to collect interest which does not accrue to the public's benefit? Another example of the sheeple who will be mystified when our economy collapses.

      Sorry, there are no credible bad reviews on Amazon. Just

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    2. Re:You want the negatives on this book? by Chandon+Seldon · · Score: 1

      The money supply is increased by ONE WAY and ONE WAY ONLY! When a bank issues a loan, the loan itself is money "created" with the debt ultimately reported to the Fed.

      What is the functional difference between that and the issuance of government bonds?

      --
      -- The act of censorship is always worse than whatever is being censored. Always.
    3. Re:You want the negatives on this book? by klenwell · · Score: 1

      Almost taken in by this review myself. Thanks for posting the counterpoint. An online forum working at its best.

      Someone recommended looking at 19th c. texts below. In that vein, check out The Education of Henry Adams as this is an issue with which he wrestles insightfully in the wake of the Battle of the Standards and William Jenning's Bryant Cross of Gold and all. Keep in mind that he's writing in advance of the Federal Reserve, but clearly trying to get his head around the idea of what money is exactly or should be.

      Also, a warning: he makes some unfortunate impolitic references to Jews. Critical readers like to dismiss these as the reflexive anti-Semitism of any 19th century . There's some justice in that reaction. At the same time, without attempting to apologize for him, such references could also be read as a shorthand (not socially taboo in the way it is today) reference to the advancing political influence of a financial industry beginning to wield the more sophisticated tools of modern capitalism.

      --
      Innovation makes enemies of all those who prospered under the old regime... -- Machiavelli
    4. Re:You want the negatives on this book? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >The entire point of the book is that the Fed has NOT managed the monetary system properly, best evidenced by the fact the value of the US dollar has declined by 98% since the Fed was created.

      On the other hand, the fault is there. And it is entierly created by the politicans as mr Greenspan said in his book (something in the lines of, -my hands was backtied) So, lets blame the politicans for the federal reserve. But their hands is backtied by the woters they serve. So lets blame the woters? No, no can do. The woters are you and me and we are impeccable by nature.

      Well, if we cant find a scapegoat. I'm afraid it all boils down to you and med. /Jens

    5. Re:You want the negatives on this book? by benzapp · · Score: 1

      None.

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    6. Re:You want the negatives on this book? by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      That is the most comical statement of all. Sure, all they do is "manage" the economy.


      No, they manage the money supply. Now, that is important to the economy, and particular important in regards to inflation, but its far from the only lever that is used to manage the economy, and it is a fairly blunt instrument compared to, say, fiscal policy when it comes to managing the economy.
    7. Re:You want the negatives on this book? by ucla74 · · Score: 1

      I thought the review was pretty clear in establishing that this was not a balanced look at the Fed.

    8. Re:You want the negatives on this book? by hardburn · · Score: 1

      The entire point of the book is that the Fed has NOT managed the monetary system properly, best evidenced by the fact the value of the US dollar has declined by 98% since the Fed was created.

      Inflation happens, and in manageable amounts, isn't particularly worrying.

      Banks issue loans by stealing part of the value of your money, then they collect interest on it. The author knows this, but doesn't seem to find anything wrong with it.

      When you use loaded terms, you can find something wrong with anything.

      I personally don't have the capital to invest in larger personal loans. Banks can collect the capital of several people like me and issue loans. They charge interest on those loans, part of which normalizes the loan against inflation, part of which goes to me and the other people who have money in the bank, and the rest goes to the bank itself. They expect to make a profit in the end. There's nothing in this process that's a secret. You agree to let the bank use your money this way when you put your savings in there. Nobody is stealing from anybody.

      Now, Mutual Funds pool money together for investments in a similar way, and typically have a higher rate of return than any savings account, but then you must weigh the risk/reward and liquidity of the money. Those belong in a separate discussion.

      They are parasites and this was at the heart of it all, the reason for World War II and for every major conflict since then.

      *blink*

      Power-hungry dictators existed long before the Fed.

      --
      Not a typewriter
    9. Re:You want the negatives on this book? by cheezedawg · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The author isn't saying there shouldn't be monetary policy. The entire point of the book is that the Fed has NOT managed the monetary system properly, best evidenced by the fact the value of the US dollar has declined by 98% since the Fed was created.
      That is not evidence of mismanagment, especially considering that the policy of the Fed for much of its existance has been to keep inflation low, predictible, and most importantly, above zero. This 98% statistic that you think proves mismanagement is actually evidence that the Fed is achieving its goals.

      Some inflation is desireable, and the reasons why are simple: sustained economic growth when the currency is deflating is next to impossible. Nobody wants to borrow money today that they are going to pay back with more expensive dollars in the future. As a result, productivity and capital investments drop, and the economy stagnates. The opposite is true when the currency inflates. The key is to keep inflation predictable so people can plan for it.

      This is actually false. The money supply is increased by ONE WAY and ONE WAY ONLY! When a bank issues a loan, the loan itself is money "created" with the debt ultimately reported to the Fed.
      No, thats not the only way that the money supply is increased. The US treasury dept increases the money supply when it auctions securities to the public. The FOMC can also increase the money supply through its open market operations.

      Again, this is another poster who apparently doesn't even understand what they are saying. Banks issue loans by stealing part of the value of your money, then they collect interest on it.
      Your loaded terminology is betraying you. Implicit in our system is the assumption that loans and investments drive future economy growth. If the money supply grows by $y, and the resulting activity increases our economy by $y, then nothing has been "stolen".

      Sorry, there are no credible bad reviews on Amazon. Just a bunch of folks who don't understand fractional reserve lending and how the money supply is directly tied to the issuance of debt. The rest are communists who hate the John Birch society and defame the author and discredit his work entirely on his involvement with that organization.
      I guess its a lot easier to argue an opinion if you just blithely dismiss anybody that disagrees with you as being ignorant.
      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    10. Re:You want the negatives on this book? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't read or respond to AC posts

      Bullshit. I guarantee that you will read this post. 100% guarantee. You are likely too proud to admit that your sig is bullshit by responding to this, though, but that doesn't change the fact that it is bullshit.

      So I am calling you out. Admit that your sig is bullshit.

    11. Re:You want the negatives on this book? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Govt Bond interest goes to the general population, and is paid for by selling more bonds or taxes.
      Loan interest goes to the bankers and creates more dept/money in a cycle that literally can't be stopped unless loans arn't paid and the system crashes.

      So basically, they are opposites as bonds create dept for the Govt, and Loans create Dept for EVERYONE.

    12. Re:You want the negatives on this book? by benzapp · · Score: 1

      Banks can collect the capital of several people like me and issue loans.

      Sorry, that isn't how banks issue loans. We have this thing called fractional reserve lending, which through a complicated process essentially allows banks to create money via issuance of loans indefinitely. Most commercial banks have liquid assets equivalent to less than 5% of their oustanding loans. When a bank issues you a loan, the money you receive didn't come from a depositor, it was created out of thin air - thereby devaluing existing monies in circulation.

      You agree to let the bank use your money this way when you put your savings in there.

      Everyone on some level knows this isn't true. If it were, you would not be able to withdraw you money at will from banks as the money was given to someone else. You haven't thought about this enough.

      Nobody is stealing from anybody.

      Yes they are. You cannot create value out of thin air. This system of lending only works because part of the value of existing money is transferred to the new money put into circulation via the issuance of debt.

      Power-hungry dictators existed long before the Fed.

      What is worse, a power hungry dictator who is honest about his plans and actions, or this form of debt slavery? There isn't enough money in the world to lend to every single citizen, business, and government entity. The average person spends a quarter of his life paying interest on his mortgage, personal debt, and his share of government debt. Personally, I think the current system is much worse - everyone is a slave and they don't even realize it. They even hold crazy beliefs like yours that the money you borrow actually was the product of someone who chose to save his hard earned money in a bank!

      Why don't you watch this video that explains how the money supply is expanded via the issuance of debt.

      http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-9050474362583451279&hl=en

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    13. Re:You want the negatives on this book? by benzapp · · Score: 1

      Some inflation is desireable, and the reasons why are simple: sustained economic growth when the currency is deflating is next to impossible. Nobody wants to borrow money today that they are going to pay back with more expensive dollars in the future. As a result, productivity and capital investments drop, and the economy stagnates. The opposite is true when the currency inflates. The key is to keep inflation predictable so people can plan for it.

      Apparently you are unfamiliar with the 19th century. In 100 years, the United States was transformed from near total wilderness to the world's largest industrial power filled with hundreds of cities and a vast railroad system. The US saw vastly greater improvements in standard of living, scientific advancement, and overall progress in comparison with the modern era. This was all done during a period of moderate - and at times severe - deflation. Deflation is the natural order of things in an industrial society. Productivity and efficiency necessarily should result in decreased costs. And please - don't tell me about the horrible days of working factories. I live in New York City - people pay $2000 a month for a 400 square foot studio in tenement built for such factory workers. It wasn't so bad.

      No, thats not the only way that the money supply is increased. The US treasury dept increases the money supply when it auctions securities to the public. The FOMC can also increase the money supply through its open market operations.

      Don't kid yourself. A bond is a loan.

      Your loaded terminology is betraying you. Implicit in our system is the assumption that loans and investments drive future economy growth. If the money supply grows by $y, and the resulting activity increases our economy by $y, then nothing has been "stolen".

      In theory this should be true, but it is impossible when people are collecting interest on money created out of thin air. The problem we have today is only part of the money stolen from the people finds its way into the economic system, the interest however accrues to a bankster elite. The current system we have could work, but only the federal government should have the right to issue loans via this system, and they should be interest free or the interest should accrue to the public coffers. Private entities should only be able to issue loans using real money from depositors who rightly are risking their own money. There is no risk in taking money from the people and giving it to someone else when they get nothing out of it.

      Watch this video.

      I guess its a lot easier to argue an opinion if you just blithely dismiss anybody that disagrees with you as being ignorant.

      I'm sorry, I didn't know some people on slashdot still support ad hominem attacks. As for the comment on fractional reserve lending, even you don't seem to grasp the consequences. Anyway, watch the video - maybe it will become clear.

      Friend, this is a real problem. No one is buying US treasuries anymore because of the pathetic interest rate the fed set last week, and the debt load of the American consumer is far too great. This system of expanding the money supply through the creation of debt is on the way out, and it behooves all responsible citizens to prepare for this accordingly. A major liquidity crisis is coming your way soon.

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    14. Re:You want the negatives on this book? by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      The entire point of the book is that the Fed has NOT managed the monetary system properly,

      Exactly. This comes across intially as a history book. Regardless of whether the facts are correct, it is not a histroy book. It is a book designed to persuade/incite, not inform. It may achieve those goals through information. However, its goal is not to inform. However, a book titled "Why I Think the Federal Reserve Sucks" would be more accurate, but probably not generate the confused people that think they are buying a history book to find someone's personal rant printed out in hardcover.

    15. Re:You want the negatives on this book? by cheezedawg · · Score: 3, Informative

      Apparently you are unfamiliar with the 19th century. In 100 years, the United States was transformed from near total wilderness to the world's largest industrial power filled with hundreds of cities and a vast railroad system.

      The United States did not become the world's largest economy until after WWII. The economy in the 19th century was wild, with massive swings in employment, GDP growth, and inflation. It was not uncommon for the economy would grow by 20+% one year, only to contract by 15% 2 years later (1813 and 1815, for example). The average nominal GDP growth for that century was only around 4.5% compared that to almost 7% since then (and that includes the Great Depression!).

      This was all done during a period of moderate - and at times severe - deflation. Deflation is the natural order of things in an industrial society.

      This is incorrect. Between 1790-1913, the annualized inflation rate was around .1%, which is very low, but still positive. With only one exception, every deflationary period during the 19th century time corresponded directly with an economic contraction. The exception to this is the years 1866-1878, where there were 12 years of sustained deflation (the longest deflationary period on record) but GDP growth remained positive. This period is an outlier in our economic history, and not a basic rule like you claim.

      Don't kid yourself. A bond is a loan.

      Of course a bond is a loan, but the mechanism which public debt increases the money supply is different from private debt. When the government holds an auction to sell securities, it transfers $X from the public to the government (in exchange for $X worth of interest bearing assets). This alone would actually decrease the money supply if it weren't for the fact that the government does not maintain a cash account, so it turns around and spends the $X, putting the money back in the private sector (although to different people that it borrowed the money from). The end result is that the private sector still has $X and they have $X worth of interest bearing assets in the form of treasury securities.

      Watch this video.

      I have seen that video before, and I do not like it. It is classic conspiratorial propaganda- just enough fact so you can't accuse them of outright lying, but dressed up with the most inflammatory language possible and reaching conclusions not supported by the facts. I found it to be an appeal to emotion rather than to reason, and I don't like that.

      I'm sorry, I didn't know some people on slashdot still support ad hominem attacks.

      I have no idea who you are referring to here (who has supported ad hominem attacks in this thread?), but the idea that slashdot of all places (the cesspool of online discourse) is somehow too dignified for ad hominem attacks made me chuckle.

      As for the comment on fractional reserve lending, even you don't seem to grasp the consequences. Anyway, watch the video - maybe it will become clear.

      You just did it again. It is possible to understand the macroeconomic impacts of fractional reserve lending, and disagree with benzapp at the same time. You have to stop assuming that anybody that disagrees with you is just ignorant.

      No one is buying US treasuries anymore because of the pathetic interest rate the fed set last week, and the debt load of the American consumer is far too great.

      No one is buying our treasuries? Today's Treasury auction for 5 year notes attracted over $37 billion worth of competitive bids. This was about $2 billion more than last month's auction (before the Fed announced the cut in the target rate), and about the same as the auction held in September 2006. Oh, and the interest rate from today's auction was 4.25%, which is only 1/8% higher than last month, and a full .

      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    16. Re:You want the negatives on this book? by benzapp · · Score: 0, Troll

      The United States did not become the world's largest economy until after WWII. The economy in the 19th century was wild, with massive swings in employment, GDP growth, and inflation. It was not uncommon for the economy would grow by 20+% one year, only to contract by 15% 2 years later (1813 and 1815, for example). The average nominal GDP growth for that century was only around 4.5% compared that to almost 7% since then (and that includes the Great Depression!).
      Do you just pull facts out of your ass and hope no one will notice? Lot's of people don't hold much faith in the GDP measurements. In terms of actual industrial and agricultural output, those numbers are bullshit. Find a source. Also, there was virtually no unemployment in the United States in the 19th century. More bullshit.

      This is incorrect. Between 1790-1913, the annualized inflation rate was around .1%, which is very low, but still positive. With only one exception, every deflationary period during the 19th century time corresponded directly with an economic contraction. The exception to this is the years 1866-1878, where there were 12 years of sustained deflation (the longest deflationary period on record) but GDP growth remained positive. This period is an outlier in our economic history, and not a basic rule like you claim.
      And this of course, is the most comical piece of bullshit in your post. You can find the exact opposite information regarding the value of money in the government's own publications! Read Historical Statistics of the United States, Colonial Times to 1970. Washington, DC: Bureau of the Census; U.S. G.P.O., 1975. I even found a nice online calculator for you to show how prices declined by 50% during the 19th century.

      I have seen that video before, and I do not like it. It is classic conspiratorial propaganda- just enough fact so you can't accuse them of outright lying, but dressed up with the most inflammatory language possible and reaching conclusions not supported by the facts. I found it to be an appeal to emotion rather than to reason, and I don't like that.
      Well, we've already established you're not very interested in facts either. Your entitled to an opinion of course, but let's not make the bogus claim you have made a legitimate argument here despite your use of words like "reason". It is a complicated subject that most people don't understand, and the video conveys the truth to the average person quite well. I'd love to know what "conclusion" was reached that is not supported by fact. I guarantee you won't tell me, because well - you're full of shit!

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    17. Re:You want the negatives on this book? by cheezedawg · · Score: 2

      Do you just pull facts out of your ass and hope no one will notice?
      Nope. The data I got was from these two sources:
      http://eh.net/hmit/gdp/
      http://measuringworth.com/calculators/uscompare/

      Lot's of people don't hold much faith in the GDP measurements. In terms of actual industrial and agricultural output, those numbers are bullshit.
      Perfect. You have constructed another argument where the facts don't matter. How about instead of blindly labeling any contrarian data as "bullshit", suggest some alternate means of measuring the economy, or better yet, explain exactly what aspect of the GDP measurements you find inaccurate.

      Also, there was virtually no unemployment in the United States in the 19th century. More bullshit.
      Where on earth did you get that idea? Even that propaganda video that you are pimping every chance you get talks about some periods of heavy unemployment in the 1800s that led to civil unrest. You know- when those evil illuminati were executing their nefarious plans for world domination.

      And this of course, is the most comical piece of bullshit in your post. You can find the exact opposite information regarding the value of money in the government's own publications! Read Historical Statistics of the United States, Colonial Times to 1970. Washington, DC: Bureau of the Census; U.S. G.P.O., 1975. I even found a nice online calculator for you to show how prices declined by 50% during the 19th century.
      You are right. I had plugged the numbers in from 1790-1913 (when the Federal Reserve was created) to get that statistic. It looks like the extra years on both ends did skew the results, and the period from 1800-1899 was net deflationary.

      That said, take a look at this graph comparing GDP growth and inflation rates from 1790-1913. The correlation between deflation and economic contractions is almost perfect. To claim that the economy thrived when the currency deflated is misleading, to say the least.

      I'd love to know what "conclusion" was reached that is not supported by fact.
      Its been a while since I watched the video. I remember such sound arguments as:
      • The Rothschilds were the richest and most powerful family in the world during the 19th century, and we have "no evidence" that this has changed, so they are still the richest and most powerful family in the world.
      • The evil bankers did not like President Lincoln's plans for the national currency, so John Wilkes Booth was obviously a mercenary hired by them to assassinate the President.
      Its classic conspiracy theory- impossible to disprove, but don't mistake that for proof that it is true.
      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    18. Re:You want the negatives on this book? by benzapp · · Score: 1

      Nope. The data I got was from these two sources:
      http://eh.net/hmit/gdp/

      You used the nominal GDP rate and not the real GDP rate - that is bad economic analysis. If you analyze the numbers again using the real GDP, you'll find the average annual growth rate from 1790 to 1912 was 4.21%, while from the period 1913 to 2006, the rate was 3.48%. The numbers are questionable for several reasons, most notably is the extensive presence of barter during the former period and related imprecision of estimates. Another simple measure of GDP growth should be the level of capital investment. As I said, an entire vast country was created during the former period, while the latter period has produced comparatively little that is lasting.

      Perfect. You have constructed another argument where the facts don't matter. How about instead of blindly labeling any contrarian data as "bullshit", suggest some alternate means of measuring the economy, or better yet, explain exactly what aspect of the GDP measurements you find inaccurate.

      That wasn't an argument, it was a statement. I don't have time to qualify every statement. But I'll give it a shot because you seem like a smart fellow and at least tried to back up your statements. Cheers to that. I'm an aesthete at heart and don't believe it is possible nor desirable to measure the success or failure of civilization in the materialistic terms of an bean counter. That alone should reason enough to dismiss any GDP measurements in relation to this discussion, but if we are to play your numbers game, I refer you to the wikipedia article which is amazingly a good place to start.

      A simple modern-day correlation would be the value of the DOW. Many people believe the stock market has recovered from the 2001 crash. In nominal terms it has, but in real terms - even using the government's dubious inflation statistics - it has still has a good 1,000 points to go before that happens. Another absolutely pressing matter is debt and tax load. What percentage of the per capita GDP in 1890 was sucked up by the banksters and their government minions? What about today? In 1890, Americans probably spent less than 10% of their income on taxes and/or interest. Today, it is more like 50%. This necessarily has to factor into this analysis somehow, but check out the wikipedia article for more.

      Where on earth did you get that idea? Even that propaganda video that you are pimping every chance you get talks about some periods of heavy unemployment in the 1800s that led to civil unrest. You know- when those evil illuminati were executing their nefarious plans for world domination.

      Sheesh, even the Haymarket Riot (May Day to commies) wasn't about unemployment. Unemployment wasn't a problem because anyone could at the very least become a homesteader on the frontier. I will admit that unemployment is more of a problem today because there is nowhere for surplus population to go. In the 19th century, people were concerned with poor people living in cramped tenements that rent for $2K a month today. They weren't concerned with hordes of people without any means to take care of themselves. I think we're talking about a different video, by the way. I really don't know much about the Illuminati, and that video doesn't discuss it.

      That said, take a look at this graph comparing GDP growth and inflation rates from 1790-1913. The correlation between deflation and economic contractions is almost perfect. To claim that the economy thrived when the currency deflated is misleading, to say the least.

      If the GDP decreases by 25% but the prices of goods drops 50%, a rational person would call that a period of prosperity. Use the real GDP rate.

      Its been a while since I watched the video. I remember such sound arguments as:

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    19. Re:You want the negatives on this book? by cheezedawg · · Score: 2, Informative

      You used the nominal GDP rate and not the real GDP rate - that is bad economic analysis.
      Yup- I had started out analyzing the GDP vs inflation rates, where the nominal GDP is the proper number to use, to generate that graph. I should have used real GDP numbers for the direct comparison. I need to stop posting after my brain has already turn off from a long day of work. My bad.

      But look at the per capita GDP growth rates. From 1790-1913, real per capita GDP grew by an average of 1.45% per year. From 1913-2006, real per capita GDP grew by 2.10%, and remember that this period includes the Great Depression.

      I'm an aesthete at heart and don't believe it is possible nor desirable to measure the success or failure of civilization in the materialistic terms of an bean counter.
      Well, I think there is a lot more to the success or failure of an entire civilization than just it's economy, but I guess that is a different discussion.

      Nobody claims that the GDP is a perfect measure of an economy, but it is the best broad measurement that we have, so I don't think that any honest discussion can just dismiss the number.

      If the GDP decreases by 25% but the prices of goods drops 50%, a rational person would call that a period of prosperity.
      I disagree. The only way you can prosper with the GDP decreasing is if your population and resource requirements are also decreasing- otherwise people start starving.

      Yeah, we're definitely talking about a different video.
      Yikes- sorry about that. More evidence that I shouldn't post past my bedtime :). I was referring to the 3 1/2 hour documentary from the mid 1990s called The Money Masters. Somebody else posted a google video link to that in this discussion, and I somehow got it confused with your post.
      Here is a link to that video, btw.

      I have also seen that Money as Debt cartoon before, and it isn't quite as conspiratorial. I still didn't like how they treat the subject like a big secret that nobody talks about when I learned about it in my freshmen econ class years ago.
      --
      "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
    20. Re:You want the negatives on this book? by Chandon+Seldon · · Score: 1

      Who buys government bonds? Who buys stock in banks that issue loans?

      These probably aren't exactly the same groups of people, but I don't think it cleanly breaks down to "normal citizens" and "the evil banker elite". In fact, knowing exactly who was making money off interest in our economic system would be really interesting.

      --
      -- The act of censorship is always worse than whatever is being censored. Always.
  12. Money is.. by AltGrendel · · Score: 1

    ..only a concept.

    --
    The simple truth is that interstellar distances will not fit into the human imagination

    - Douglas Adams

    1. Re:Money is.. by Daimanta · · Score: 1

      A concept which can get you ramen, Mountain Dew and high speed internet. Basically, everything a /.er could desire.

      Well, that and a girlfriend.

      --
      Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power lost.
    2. Re:Money is.. by vertinox · · Score: 1

      A concept which can get you ramen, Mountain Dew and high speed internet. Basically, everything a /.er could desire.

      Well the point he was making is that if tomorrow by the unlikely chance everyone decided money was no longer valuable and refused good and services for money that it would simply be worthless.

      Although it is unlikely, if everyone simultaneously agreed money was worthless then Bill Gates would have nothing of value in his bank account.

      However, this does happen slightly every time the inflation goes up. People slowly agree that money isn't worth as much as it was before and they require more of it to be worth something.

      In the end... Money these days is a non-tangible since your bank account is simply a recording of data of money that does not exist in even paper form or with some type of gold backing it.

      --
      "I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
      -Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
    3. Re:Money is.. by AtariEric · · Score: 1

      Money can rent one of those too...

      Legality may vary though, depending on location, but still...

      --
      Don't trust any concentration of power.
    4. Re:Money is.. by blahplusplus · · Score: 1

      Money is debt. Anyone who does not own thier own self-sustaining property (food, housing, etc) is in permanent debt to the people (familiy, industries, etc) who control the money supply.

      Only once you get enough money to control a significant amount of passive profit generating assets does the nature of money change, by being able to control assets with higher capital flow then what you consume.

  13. i am very surprised to see this on /. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ive known this for quite some time, and when you tell people about it they mock you with tinfoil hat jokes. it is amazing just how important of an issue this is and 99% of americans and the rest of the world for that matter are in complete ignorance of it.

    watch 'the money masters' a documentary by bill still, im sure you can find it on youtube or something of the sort.

    the fact of the matter is, the federal reserve is the biggest scam in history.

    people think you are a lunatic when you say that the federal reserve created the great depression. students that study economics have a very brainwashed spin on it which goes something like 'well, they didnt CAUSE it, but they didnt PREVENT it.'....

    look at what ben bernanke said during milton freidman's (nobel prize winning economist that died recently, very outspoken critic of the FED) 90th birthday-

    "Let me end my talk by abusing slightly my status as an official representative of the Federal Reserve. I would like to say to Milton and Anna: Regarding the Great Depression. You're right, we did it. We're very sorry. But thanks to you, we won't do it again."

    what is sad is that even armed with this knowledge the citizens of the USA wont take up arms and vanquish the true foe of the modern world that creates division and false opposition. we are a pathetic lazy people that deserve what is coming to us.

    1. Re:i am very surprised to see this on /. by jeevesbond · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Quite right, here's a good quote:

      Bankers own the earth; take it away from them but leave them the power to create credit & with a flick of a pen they will create enough to buy it all back again. Take this power away from them & all great fortunes like mine will disappear, & they ought to disappear for this would be a happier & better world. But if you want to be slaves of bankers & pay the cost of your own slavery, continue to let bankers control money and credit.

      - Lord Stamp, former Director of the Bank of England, 1940

      Here's a link for 'The Moneymasters', it's an interesting watch--if a little 80's/90's

      This is an area where there are some interesting conspiracy theories, however central banks and currency are complicated subjects so it's worth keeping a cool head and trying to remain objective.

      This is a subject not many understand, myself included, so I remain very skeptical that the information put forth by books like The Creature from Jekyll Island: A Second Look at the Federal Reserve and films like The Money Masters is correct. What we can all take from these are some interesting questions to ask bankers and economists, it would be interesting to find out how the banking systems of the world actually work, unfortunately--judging by the Amazon reviews someone else posted--it looks like this book is not a good place to find this out.

      --
      I'm going to transform myself into a mighty hawk. Either that or I'll just go and work at Dixons, haven't decided yet.
  14. What the...? by boyfaceddog · · Score: 1

    Not news for nerds. News for economists, maybe. And I guess you could call economists nerds, sort of, but not in the IT way. So, no, not news for nerds.

    Stuff that matters? Yeah, I guess, sort of. But not from an IT perspective, or even the persective of someone who is more concerned about computers than money.

    Why is this review here?

    Oh, I forot. Slashdot is Digg now.

    Sorry, my fault.

    --
    Here will be an old abusing of God's patience and the king's English.
    1. Re:What the...? by UbuntuDupe · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah, normally, you have to wait for a thread to tangent about money to have one of these discussions. A book about the Federal Reserve just doesn't seem appropriate for /.

      Nevertheless, I'm going to comment:

      The review claims that a number of statements are false. I mostly disagree:

      The Federal Reserve is federal, i.e., a part of the US government.

      It's a semantics game to claim otherwise. The Fed chairman is appointed by "the government", charterd by the government, and designated to achieve US domestic policy goals, and subject to being shut down if it acts too crazily. It is given significant autonomy by congress. Does that make it "not part of the government"? Okay, then I guess the federal courts aren't either.

      The Federal Reserve is a reserve, i.e., it has monetary savings of real value.

      The federal reserve has cash holdings. Cash has real value. Don't believe me? Go offer it in an exchange.

      The Federal Reserve serves the public, and is not a cartel of private banks serving itself.

      Kind of. Given its autonomy, it could achieve nefarious goals. However, members are required to basically give up any financial holdsing that could lead to a conflict of interest.

      The US dollar has real value, i.e., it represents tangible wealth, such as gold securely stored at Fort Knox.

      It is true that money is only a *claim* on real wealth; that, in other words, money flows in the opposite direction as wealth. However, you can in fact trade your money for real wealth; in that sense, it has real value.

      Inflation is an increase in prices.

      Usage determines meaning, and this is exactly how most people use the term "inflation" (in the economics sense).

      Inflation is caused by greedy companies, not the US government or the Federal Reserve.

      Under the definition the author wants to use, yes, the US gov. and Fed cause inflation. They're not the only cause of general price increases. There are also supply shocks.

    2. Re:What the...? by metlin · · Score: 1

      Umm, it says News for Nerds, not necessarily News for IT Nerds.

      If you have worked with any kind of finance/economics, you would know that it is all nothing but math. Probability and statistics, linear and dynamic programming, machine learning techniques, data mining techniques and so on and so forth.

      Secondly, that was a rather interesting review. For those of who have been reading Slashdot over the years, we are now in positions where we deal with this thing called the Real World. Given that state of the US economy and what the feds have been doing etc, it is definitely of interest to some of us - you know, recession, jobs, budgets, quarterly profits and things like that?

      But I forget, there are still 15 year olds on Slashdot who do not think beyond the latest Linux distro or RPG game. If you don't like this place, go elsewhere. But please, enough with the bitchin' already.

    3. Re:What the...? by lgw · · Score: 1

      The federal reserve has cash holdings. Cash has real value. Don't believe me? Go offer it in an exchange. The Fed does keep both gold and foreign currency around (I used to live next door to a fed branch, it was quite heavily fortified). However, its value is a trivial fraction of the currency in circulation, which itself is a fraction of the money supply.

      I think the point is: the US Dollar is not in any way backed by the holdings of the Fed. Instead it's backed by the government's ability to tax the people. Seriously, I trust the government to rasie taxes *way* more than I trust it to hold onto something of value, so this seems like a better system to me.
      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    4. Re:What the...? by hanabal2 · · Score: 1

      Looking at the side menu, I see an IT section, as well as many others. This tells me that /. deals with many topics other than IT. So if there are economy nerds, I for one welcome them to read and enjoy /.

    5. Re:What the...? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The federal reserve has cash holdings. Cash has real value. Don't believe me? Go offer it in an exchange.


      I don't think you understood the meaning behind of "real value". The "real value" of cash and coinage is linen-paper and small bits of metal. Replace "cash holdings" with "shiny plastic beads" and try saying that again.

      Captcha: Credited. How appropriate.
    6. Re:What the...? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The federal reserve has cash holdings. Cash has real value. Don't believe me? Go offer it in an exchange. ...
      It is true that money is only a *claim* on real wealth; that, in other words, money flows in the opposite direction as wealth. However, you can in fact trade your money for real wealth; in that sense, it has real value."

      You're not grokking the term "real".

      The "real" here means intrinsic value other than as a medium of exchange. In that sense, cash (current notes) has no "real" value other than as an exchange medium, even that only because it is (supposedly) backed by Fed's pot of gold held up in the fortress.

    7. Re:What the...? by rossifer · · Score: 1

      I think the point is: the US Dollar is not in any way backed by the holdings of the Fed. Instead it's backed by the government's ability to tax the people.
      Actually, the US dollar as money is backed by the assets against which bank loans are provided. The US dollar as currency is backed by the government. Luckily, the government doesn't have to hold all that many assets in reserve to completely cover the US dollar as currency.

      So many things become simpler when you understand that money and currency are different and that the relationship between money and currency is rather fluid.
    8. Re:What the...? by triclipse · · Score: 1

      Does that make it "not part of the government"? Okay, then I guess the federal courts aren't either.

      Except for the fact that the federal courts are established by Article III of the United States Constitution . (Did that really need a link to Wikipedia?)

      --
      No Inflation Taxation without Representation
    9. Re:What the...? by UbuntuDupe · · Score: 1

      *sigh*

      I was referring to the lower courts that Congress has to specifically establish (like the Federal Reserve). In other words, these ones:

      "shall be vested ... in such inferior Courts as the Congress may from time to time ordain and establish."

    10. Re:What the...? by triclipse · · Score: 1
      *double sigh*

      The fact remains that the U.S. Constitution specifically provides for courts, either inferior or supreme. There is no such provision for a central bank.

      --
      No Inflation Taxation without Representation
    11. Re:What the...? by lgw · · Score: 1

      Actually, the US dollar as money is backed by the assets against which bank loans are provided. The US dollar as currency is backed by the government. Luckily, the government doesn't have to hold all that many assets in reserve to completely cover the US dollar as currency. You must be using those words in an unusual way. Currency is anything with "current value" that serves as a medium of exchange. Money is anything that serves as a medium of exchange, whether or not is has independent value.

      Money doesn't have to be backed by assets or a government - because it doesn't have to have independent value - as long as it spends it's money (technically money has to have an agreed-upon measure, or it's just barter).

      Currency has to be backed by something. Technically the Fed has assets that back all of the outstanding Federal Reserve notes and coins, but those assets are mostly dollar-valued securities issued by the federal government, which of course doesn't count as "hard" currency.

      The main force that provides a current value for the dollar is that taxes are due in dollars. The main proof that dollars have current value is that people willingly work for the government in exchange for dollars. When either of these stop being true in a country, that country stops having a national currency (though it's bills and coins might still be money).

      The Fed has foriegn currency, gold, and other real assets equal to the value of 5% of the currency, which is great protection against hyper-inflation.
      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  15. Author is badly mistaken WRT inflation by Enlarged+to+Show+Tex · · Score: 1

    Inflation is not caused by so-called greedy companies; it is, in fact, caused by the Federal Reserve. Inflation is, quite simply, the printing of additional money (as opposed to replacement of worn or destroyed notes).

    1. Re:Author is badly mistaken WRT inflation by Epi-man · · Score: 1

      Inflation is not caused by so-called greedy companies; it is, in fact, caused by the Federal Reserve. Inflation is, quite simply, the printing of additional money (as opposed to replacement of worn or destroyed notes).

      Hey, feel like re-reading the author's comments??? Here there are to make it easier for you:

      The typical American, if he or she has given any thought to the matter, would consider the following statements to be true: The Federal Reserve is federal, i.e., a part of the US government. The Federal Reserve is a reserve, i.e., it has monetary savings of real value. The Federal Reserve serves the public, and is not a cartel of private banks serving itself. The US dollar has real value, i.e., it represents tangible wealth, such as gold securely stored at Fort Knox. Inflation is an increase in prices. Inflation is caused by greedy companies, not the US government or the Federal Reserve.

      As G. Edward Griffin makes clear in his book, none of these beliefs are true -- regardless of how well entrenched they are in our conventional "wisdom."

      Yeah, notice how he sort of tells you this? The author is not badly mistaken at all, you are simply a very poor reader, no? Sorry to be so harsh, but before you unleash your flamethrower...one should always make sure the target is deserved, and you sure better make sure you don't simply call them mistaken and then say exactly what they were saying.
    2. Re:Author is badly mistaken WRT inflation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Read a little closer

      "Inflation is caused by greedy companies, not the US government or the Federal Reserve.

      As G. Edward Griffin makes clear in his book, none of these beliefs are true..."

      What you saw was the lists assumptions that many people hold about money and the federal reserve, this book is meant to debunk them.

    3. Re:Author is badly mistaken WRT inflation by AuMatar · · Score: 1

      Except that it isn't. Inflation is caused by an overincrease in money, or a shrinking economy. Inflation is in line with the following equation:

      change in money supply+money supply*change in velocity of money (the rate at which it changes hands)=change in gdp + inflation

      If the money supply is stable, you can only increase gdp if you have deflation (at least equally bad) or if people start using the same money more. Since thats unrealistic, you need to increase the money supply. What you try to do is increase it so that it exactly equals the change in GDP, but thats pretty impossible to do.

      --
      I still have more fans than freaks. WTF is wrong with you people?
    4. Re:Author is badly mistaken WRT inflation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but before you unleash your flamethrower...one should always make sure the target is deserved, and you sure better make sure you don't simply call them mistaken and then say exactly what they were saying.

      You're new here, aren't you?

    5. Re:Author is badly mistaken WRT inflation by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      Inflation is, quite simply, the printing of additional money
      Please, go back to grade school. Inflation is the increase in money supply, which is much more inclusive than the printing of extra currency.

      The largest factor in the money supply today is not specie or paper currency. It is debt. It is the ability of lending institutions to lend money based on a fractional reserve, in effect increasing the money supply without ever touching a printing press.

      Furthermore, the Federal Reserve does not print money, the US Treasury does. There is a distinction between the two, though both can influence inflation. The Federal Reserve has some control over inflation because it can influence the portion of money supply that comes from partial-reserve debt. The Treasury can impact inflation by currency quantity changes.
      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    6. Re:Author is badly mistaken WRT inflation by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      Inflation is, quite simply, the printing of additional money


      No, its not. Inflation is an increase in general price levels. It may be (or may not be, depending on other factors in the economy) an effect of creating additional money (either by printing additional notes or easing credit terms), though if the money supply is expanding at exactly the pace at which the output is expanding, you wouldn't expect it to have that effect. It may also be a result of causes other than expansion of the money supply. Shortage of a key, broadly important economic input (energy/fuel inputs are the best examples) resulting in declining production can produce inflation, as can anything else that reduces production, given a constant money supply, as can other persistent supply reductions that may accompany war or domestic instability (and by "war" I mean one where attacks are occurring on the country being studied, not a "foreign war", although I suppose a foreign war that a country participates in could limit production by reducing the supply of labor and thereby produce inflation as the same money is chasing fewer goods, though it would be rather unusual for a modern foreign war to involve enough of the population to have a significant effect through that mechanism.)

    7. Re:Author is badly mistaken WRT inflation by Klaus_1250 · · Score: 1

      ...people start using the same money more. Since thats unrealistic, ... Not that realistic. Lowering taxes is a way to increase the velocity of money. Lowering interest rates can have the effect of increasing the money supply.
      --
      It only takes one man to change the Wisdom of the Crowd to Tyranny of the Masses.
    8. Re:Author is badly mistaken WRT inflation by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      If the money supply is stable, you can only increase gdp if you have deflation (at least equally bad) or if people start using the same money more. Since thats unrealistic, you need to increase the money supply.


      Actually, increases in the velocity of money (particularly the velocity of money within the domestic economy) are not unrealistic. They aren't things you can achieve through monetary policy, of course, though other government policies can affect them; for instance, if you allow checks to be processed as EBTs, you reduce delays and uncertainty in processing transactions, and thereby increase the velocity of money. If you can alter tax policy to selectively reduce the share of taxes paid by a class of consumers that has, on average, a higher propensity to spend in the domestic economy, you increase the (domestic) velocity of money.

      What you try to do is increase it so that it exactly equals the change in GDP, but thats pretty impossible to do.


      As I understand it, central bankers don't, in practice, aim to exactly match GDP growth, instead they usually try to slightly overshoot for two reasons: first, if its not excessive, slightly easy money itself is generally seen as being stimulative and accelerating GDP growth; second, inadequate money supply is seen as substantially worse than oversupply of similar magnitude even outside of the range in which the stimulative effect of easy money is outweighed by the inflationary effect, so its better to miss high.
    9. Re:Author is badly mistaken WRT inflation by HyperbolicParabaloid · · Score: 1

      Inflation is also not caused by printing money. That is an archaic oversimplification.

      --


      -------------------------
      A person of moderate zeal
  16. Tag suggestion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Yet most people do not know what money really is...

    Tag rootofallevil

    1. Re:Tag suggestion by White+Flame · · Score: 1

      "The love of money is a root of many evils."

    2. Re:Tag suggestion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1 Timothy 6:10 (NIV) - For the love of money is a root of all kinds of evil. Some people, eager for money, have wandered from the faith and pierced themselves with many griefs.

      The King James Version also uses "all", but you are correct in emphasizing a single root.

      http://www.ibs.org/niv/passagesearch.php?passage_request=1+timothy+6%3A10&niv=yes&submit=Lookup
      http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20Timothy%206:10;&version=9;

  17. How does one become a member bank? by WindowlessView · · Score: 1

    I hope this isn't too painfully stupid or off point: how does one open a bank? I don't think that is a title in the Dummies series yet and I have been periodically curious about it. How realistic is it for a small group of people or a community to start a bank or credit union?

    --
    Leave the gun, take the cannolis.
    1. Re:How does one become a member bank? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://money.howstuffworks.com/bank5.htm/ I know someone who started a bank 30 years ago with four partners and about $2,000,000 in assets. It's possible.

    2. Re:How does one become a member bank? by aminorex · · Score: 1

      I once looked into it, and it doesn't look too hard, but it will take about $500,000 to start. You might raise that in a limited partnership with friends and family.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    3. Re:How does one become a member bank? by scottyokim · · Score: 1

      Maybe become a Liberty Dollar RCO as well?

    4. Re:How does one become a member bank? by nelsonal · · Score: 1

      The main decision is you have to decide if you want to open a national bank (chartered federally) or a state bank (chartered within the state). The choice will impact your markets and rules you operate under. Then you need stockholders (both have restrictions on how few shareholders you have). Then you need to apply for a charter with the relavent banking regulator (OCC, FED, or State)
      Practially, you would want a decent deposit base (>10 million to have a good shot at making it. It's best if most of these initial deposits come from your shareholders. A good rule of thumb is branches become profitable with about $25 million in deposits.

      --
      Degaussing scares the bad magnetism out of the monitor and fills it with good karma.
    5. Re:How does one become a member bank? by WindowlessView · · Score: 1

      Thanks to everyone for the replies. There is some good information here.

      --
      Leave the gun, take the cannolis.
  18. Stay ignorant then by rolfwind · · Score: 1

    about the world around you. It's not as if any of this stuff will ever affect you.

    Unless you want to buy a house. Or a car. Or food. Or anything, really.

    I mean, computers come free anyway. Computing time was never so costly that they ever had to divvy it up by time slices or something. And IT should never have to be affected by monetary concerns. Unlimited budgets for our departments are a good thing. Or at least were until the tech bubble crashed some years back....

    1. Re:Stay ignorant then by Dun+Malg · · Score: 1

      about the world around you. It's not as if any of this stuff will ever affect you.

      Unless you want to buy a house. Or a car. Or food. Or anything, really.

      I mean, computers come free anyway. Computing time was never so costly that they ever had to divvy it up by time slices or something. And IT should never have to be affected by monetary concerns. Unlimited budgets for our departments are a good thing. Or at least were until the tech bubble crashed some years back.... Now you're just being an ass. You sound like congress torturing the commerce clause to invent authority to pass laws about shit that ain't their business. Yeah, anything can be said to be related to anything else if you loosen the definition enough.
      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    2. Re:Stay ignorant then by vertinox · · Score: 1

      Now you're just being an ass.

      He maybe an ass, but he's right. You can't really ignore what the Federal Reserve does. Its decisions affect you more than an executive order by the President.

      Unless of course you don't own a home, car, or credit card.

      Personally I used to think I could ignore this stuff... Until I bought a house. If they drop the rate again, I'm going to see if I can refinance. Not really nerdy though... But all nerds who live in the states have to deal with their decisions one way or another.

      --
      "I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
      -Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
  19. real value? by Lord+Ender · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...The US dollar has real value, i.e., it represents tangible wealth, such as gold securely stored at Fort Knox.
    Gold has almost no real value. You can do very little with it other than make jewelry. Yet, like fiat currency, people have become collectively convinced that it is valuable. Because of this, we spend countless resources digging it up from the ground, then burying it back underground. If we actually started USING the 95% of the worlds gold that wastes away in vaults, the value of gold would be almost nothing due to inflation (19x increase in supply).

    Real value is power--the ability to control other people (aka labor). Whether the medium is gold coins or paper money or tootsie pops, what you are trading when you exchange money is labor.

    Inflation does not tax the poor: They have no cash savings.
    Inflation does not tax the middle class: They keep their assets in real-estate and mutual funds.
    Inflation forces everyone else to invest in something, because hoarding money isn't good for the economy.

    I'm sick of all the "money is a scam" articles on the internet recently.
    --
    A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
    1. Re:real value? by Mr+Pippin · · Score: 1

      Inflation forces everyone else to invest in something, because hoarding money isn't good for the economy
      That, or it's an example of Gresham's Law http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gresham's_Law in action.

    2. Re:real value? by vfrex · · Score: 1

      See, the first mistake is calling it a law. It is an old economic theory.

    3. Re:real value? by rewt66 · · Score: 1

      Sure. And Newton's law is an old physics theory.

    4. Re:real value? by dada21 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Gold has almost no real value. You can do very little with it other than make jewelry. Yet, like fiat currency, people have become collectively convinced that it is valuable. Because of this, we spend countless resources digging it up from the ground, then burying it back underground. If we actually started USING the 95% of the worlds gold that wastes away in vaults, the value of gold would be almost nothing due to inflation (19x increase in supply).

      Gold is one of the only elements that does not deteriorate (ever), is not destroyed by any acid or chemical process, nor susceptible to environmental changes (rusting, corrosion, etc). Because of this, gold DOES have massive value as one thing: a store of value.

      It is hard to come by (rare) -- industry uses up about as much gold as is mined per year.

      It is useful in MANY modern and ancient processes, from electronics (computers, etc) to medical uses (fillings, etc) to consumer uses (jewelry, etc). It has significant value beyond just as a store of money.

      Real value is power--the ability to control other people (aka labor). Whether the medium is gold coins or paper money or tootsie pops, what you are trading when you exchange money is labor.

      No, you're not. What you're exchanging is an item of value. Labor is important in the initial creation of a product but it is not the only significant "cost" of a product. Rarity, longevity, storage requirements, transportation requirements and usefulness are all valuable towards the price of a product. Labor, while important, doesn't account for value alone. Paper money can be printed at will, tootsie pops can be manufactured by the billions. Only gold has the rare aspects of its composition and rarity that make it valuable as a store of value.

      Inflation does not tax the poor: They have no cash savings.

      Bull. The poor have no savings because they have no incentive to save -- their savings is destroyed by inflation.

      Inflation does not tax the middle class: They keep their assets in real-estate and mutual funds.

      And those assets are often-times in asset bubbles because of inflation's drive to create malinvestments. See the current housing market, see the stock market in 2015.

      Inflation forces everyone else to invest in something, because hoarding money isn't good for the economy.

      Hoarding money IS good for the economy -- when money is "hoarded," it creates a demand for money, and a demand for money brings prices DOWN for those who are not hoarding. Inflation makes prices go up, and not everyone should invest in something. I only invest in myself.

      I'm sick of all the "money is a scam" articles on the internet recently.

      Paper money is a scam.

    5. Re:real value? by CodeBuster · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Gold has almost no real value. You can do very little with it other than make jewelry.

      The difference is that fiat currency can be arbitrarily increased by politicians with ease whereas increasing the available gold supply requires more time and effort and thus tempers the ability of politicians to pull the inflation ripcord whenever it is politically expedient to do so. The essential qualities of a commodity that serves as a store of value are rarity, durability, easy divisibility, and the general ease of identification and gold meets all of these requirements. Are other forms of commodity backed money possible? Yes, but gold is eminently practical for this purpose and that is why it has historically been used as a primary store of value.

      The problem with inflation is that, generally speaking, inflation causes expectation of further inflation in a self fulfilling prophecy that, if left unchecked and allowed to accelerate, will ultimately destroy the monetary system and force all back into barter and other more inefficient forms of exchange. If you don't believe that inflation hurts the poor or the middle class then why not ask the people of Argentina or Zimbabwe or Bolivia if they have been hurt by inflation? In fact inflation is among the most regressive of all taxes since it can effectively limit social mobility and reinforce existing disparities while not allowing for a reasonable chance of promotion beyond one's present economic circumstances.

    6. Re:real value? by MarsDefenseMinister · · Score: 1

      Your mistake is thinking that laws of physics are made by lawyers. A law is a mathematical relationship between two physical measurements or observations. It's a formula.

      Basically if you can plug it into a BASIC program on a Commodork 64 to calculate some physics thingy, then it's a law.

      --
      No weapon in the arsenals of the world is so formidable as the will and moral courage of free men.-Ronald Reagan
    7. Re:real value? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The fact that your dipshit reply got a +5 insightful only demonstrates how sadly deluded the masses are.

    8. Re:real value? by vfrex · · Score: 1

      Laws of physics? Are you comparing economics to science?

    9. Re:real value? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wish I had mod points. I would have modded your stupid comment down.

    10. Re:real value? by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 1

      Basically if you can plug it into a BASIC program on a Commodork 64 to calculate some physics thingy, then it's a law.

      Funny, I don't remember this definition from my Physics 101 course in college. Are you quoting Newton or Maxwell?

      --
      It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
    11. Re:real value? by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      Hoarding money IS good for the economy -- when money is "hoarded," it creates a demand for money, and a demand for money brings prices DOWN for those who are not hoarding. Inflation makes prices go up, and not everyone should invest in something. I only invest in myself.
      False. Excess demand for money cripples the economy -- see the financial crisis of 1873. Haven't we been through this before?

      Hoarding of currency cause deflation, which causes additional hoarding, which cause additional deflation, etc... this results in a rapidly shrinking economy where there is little to no investment or cash outlay -- leading to massive unemployment and reduced demand for consumer goods, which feeds the fire further.

      Sustained slow deflation might not be a terribly bad thing, but it is nearly impossible to sustain a slow rate of deflation when hoarding without money supply adjustments is a self-catalyzing suppressant of economic activity.
      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    12. Re:real value? by thelexx · · Score: 1

      Don't bother trying to undo nearly 100 years of dis/mis-information here on /. Despite keeping my sig, I'm increasingly coming to think it's a waste of energy trying to convince anyone that anything fundamental is wrong with our economic system. And I don't even advocate a return to the gold standard or anything. People have eyes and ears, and especially here can certainly read. The thinking logically, objectively and critically though, either they have it or not, and largely not it seems. Also, many are quite literally scared of true freedom and what gold really represents in terms of not relying on the government to tell you what is and isn't real. If they are caught out in the end, so be it. One thing to point out though, industrial consumption of gold is less than 15% of production. I mentioned this in a recent post with an attribution for the statement (it's not hard to find data though). Like I said though, it seems most people don't really care about any of it, what a true store of value really is, etc. Yet.

      --
      "Gold still represents the ultimate form of payment in the world." - Alan Greenspan, 1999
    13. Re:real value? by P3NIS_CLEAVER · · Score: 1
      --
      Please sign petition to restore sanity to our banking system!!!

      http://financialpetition.org/
    14. Re:real value? by RobBebop · · Score: 1

      Real value is power--the ability to control other people (aka labor). Whether the medium is gold coins or paper money or tootsie pops, what you are trading when you exchange money is labor.

      What about Soma? Now, who wants to go on a vacation?

      --
      Support the 30 Hour Work Week!!!
    15. Re:real value? by Xonstantine · · Score: 1

      Inflation does not tax the poor: They have no cash savings. Inflation does not tax the middle class: They keep their assets in real-estate and mutual funds. Inflation forces everyone else to invest in something, because hoarding money isn't good for the economy. This is an idiotic collection of statements. Really.

      1. Plenty of poor people have cash savings. They may not be significant compared to Warren Buffet's, but that doesn't mean the savings are valueless to them nor that erosion of that value due to inflation is of negligible impact.
      2. People on fixed incomes (annuities, pensions, etc) are hit hard by inflation, and can easily see the value of their fixed incomes inflated into worthlessness. 3. Not all middle class people "keep thier assets in real-estate and mutal funds". 4. Inflation forces people to SPEND money, not invest it, because over time it becomes worthless as a store of value.
    16. Re:real value? by dada21 · · Score: 1

      False. Excess demand for money cripples the economy -- see the financial crisis of 1873. Haven't we been through this before?

      We have, and your lies about the Panic of 1873 have been destroyed before. The reason for the Panic was DIRECTLY due to government's mishandling of the money supply, exactly the problem that I speak of. Grant decided to contract the money supply when the investors wanted to put as much as they could into railway building. It was Grant, not the investors, that created the Panic.

      In fact, the more you read about the Panic, the more you see that it was the final end result to what Lincoln started with his inflationary money system that attempted to pay for the War between States. See Mises for info on how the Panic ended this game by the government.

      Hoarding of currency cause deflation, which causes additional hoarding, which cause additional deflation, etc... this results in a rapidly shrinking economy where there is little to no investment or cash outlay -- leading to massive unemployment and reduced demand for consumer goods, which feeds the fire further.

      Hoarding of money is the DEFINITION of deflation: removing money from the economy. It is like saying "Untying your shoelaces creates untying of shoelaces." Duh. Deflation causes the demand for money to rise, which is symbolized by merchants dropping prices. Not everyone will hold out forever as merchants drop prices, and not all merchants will drop prices because they have products that people actually do need, or do want, rather than "oooh, cool, iphone, must have must have visa visa visa." This is good for the market. Massive unemployment isn't a side effect of deflating a currency supply -- yes, wages can go down, but prices are generally going down anyway, so the net result may not be unemployment or poverty. Saving is good, spending is good, but only if it is needy or truly wanted.

      Sustained slow deflation might not be a terribly bad thing, but it is nearly impossible to sustain a slow rate of deflation when hoarding without money supply adjustments is a self-catalyzing suppressant of economic activity.

      But hoarding doesn't just come from sticking it under the mattress. You could "hoard" by putting it into an interest-bearing demand deposit account with 90 day turn-over (say, a CD), and have that money loaned out to the market (unusable by you for those 90 days). In fact, the entire bond market should work this way -- people asking for a loan by issuing a bond, and bondholders keeping the bond or selling it to others when they're ready to move markets.

      Fiat currency always harms the poor and enriches the powerful. It has always worked this way, even before the time of Christ. Fixed currencies give the poor hope for the future, with a savings that is actually worth something. People who take in money and are comfortable in their futures tend to spend some of it, especially if prices are right.

    17. Re:real value? by Niten · · Score: 1

      Real value is power--the ability to control other people (aka labor). Whether the medium is gold coins or paper money or tootsie pops, what you are trading when you exchange money is labor. No, you're not. What you're exchanging is an item of value. Labor is important in the initial creation of a product but it is not the only significant "cost" of a product. Rarity, longevity, storage requirements, transportation requirements and usefulness are all valuable towards the price of a product. Labor, while important, doesn't account for value alone.

      Yes, you are. Storage and transportation requirements affect the cost of a product because they have an impact on the amount of labor required to produce it. The cost of the fuel and vehicles used in transportation, in turn, corresponds to the cost of the labor used to produce these utilities. Rarity, longevity, and usefulness affect the value of a product and, according to the rules of supply and demand, help set what a producer can reasonably charge for the product of his labor; however, it's important to understand that in the end it's still labor what is being paid for, whenever money is used to create something. These properties just affect the value of that labor. You don't pay a wage to raw materials.

      Paper money can be printed at will, tootsie pops can be manufactured by the billions. Only gold has the rare aspects of its composition and rarity that make it valuable as a store of value.

      And gold can be dug up from the earth, enriching people involved in an activity which does not directly benefit the rest of society. My contention is that the quality of a monetary system can be judged by its lack of incentives for economic "leaches". With the gold standard you have gold miners for leaches; with the current system you have the Federal Reserve. Neither is ideal.

      Paper money is a scam.

      Our current system is arguably a scam, but don't confuse paper money with the issue of the Federal Reserve. The problem is not with the idea of monetary policy, just with who controls it: hand control of the money supply over to the government and taxpayers no longer have to pay interest into the pockets of a third party. And (for the sake of argument) if economists suddenly turned their backs on so many years of thought and evidence and decided that a fixed money supply was a good thing, then we could have the government hold the supply of money constant for all the benefits of using a gold standard, without the wasted effort on gold mining.

      Gold is an arbitrary choice for a monetary standard and, like any other natural resource, leads to the misdirection of labor to the detriment of the entire society. Conflating the ideas of using a fixed money supply and using gold as a monetary standard - not to mention desiring a return to a fixed money supply to begin with - betray a naive understanding of economic theory.

    18. Re:real value? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about land? It has real value, the supply is fixed, it can't be hidden, and if you use a Georgist "land rent" idea of taxation, it can't be horded. A geolibertarian view could have government create notes based on "land rent" valuation -- the government would exchange them for goods and services, people would use it as money among themselves, and it would finally be returned to the treasury when people paid their land value tax.

    19. Re:real value? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gold is one of the only elements that does not deteriorate (ever), is not destroyed by any acid or chemical process, nor susceptible to environmental changes (rusting, corrosion, etc). Because of this, gold DOES have massive value as one thing: a store of value.

      One might say just about the same thing as water. And does this mean that my plastic disposable spoon is a store of value because it will still be here in god knows how many centuries?

    20. Re:real value? by Lord+Ender · · Score: 2, Funny

      Looking at your website, it seems you publish some sort of gold newsletter. Surprise, surprise.

      First, your physics is completely wrong. Radioactive elements are the only ones that decay.

      Second, your assertion that all new gold is used in industry is highly questionable. Most gold is hoarded underground and not used for ANYTHING--a senseless waste of resources.

      You are correct that my one-sentence definition of "value" is an oversimplification. But your assertion that ANY physical object has some sort of inherent value is wrong. Nothing has value unless people want it and are willing to sacrifice for it--including gold.

      Your claim that the poor choose not to save because they understand and fear inflation is laughable. Anybody with a checking account can use scottrade, etrade, or whatever and transfer their assets from currency to revenue-generating businesses, REITs, or even gold ETFs if they are so inclined. Inflation isn't stopping the poor from saving. Living hand-to-mouth is.

      Your don't seem to have made a point when you stated that real-estate and securities can fluctuate in value ("bubble" in your terms). Averaged out, these things grow in value faster than inflation, and much faster than gold. The minor corrections in these assets are just static. Gold goes up and down in value over the short term, too. On top of that, it doesn't generate any new value, as a business (stock investment) does. What is your point again?

      I'm not an economist, so I can't compare the value of hoarding to investing with great accuracy, but I can say that countries which adopted banking (aka lots of investment, hardly any hoarding) did FAR better off economically than countries that didn't.

      Finally: If paper money is a scam, then please explain why the countries with fiat currency have dramatically better standards of living than barter societies. My understanding is that paper money benefits everyone, but it benefits some disproportionately. It doesn't bother me. I direct deposit into an investment brokerage.

      And you are right that you do desperately need a web designer; but you probably will have to pay him in "scam" money. Not many web designers are willing to take metals and kooky newsletters as payment, because they don't value those things as much as they value fiat currency.

      --
      A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
    21. Re:real value? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "But hoarding doesn't just come from sticking it under the mattress. You could "hoard" by putting it into an interest-bearing demand deposit account with 90 day turn-over (say, a CD), and have that money loaned out to the market (unusable by you for those 90 days). In fact, the entire bond market should work this way -- people asking for a loan by issuing a bond, and bondholders keeping the bond or selling it to others when they're ready to move markets."

      You sir are retarded. Putting your money into an interest-bearing demand deposit account with 90 day turn-over is the exact opposite of hoarding money. You have just invested it. Investing != Hoarding.
      Jesus.

    22. Re:real value? by Lord+Ender · · Score: 1

      My statement was an oversimplification. Labor and things people are willing to labor to attain have value. Land is one of those things. The problem is that it is damn hard to value land. If someone invents a new material that allows for the cheap construction of skyscrapers, land goes down in value. It is an interesting idea, though.

      --
      A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
    23. Re:real value? by Spy+Hunter · · Score: 1

      Bull. The poor have no savings because they have no incentive to save -- their savings is destroyed by inflation.

      Bull yourself. The interest on zero-risk FDIC-insured savings accounts beats inflation, as long as inflation is kept low, which is a job the Federal Reserve has been successful in performing for quite some time now. *Nobody's* savings are being "destoyed" by the inflation we have here in the US.

      Also, hoarding money is *terrible* for the economy. Value in this world is created through trade, and the more trade there is the bigger and healthier the economy. If you have a bunch of money stashed under your mattress and you're not letting anyone use it, that money is not contributing to the economy. Putting that money to work increases the size of the economy.

      I don't understand you people. Why do you care how much the dollar has depreciated since 1913? Have you been hoarding cash under your mattress since then? Do you have a time machine that brings 1913 dollars into the present? The value of the 1913 dollar has zero relevance to transactions going on today; it is not proof of any conspiracy to rob you of your value. The only thing that really matters is how inflation affects your assets, and if you invest your money, even just in a savings account at the bank, you'll beat inflation as long as the Fed is doing its job. You should be *supporting* the Fed in its drive to keep inflation reasonable.

      The only valid point you guys have is that politicians probably shouldn't be trusted with managing the money supply, because they have a huge incentive to print far too much money and cause unchecked inflation. But that's why we *need* something like the Fed; something not immediately beholden to the will of whatever politicians are in office right now, to manage the money supply. We can't go back to the gold standard; that cat is out of the bag and the gold standard has its own set of problems anyhow. We just have to do our best to keep control of the money supply uncorrupted by politics.
      --
      main(c,r){for(r=32;r;) printf(++c>31?c=!r--,"\n":c<r?" ":~c&r?" `":" #");}
    24. Re:real value? by istewart · · Score: 1

      Inflation does not tax the poor: They have no cash savings.
      Inflation does not tax the middle class: They keep their assets in real-estate and mutual funds.


      Inflation gives the poor no incentive to save, as their cash savings will decrease in real value over time, and they are unlikely to be able to accumulate enough cash to invest in more risky instruments that are more likely to hold value. Furthermore, the prevalence of cheap credit fosters predatory lenders such as payday-loan and rent-to-own establishments, and the availability of such instant gratification enforces a high time preference among the poor. You can cling to Keynesianism and try to regulate the predatory lenders out of existence, but that doesn't solve the root problem.

      As for inflation not harming the middle class, tell that to all the members of the middle class who are staring down foreclosure, or whose mutual funds took a gigantic dump because they were holding now-worthless mortgage-backed CDOs. Once again, the mainstream argument will be that more regulation must be placed on the mortgage industry. But if those lenders didn't have the Fed telling them they won't be allowed to go broke in a bank run, they never would've been able to make those bad loans in the first place.

      I don't completely agree with those preaching the "gold standard," as they merely believe that gold would become predominant if there was a free market in media of exchange. But it's complete BS to claim that inflation is harmless. The deleterious effects are there if you look for them.

      Money, if treated as the most readily exchangeable good in an economy rather than some mystic avatar of wealth that should be held separate from all other goods, is not necessarily a scam. But fractional-reserve banking is, and the Federal Reserve is the means by which that scam is stabilized and perpetuated.
    25. Re:real value? by The+One+and+Only · · Score: 1

      Gold has almost no real value. You can do very little with it other than make jewelry.

      Gold is also an excellent conductor of electricity, a soft, easily malleable metal, along with other cool properties. It likely has countless possible uses that are stripped from the human race by the ancient superstition that a slightly-more-rare metal has some magical and mystical value to it. Aluminum was once more valuable than gold, until its myriad of uses was unleashed by the invention of our electricity-intensive processes to produce aluminum from bauxite. Now aluminum has contributed positively to the human race in very obvious ways. I wonder how much good the wholesale release of stored gold would do.

      --
      In Repressive Burma, it's not just your connection that dies. slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=314547&cid=20819199
    26. Re:real value? by MarsDefenseMinister · · Score: 1

      Either one.

      Also, the part you quoted wasn't the point I was making, it was the illustration of the point. Newton, as you point out, came up with some laws. His second law of motion can be written as a formula, and plugged into a computer. Perhaps you've heard of it, F=ma

      F=ma is a law because it relates a domain and a range in a mathematical formula which describes physical behavior of objects.

      I'm curious, what did your professor tell you about the definition of a law? It sounds like they weren't very good at teaching.

      --
      No weapon in the arsenals of the world is so formidable as the will and moral courage of free men.-Ronald Reagan
    27. Re:real value? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The CPI is constantly adjusted excluding things like gas and housing.

    28. Re:real value? by MarsDefenseMinister · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure what you mean. Please clarify.

      --
      No weapon in the arsenals of the world is so formidable as the will and moral courage of free men.-Ronald Reagan
    29. Re:real value? by turing_m · · Score: 1

      "I'm sick of all the "money is a scam" articles on the internet recently."

      Real free speech is a bitch, eh? It must have been so nice back before the 1990s when all anyone easily read was the same propaganda from Time/Newsweek, discussing hard-hitting political issues like Bill Clinton's hairstyle.

      --
      If I have seen further it is by stealing the Intellectual Property of giants.
    30. Re:real value? by hardburn · · Score: 1

      Rarity, longevity, storage requirements, transportation requirements and usefulness are all valuable towards the price of a product.

      The only thing important to the price of a product is its perceived value to people. All the traits listed above may play into that perception. But good marketing can and often does increase the perceived value without the product itself actually being better in any tangible way.

      The poor have no savings because they have no incentive to save -- their savings is destroyed by inflation.

      Interest on a bank account, as small as it may be, will surpass yearly inflation.

      The big problem with a return to the gold standard is that it ultimately fails in the face of key technological advances, namely:

      1. Cheep transmutation
      2. Asteroid mining

      Either one of these will make gold as cheep as lead. While I don't really expect cheep transmutation to work in the near future, orbital launch costs are only going to come down. At some point, that alone will make asteroid mining economical.

      When that happens, I wouldn't want to have my money stored up in gold or any other metal. Fiat currency appears to be the only monetary system that will hold up under technological change.

      --
      Not a typewriter
    31. Re:real value? by nexeruza · · Score: 1

      You guys keep quoting this over and over and correcting it...
      The US dollar has real value, i.e., it represents tangible wealth, such as gold securely stored at Fort Knox.
      He was speaking as an ignorant average citizen that falsely believes that to be true........ RTFA

    32. Re:real value? by Colin+Smith · · Score: 1

      Gold has almost no real value. You can do very little with it other than make jewelry. Yet, like fiat currency, people have become collectively convinced that it is valuable. Not to put too fine a point on it. There's 5,000 years of history which disagrees with you. It has value literally because people trust it to have value. That IS the nature of money.

      Real value is power--the ability to control other people (aka labor) I get paid money for my time... Money gives someone else the ability to make use of my time and skills.

      Inflation does not tax the poor: They have no cash savings. Inflation (by definition) increases the relative value of assets over cash. Those who have cash or who's pay levels don't keep up with inflation find themselves sliding lower in the economic ladder. Those with assets benefit. Those with the most assets benefit the most.

      Basically it makes the richest richer and the poorest poorer. It stretches the economy.

      Inflation forces everyone else to invest in something If you define "desperately getting out of cash" as investing... It strongly encourages frivolous investment. Buy anything as long as it's not cash.
      --
      Deleted
    33. Re:real value? by Lord+Ender · · Score: 1

      Inflation gives the poor no incentive to save, as their cash savings will decrease in real value over time, and they are unlikely to be able to accumulate enough cash to invest in more risky instruments that are more likely to hold value.
      It takes $500 to open a Scottrade account. Inflation is not keeping the poor from accumulating $500. That's just $50/month for 10 months. I've been poor (lived for $10,000 per year while in college). When I decided whether to save or spend, I can tell you that inflation wasn't party of the equation.

      Also, the funds that went bust used leveraged investing in junk bonds. They weren't mutual funds. They were hedge funds. Hedge funds aren't even an option for the 401ks in which most middle class keep the majority of their savings.
      --
      A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
    34. Re:real value? by slas6654 · · Score: 0

      First off, what is a fixed-income person anyway? Is it someone that never worked or retired at 55 and is living off Social Security benefits? Is it someone that refuses to convert hard fixed assets to income-producing assets? Is it someone capable of going-back to work but doesn't want to? Secondly, numerous posters have reminded us that basic savings rates beat inflation year-over-year for the last 25 years. Who says they can't bank it in savings, beat inflation and pocket the extra return? Why do the they have to spend the money? Will they die if they don't spend it?

    35. Re:real value? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Cheep transmutation

      Turning baby chickens into gold?

    36. Re:real value? by Acer500 · · Score: 1

      Inflation does not tax the poor: They have no cash savings.
      I see... good that you don't live in a 3rd world country like mine (Uruguay), then you'd REALLY feel the sting of inflation.

      The thing is, when you have strong, sustained inflation, what happens is that the salary increases don't match the inflation and you get "real salary" loss (which means that your salary doesn't buy the same amount of things it did before).

      My salary today is 400 % of what it was when I started working, you think my spending power has increased as much???, and I'm 26, yet I can barely afford food, rent, bills and Internet (I foolishly live alone which people my age here can't manage, it's not advisable at all, much better to split costs, but I digress)

      A simple search in Google Scholar returns this oft-quoted book by David Romer (which seems to be a Neo-Keynesian economist), which in its very first page states

      "Expansionary monetary policy aimed at rapid output growth is associated with improved conditions for the poor in the short run, but prudent monetary policy aimed at low inflation and steady output growth is associated with enhanced well-being of the poor in the long run." A little background on Romer:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Keynesian_economics

      The nice thing is I didn't know this guy existed. I sometimes want to go into Economics and Politics and I love talking about this stuff although it's clear I could use lots of basics (I only did a very basic course on Macro and Micro economics in university).
      --
      There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics.
    37. Re:real value? by 808140 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The Fed is not a part of the government in the sense you seem to think it is. History has shown that when politicians are allowed to print money, they do, and in large quantities. Which is why modern central banks like the Fed and the ECB are not beholden to the interests of democratically elected politicians. Hell, if that had been the case, Paul Volker would have been in pretty deep shit. Thankfully, the prevailing attitudes of the day had no bearing on what he knew needed to be done and the result was that the stagflation from the Carter era did not persist, despite Reagan lampooning the Fed in Congress.

      I'm also not sure why everyone is going on about inflation. Inflation is at a low, targeted rate and has been for some time. There was a period when inflation went out of control -- but that's because economists had a very skewed idea about what sane monetary policy was and the result was 1970 to about 1982. Since then, the Fed has tried to keep inflation at a low, positive, and predictable rate (roughly 3%).

      Deflation (the opposite of inflation) is detrimental to the economy because it encourages people to hoard cash -- why spend it, when its value is going up? Hoarding cash is not the same as saving -- you can save your money in a bank, for example, which typically provides you with an interest rate which is slightly greater than the rate of inflation. Hoarding cash is putting it in your mattress and keeping it out of circulation. Look at interest rates in Japan in the 1990s for an example of what that sort of thing can do to an economy. Are you old enough to remember how afraid everyone in the US was of Japan in the 1980s? Now they're just a random Asian country known for hi-tech toys and weird game shows. But there was a time that Americans were worried they were going to buy us.

      A low, positive inflation rate does the opposite: it provides incentive to spend cash, and to keep it in circulation. This increases the liquidity of money markets and makes loans easier to obtain, which in turn stimulates wealth generation -- jobs, capital investment, etc.

      Most people who start companies aren't independently wealthy -- they look for investors and they take out loans to finance their start-ups. In order to get the money they need, there has to be money around and available. It isn't around and available if it's hidden in your mattress. These people build products, employ workers, and generally keep the economy going.

      Did you know that in inflation adjusted dollars, the yearly GDP of the US is greater than the worth of the world's entire gold supply? How exactly do you expect to reconcile that fact with a gold standard? How exactly can you have a currency based on gold when in a very real sense there simply isn't enough gold? Economics is not a zero-sum game, and the pie keeps on growing. The money supply needs to too, and having a supply-capped money supply may seem like a smart idea if you haven't thought much about it, but in reality it would effectively cap economic growth.

    38. Re:real value? by Breakfast+Pants · · Score: 1

      The difference is that fiat currency can be arbitrarily increased by politicians with ease whereas increasing the available gold supply requires more time and effort. Let's assume the gold supply was fixed. Someone who owned 5% of the gold in 1910 *no* work and did *not* lend any of it would would still own %5 of the gold out there today. If gold was the monetary currency, they would basically be rewarded for all of our achievements even though they did nothing on their own, nor did they even lend to the achievers!
      --

      --

      WHO ATE MY BREAKFAST PANTS?
    39. Re:real value? by Lord+Ender · · Score: 1

      This topic is about the US monetary system, which has inflation rates between two and four percent. There is a lot of talk in the US suggesting that this inflation will mean the end of the world and the enslavement of mankind, etc. etc.. My comments were about the US system of low, controlled inflation. Clearly, they don't apply to a hyperinflated currency like yours. I only took macro at econ (in addition to reading about this stuff when I get the chance). All I know about hyperinflation is that you should 1) learn English, which you have done. 2) get the hell out of the country.

      --
      A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
    40. Re:real value? by CodeBuster · · Score: 1

      What about the tremendous current account defecit and the spiraling national debt? The social security system is full of IOUs (we need private accounts yesterday, but the AARP and the Democrats are standing in the way because they want to keep borrowing my money at a negative rate of interest...which means young people lose big time) and the projected medicare spending, as millions of overweight boomers with diabetes, high blood pressure, and a host of other expensive ongoing conditions begins to retire, is projected to spiral out of control. The fed may be independent, strictly speaking, from the government in that Congress and the President cannot sack the Fed Chairman for cutting the discount rate, but you cannot honestly believe that the actions of the Federal government have no effect whatsoever on the long term value and stability of the dollar. This country is heading for a financial trainwreck, even if it is happening at a glacial pace right now, and by the time most people realize how screwed up things really are it will be too late for anyone, even the Fed, to do anything about it.

      You are right about inflation in terms of average yearly rate, but have you ever heard of debacles like Long-Term Capital Management and the attendant bailout policies undertaken by our government? I disagreed strongly with the latest interest rate cuts. There was inflationary pressure before from the housing bubble and now it has been unleashed and will increase. In fact, I would not be surprised by an increase to around 4-5% over the next five years, especially if the Fed cuts another 50 basis points because the spenders are screaming for relief. The Senate gets to question the Fed Chairman btw and you can tell that the Senators, some of them anyway, are making political kabuki theater out of the whole thing with the National Association of Realtors lobbying hard for the Senate to pressure Bernanke for more cuts.

      The Federal Reserve and the Government are separate in theory, but political pressure always seems to factor into the Federal Reserve decisions lately, even if only indirectly. The Paul Volker Fed with its get tough message of responsible monetary policy come hell or high water seems to be a thing of the past. Alan Greenspan was pretty good, although sometimes too willing to turn up the credit spigot when it might have been better to simply tough it out, but Bernanke is starting to worry me.

      Did you know that in inflation adjusted dollars, the yearly GDP of the US is greater than the worth of the world's entire gold supply?

      The money would adjust to match the amount of gold and we would find out how much the currency has really been inflated over 36 years of government profligacy. Gold would probably soar to thousands of dollars or perhaps even tens of thousands of dollars per ounce. Or take land and real estate for example, the prices have skyrocketed in the last thirty years, doubling and tripling and even quadrupling in some places, outpacing inflation by a wide margin, especially here in California, and the supply of land is pretty much fixed or may even decline in the next 50-100 years if the global warming crowd turns out to be correct.

      The point is that something has to be done about the ability of the Federal government to issue effectively unlimited debt. How else do you propose that we reign in spending? Surely not by issuing more easy credit to subprime borrowers at taxpayer expense or allowing entitlement spending and taxes to run out of control?

      I dont know about you, but I am putting part of my spare money, what I manage to save once the government picks my pocket, into international commercial real estate investment trusts and gold...yes gold because I have very little confidence in the long term stability of the US dollar during my golden years (pun intended) and I am not the only one.

    41. Re:real value? by CodeBuster · · Score: 1

      What are you trying to say? That if money were backed by gold then everyone would be sitting on it instead of spending or investing it? Do people do that with their money right now? Are you only spending and investing your money because of inflation? Certainly not. The supply of gold is not fixed in any case and the supply has increased massively since 1910 with modern mining and refinement techniques. Nobody would do as you suggest, sit on their money and never lend it, when they could earn profits and more gold (in a gold backed money system) by loaning it out to a growing economy.

    42. Re:real value? by 808140 · · Score: 1

      Listen, the government does make poor decisions, financial and otherwise. No one here is going to argue that point. But the reason we have the Fed is to keep the government as honest as we can expect it to be. The government cannot print money for itself; if it wants to spend money it needs to either raise taxes or issue debt securities. The latter is borrowed money and it must be paid back, and it will be, and by us. This is a burden, there's no question. But let's not forget that we had a surplus under Clinton, after years of spending money we didn't have by Reagan. Bush and co have been spending our money like it's going out of style, there's no reason to believe that this time we won't be able to pay it back.

      Of course I've heard about LTCM. I'm not sure why our government organizing a bail-out to prevent wider collapse of financial markets is such a bad thing. First of all, if the financial markets collapsed, you'd be pretty aversely affected -- as it is, you weren't. Second, it's not like "organizing" a bail-out means printing money: in actuality, it meant convincing 14 (private) investment banks to contribute hundreds of millions of dollars each to the cause. Not to mention that if I recall correctly, those banks actually came out on top in the long run. So I'm not sure why you bring up the whole LTCM debacle -- it's an example of the Fed doing its job and ensuring that the markets stay stable.

      I don't see how the housing bubble is the fault of the Fed or how it would be helped by a gold standard. Likewise the failure of social security -- a system which depends on strong population growth to function -- seems unrelated to any failure of fiat currency conceptually or in practice.

      Questioning the Fed chairman, telling him how to do his job, etc, is nothing new -- it was done in Volker's time, too. Luckily, it's all just petty posturing -- Senators can do absolutely nothing but beg, they have no power whatsoever over the Fed.

      I'm not sure what you mean when you say the "money would adjust to match the amount of gold". Do you mean we'd see serious, steady deflation? I think I explained why that would be a colossally bad thing in my previous post. People would stop spending, trade would be impacted, wealth generation would slow to a standstill, and we'd sink into another depression.

      The price of gold would not soar to any price -- a gold standard, by definition, backs paper currency with a commodity, so 1 dollar would be defined to be some amount of gold and that would be the end of it. The price of gold does not "adjust" under this system, so again, I'm not sure what you mean -- if you're advocating a return to the gold standard, it seems to me you should at least understand that the price of gold would be unable to fluctuate. That's sort of the point.

      It's true that land is a limited resource and so it stands to reason that we will eventually run out of it, assuming our population growth continues unabated. But that turns out to be a big assumption -- population growth is slowing in most developed countries. Australia, for example, has negative population growth, and requires immigration to replenish its numbers. Singapore as well. The US hasn't gotten there yet, but it stands to reason that we will. If the rest of the world develops as we have, why wouldn't the same apply to them? At any rate, the price of land is not soaring across the board -- only in desirable places. This is how the market works -- things which have low supply and high demand tend to experience an upward pressure in prices.

      Homes in the US are most likely overvalued, and everyone is concerned about this. But securities of any sort being overvalued is nothing new: it happens with all sorts of goods and there is always a reversion to the mean, eventually. This can sometimes be painful -- recession is often the result -- but it is fundamentally temporary.

      The government's ability to issue effectively unlimited debt is not the fault of the Fed and abolishin

    43. Re:real value? by strikethree · · Score: 1

      "Gold has almost no real value."

      Bullshit. Gold is VERY valuable. For example, gold is an excellent conductor and it does not corrode or oxidize. Gold is great for medical and electronic uses. You may want to perform more research on gold to understand exactly why it is as valuable as it is. Yes, it makes for pretty jewelry (oooh shiny) but that is its most trivial use.

      strike

      --
      "Someone needs to talk to the tree of liberty about its ghoulish drinking problem." by ohnocitizen
    44. Re:real value? by CodeBuster · · Score: 1

      A very reasoned response...you make a convincing rebutal, but a few more questions if I may.

      If the federal government issues securities (i.e. debt) and the Federal Reserve buys them to put money into circulation then isn't the Federal Government, even if it is indirect, printing money? The Federal Government is in that unique situation because their credit rating is effectively unlimited...you are right about that (i.e. if they fail then the country fails) and if that is the case then isn't that the same thing, effectively, as controlling the presses which actually print the money?

      But let's not forget that we had a surplus under Clinton

      Not to defend Bush or Reagan on the spending account, Bush especially has proven to be more spendy than just about any President in living memory, but was there really a surplus during the Clinton era or does that depend upon who does the accounting and what method they use? The federal government passes a budget before they know exactly how much tax revenue will actually be collected to support it (in fact this is not entirely the government's fault...if they waited for all of the taxes to be accounted for before formulating the budget then there would be large gaps of time when the government was operating on emergency funding, without a budget, while the taxes were collected and accounted for). For a hypothetical example, if I plan to spend 10,000 dollars in a given month but only spend 5,000 does that mean I have a 5,000 dollar surplus, because I spent less than I had planned, even though my income was only say 5,000 at the end of that month? The government accounts for their "surplus" in this way but most people wouldn't call that a surplus since there was no ability to spend 10,000 anyway without going into debt.

      Of course I've heard about LTCM...it's an example of the Fed doing its job and ensuring that the markets stay stable.

      Granted, but is it fair to allow frims, whether through use of asymetric information about assets or transactions or whatever other means, to put investors into a position where the entire economy could collapse because of mispriced risk? Should the fed buy government debt to make cash available for overnight loans to protect investors from risks that they willingly took? With high risk comes high reward yes, but also the downside of loss of principle. Did the taxpayer, where the government funds ultimately come from, receive the best rates for those Fed loans given the amount of risk (remember that there was a chance that the loan package might not have worked...it did but it could have failed to stem the tide under a more general collapse of confidence in the marketplace)? I know that LTCM paid the loans back (or rather the firms and governments in which LTCM had holdings paid the loans back), but it was all a very riksy thing in spite of it all.

      I don't see how the housing bubble is the fault of the Fed or how it would be helped by a gold standard. Likewise the failure of social security -- a system which depends on strong population growth to function -- seems unrelated to any failure of fiat currency conceptually or in practice.

      The fed kept interest rates low for a long time after the Dot Com bubble burst and 9/11 hit thereby encouraging and fueling speculation in the mortgage markets. Does anyone else see a problem when there are "do it yourself" mail order "kits" to help you get into the house flipping boom? Is there any real value to the economy in people buying and reselling properties on a weeks notice and pocketing $40,000+ on the transaction? Why should the Fed make it cheap for speculators to borrow money to do this? The Fed shares some part of the blame for the housing bubble. As for the gold standard it would be harder to issue new credit willy nilly if you had to back the new credit with fractional gold reserves (this could be both a good and a bad thing).

      Questioning the Fed chairman, telling him how to do his job, etc, is nothing ne

    45. Re:real value? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Inflation does not tax the poor: They have no cash savings.
      Inflation does not tax the middle class: They keep their assets in real-estate and mutual funds.
      Inflation forces everyone else to invest in something, because hoarding money isn't good for the economy. What if the salaries grow at a rate smaller than the inflation rate?
    46. Re:real value? by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      We have, and your lies about the Panic of 1873 have been destroyed before
      No. Every time it comes up, you refer back to your own explanations. This time, in a first, you refer to another source besides yourself. Unfortunately, it happens to be mises, and the link you provide doesn't even address the causes of the 1873 panic, but rather the economic correction that occurred.

      Grant decided to contract the money supply when the investors wanted to put as much as they could into railway building.
      Wait, so now you are saying that deflation caused the Panic? Last time this came up, you said it was inflation that caused the panic. Which cause will you choose next time? At any rate, that's pretty funny, since overinvestment in railroads was a prime cause of the recession of 1873. Or perhaps you are confusing the cause of the Panic with the cause of the Recession?
      Hoarding of money is the DEFINITION of deflation: removing money from the economy
      False. Deflation is not "removing money from the economy" -- you are still confused on basic definitions of inflation and deflation? You, sir, need to read some remedial economics texts, since your misinterpretations of basic terms color your wayward interpretations of other works. Deflation is a persistent decline in the prices of goods and services, and removal of currency from the money supply is only one of the factors that can cause it. Another one is oversupply of goods and services; yet another one is reduction of loans in circulation. You still don't understand that currency in circulation != the money supply?!

      Deflation causes the demand for money to rise, which is symbolized by merchants dropping prices. Not everyone will hold out forever as merchants drop prices, and not all merchants will drop prices because they have products that people actually do need, or do want, rather than "oooh, cool, iphone, must have must have visa visa visa." This is good for the market.
      How is it good for the market? Price drops are always beneficial? Is that what you're saying -- really? That the final answer to macroeconomics is that low prices == good?

      And the most laughable of all:

      But hoarding doesn't just come from sticking it under the mattress. You could "hoard" by putting it into an interest-bearing demand deposit account with 90 day turn-over (say, a CD), and have that money loaned out to the market (unusable by you for those 90 days
      That is not hoarding, that is investing. It is the opposite of hoarding. By putting your money into a demand-deposit account, your are making that money available for use by others -- hence making sure that it is in the money supply.

      Seriously, take some night school economics classes or something. Reading mises.org and other agenda-driven information does not equate an education in economics.
      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    47. Re:real value? by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 1

      Actually they were excellent teachers. They were just more precise and clearer in their terms than you. :)

      --
      It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
    48. Re:real value? by MarsDefenseMinister · · Score: 1

      What was the definition of a law they gave to you then? I'd like to know.

      Stop being snarky and be helpful instead.

      --
      No weapon in the arsenals of the world is so formidable as the will and moral courage of free men.-Ronald Reagan
    49. Re:real value? by LordVader717 · · Score: 1

      The only uses here are gold plated connectors (for which a few milligrams are needed, and whose technical advantage over other metals are debatable) and tooth fillings.
      Also, like any other element, trace quantities are used for scientific research applications. That just about wraps up everything.

      Don't kid yourself. Gold was actually useful to people in the distant past, but not any more. There's only a market there because of it's shininess and (manufactured) value.
      The Value of Gold is almost as artificial as the value of modern currency.

  20. for the cliff notes, go here... by ed1park · · Score: 2, Informative
  21. Gold Standard == Bad by brunes69 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The only people who argue for reinstatement of the gold standard are those who do not have a fundamental grasp of macroeconomics. Reinstating gold-backed currency would do several bad things, because it artificially constrains the value of gold as a commodity metal.

    Because the value of gold is implicitly tied to the value of a currency, gold can no longer be traded as a commodity in any real sense. As in - if your currency is backed by gold, what happens if the value of gold should go down due to a glut in the production market? Answer is nothing, because it *can't*. If money is backed by gold then you can't logically trade gold separately from money. This means that gold is artificially valued, and the prices of things that use gold would increase for no sound economic reason.

    1. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

      What should money be based on then, the promise of future labor or exchange of goods as rationed by a single central authority?

    2. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Dan+Ost · · Score: 1

      The promise by the government that they will accept it as payment for taxes.

      What else do you need?

      --

      *sigh* back to work...
    3. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by metlin · · Score: 2, Funny

      The promise by the government that they will accept it as payment for taxes. ...in exchange for services, infrastructure and governance.

      There, fixed that for you.

      (Disclaimer - your definition of what government should do may vary.)

    4. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by smooth+wombat · · Score: 1
      The only people who argue for reinstatement of the gold standard are those who do not have a fundamental grasp of macroeconomics.


      You mean Steve Forbes, right? The guy who said that oil would go back down to $55/barrel (or lower).

      No wonder his father's wealth has been squandered. Yet, amazingly, financial hacks like Kudlow still have him on from time to time.

      --
      We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
    5. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by aminorex · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The reasonable reaction to these concerns is to peg the currency to a basket of commodities (or their futures). This would eliminate core inflation, if the basket were to be weighted identically to the core inflation metric, resulting in absolute stability in the value of currency. By using derivatives (commodity futures, specifically) rather than actual commodities, the money supply could be controlled through futures market operations, thus retaining the ability of the government to manipulate the currency in order to counter-act adverse events resulting from market panics and bubbles.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    6. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by jcr · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The only people who argue for reinstatement of the gold standard are those who do not have a fundamental grasp of macroeconomics.

      Oh, please. You do not support your position by proclaiming that your opponents are ignorant.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    7. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by UbuntuDupe · · Score: 4, Informative

      This is what I don't like about arguments against the gold standard.

      The entire disadvantage you just listed as stemming from a gold standard is: "Things requiring gold would be unjustifiably expensive."

      That advantage is so bad that no one can support a gold standard unless they "fundamentally misunderstand macroeconomics"?

      It's things like this that for so long kept me from understanding the hate for the gold standard. The best arguments against it seemed to be pretty trivial, and yes, that includes the extensive list on Wikipedia.

      Think how confusing that must sound: Those who support a gold standard are idiots because they are too dismissive of high prices for items containing gold. Huh?

      After a while of wringing out sources for a serious argument, I finally found something more convincing, which is this:

      1) Under a gold standard, the (very high) volatility of gold is imposed on the general price level, making it that much harder to plan economic activity, and magnifying negative events.
      2) Significant amounts of gold must be held out of production, just for use as money, with signficant opportunity cost.
      3) Increasingly huge portions of the economy are diverted to gold production during times of economic growth because that, rather than e.g. cancer cures, have the highest return.

    8. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by benzapp · · Score: 1

      There are other alternatives. A commodity index can be utilized instead of a gold standard. Especially with rising costs of many imported resources, this would ease the shock amongst the American people.

      The reality is the constitution grants congress to fix the value of money to whatever they see fit - given the complexity of the modern world, and a commodity index is the most sound approach.

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    9. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by ShatteredArm · · Score: 2, Funny

      I think you're wrong. Clearly he does support his position by proclaiming that his opponents are ignorant.

      Now whether it is a valid argument is an entirely different story...

    10. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by MSTCrow5429 · · Score: 1
      I think you are missing the blatantly self-evident truth that money is a commodity, and how in the world would it "artificially" constrain the value of gold? The value of an ounce of gold is always the value of an ounce of gold. What matters is the purchasing power of an ounce of gold, not that 1 ounce of gold = 1 ounce of gold.

      If money is backed by gold then you can't logically trade gold separately from money. This means that gold is artificially valued, and the prices of things that use gold would increase for no sound economic reason.

      That's because gold is money. If I use gold for something other than currency, I am simply valuing it as more productive in another capacity. Nothing is devalued, only changed in form.

      --
      Slashdot: Playing Favorites Since 1997
    11. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by MSTCrow5429 · · Score: 1

      Look at the US Constitution, Article 1, Section 10. Gold and silver are the only legal tender, which means that legally, they are the only acceptable forms of payment of taxes.

      --
      Slashdot: Playing Favorites Since 1997
    12. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Ed+Avis · · Score: 1

      It's one thing to have $1000 exchangeable on demand for x grams of gold (or of silver), but it would get a bit daft if the central bank had to pay out 10g of gold, 0.1 bushels of wheat, three lean hogs and half a tonne of copper. The gold standard was maintained by shipping gold around the world to cover trade deficits and surpluses. This couldn't happen with 'soft' commodities.

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    13. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Ed+Avis · · Score: 1

      I think the best argument against the gold standard is that we used to have one, and it didn't really work out that well. (sterling's return to the gold standard after WW1; collapse of Bretton Woods agreement in the 70s.)

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    14. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by dch24 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Will somebody please mod the parent +1 insightful? Or post his bullet points at the top of wikipedia?

      As a counter-argument (I have to play devil's advocate here):
      1) The volatility of gold is only tied to the supply and demand of it. If the supply of gold increases, does it really reduce the value of currencies? Or does it create new wealth? If it creates new wealth (in the hands of the mining companies) then it hasn't reduced the value of gold holdings, as long as demand increases proportionate with supply. This is why gold is usually put forth as a standard: the demand for it increases almost exactly 1:1 with the increase of the supply. Or, in other words, there is infinite demand, but the price sensitivity is linear.

      2) The opportunity cost of not being able to manufacture electronics with gold in it (or jewelry, or whatever you're going to do with the gold) is balanced by the opportunity cost of running out of gold. Gold is rare. It's not as rare as some other minerals, but by putting significant amounts in reserve, any government can then guarantee the value of its currency. Hyperinflation is a significant opportunity cost just so that manufacturers (and jewelers) have an unlimited supply of gold.

      3) This may be the hardest one to counter. The environmental cost of mining for gold will probably never be properly taxed or regulated. I think the best counterargument is to compare a gold standard with our current environmental crisis, fueled by the U.S. Government's insistence that all oil be sold for U.S. Dollars (source). If we assume (pretty naively) that oil will continue to be pegged to the U.S. Dollar, then we effectively have Oil as our currency backing right now. The result is that in times of economic growth, (now I'm quoting you) "Increasingly huge portions of the economy are diverted to [oil] production ... because that, rather than e.g. cancer cures, have the highest return."

      The environmental impact of mining is arguably more controllable (it stays on the ground) than that of burning oil (it causes GLOBAL pollution).

      OK, so please respond to me and let's debate the pros and cons of a gold standard.

    15. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 1

      Hold on now, if it wasn't for the "you idiots" argument discussions on the web would grind to a halt. If you weren't so stupid you'd know that already.

      --
      It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
    16. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      The best argument against the gold standard is you can't eat gold, smoke it or put your hand up its jumper.

      That's to say it's an arbitrary mineral with few unique practical uses and no magical qualities other than being shiny.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    17. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by wowbagger · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's one thing to have $1000 exchangeable on demand for x grams of gold (or of silver), but it would get a bit daft if the central bank had to pay out 10g of gold, 0.1 bushels of wheat, three lean hogs and half a tonne of copper.


      No, they give you a booklet containing coupons worth 10gAu, 0.1 bushel of wheat, etc.

      You then go to the local granary, hand them the coupon for the wheat, and they give you a bag of wheat. They punch the coupon to indicate it had been redeemed and put it in the bag to send back to the government to indicate that share of the government's reserve in wheat has been paid out (for which the government has previously paid them).

      You go to the local meat market, hand them the coupon for the hogs, and they give you the meat.

      You sell the coupon for the copper on the open market to a business which needs it.

      etc.

      The "reserve" for the various items in the "basket" is just bookkeeping in the various entities which produce the goods - much as it is now. The government maintains a reserve of gasoline, food, etc. - most of which is nothing but a ledger entry at some refinery/food producer/etc.
    18. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by nate+nice · · Score: 1

      Allen Greenspan, before he was Fed chief, was for the gold standard.

      Reinstating the gold standard would change things, but I'm not sure if they are good or bad. It would be a bad idea now anyways since so much reserve gold has been sold off.

      But in theory, a gold standard assigns an intrinsic value to money. Since gold is mined at around a 3% increase every year, inflation is under control.

      Most Libertarians want a gold standard, or some equivalent. A lot of people believe the Fed will collapse one day, as all fractional reserve systems have eventually.

      --
      "If you are a dreamer, a wisher, a liar, A hope-er, a pray-er, a magic bean buyer ..."
    19. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Hatta · · Score: 2, Informative
      Read it again.

      No State shall enter into any Treaty, Alliance, or Confederation; grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal; coin Money; emit Bills of Credit; make any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts;

      This only restricts the states from coining money that is not gold or silver. The federal government can make anything they want legal tender. Once it's legal tender, the states can use it.
      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    20. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by MSTCrow5429 · · Score: 2, Interesting
      No State shall...make any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts;

      That pretty strongly says to me that they can't accept anything as legal tender other than gold or silver, as this would be tantamount to making it legal tender, which is prohibited. The Federal Government can not legally coerce the States to accept fiat currency as legal tender.

      --
      Slashdot: Playing Favorites Since 1997
    21. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Kadin2048 · · Score: 1

      That's not a bad idea.

      I tend to wonder exactly how we'd find a halfway-decent, objective way of deciding what would be in the "basket" of commodities, and how often that basket would change -- didn't they have to change the Consumer Price Index not that long ago, because it was filled with stuff that most people don't purchase anymore? I'd be a bit concerned that if you put the control over what goes in the 'basket' into political hands, there would be a lot of temptation to gerrymander it for various ends. Whatever goods you put in the basket would tend to be price-stablized (some might say distorted), because in addition to trading as commodities, they'd also trade as quasi-currency. I'm not sure what effect that would have if you included a food crop or a consumable good (say, oil or coal) in it, but it seems like it could get interesting.

      I've heard that some smaller countries have their national currencies pegged to a basket of major currencies; e.g., ten Banana Republician Dollars is worth four Euros, two GBPs, 5000 JPY, and three USD. This means that their central bank has to maintain a more complicated reserve (they have to have some of each currency, instead of just having USD, or Euros, or whatever), but it protects them against fluctuations in one currency in particular. A commodity-based system wouldn't be that different, conceptually.

      --
      "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
    22. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by runderwo · · Score: 1

      1) Under a gold standard, the (very high) volatility of gold is imposed on the general price level, making it that much harder to plan economic activity, and magnifying negative events.
      Very high volatility? Check your facts. The only time the price of gold has been volatile has been when federal monetary policy had a significant shift, such as when gold and silver confiscation began, and when the gold standard was abandoned. Otherwise, it has steadily drifted up and down in accordance with general market trends. When inflation is high, the price of gold is high. When inflation is low, the price of gold is low.

      And how do you propose to 'plan economic activity'? It's hard to do that gold standard or not, because people don't behave the way a planned economy wants them to. The federal reserve tries to get people to behave the way it wants by manipulating interest rates, with often exactly the opposite effect.

      2) Significant amounts of gold must be held out of production, just for use as money, with signficant opportunity cost.
      Bullshit. That's gold confiscation which is the system we have today under the federal reserve. With a gold standard, you can exchange a note for gold at any time. You need gold for an opportunity? Redeem your notes for it. There is no opportunity cost. It's just far easier to carry notes than bricks of gold.

      3) Increasingly huge portions of the economy are diverted to gold production during times of economic growth because that, rather than e.g. cancer cures, have the highest return.
      Bullshit. You know what happened to the vast majority of gold speculators during the last rush? They starved. There is no evidence that increasing mining operations at all affects the supply of gold. At some point, it costs more to mine it than it can be sold for, and that price is determined by the market. Gold hoarding increases the market price of gold, but it has costs of its own, because gold must be stored securely and secretly. Many people are going to invest in mining operations that have a good return. Mining operations with a poor return will go out of business. Just like today.
    23. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Grishnakh · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I disagree. I don't know whether this is really a good thing to do in this particular discussion thread, but there's other threads where the opponents' position is utterly stupid, and it's simply a waste of time to do much besides proclaim that they're ignorant. Otherwise, we'd all be wasting lots of time every time some moron made some utterly ridiculous claim.

      If we're discussing an article about China's proposed manned mission to the moon, for instance, and some fool writes a comment that seriously claims the moon is made of green cheese, do you really think we should waste time debunking that claim? No, I'd just call him an idiot. Similarly, if we're discussing paleontology, and some fool writes a comment that the earth is 6000 years old, is there any reason to debunk that idiotic claim? Of course not, because anyone with a basic grasp of science knows that's utterly ridiculous. So that's a perfectly reasonable time to call that person a moron. (Unfortunately, there's a LOT of such morons out there.)

      I think the person who made this claim about proponents of the gold standard may be a little extreme with his standard, however, because I don't think it's quite as obvious to the audience here on /. (if indeed his claim is even true: I Am Not An Economist).

    24. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 1

      we used to have one, and it didn't really work out that well. (sterling's return to the gold standard after WW1; collapse of Bretton Woods agreement in the 70s.)

      I don't know much about your second example, but the problem with the return of the pound sterling to a commodity gold standard was that the sterling had been inflated since it was taken off the gold standard and they wanted to return to the standard at the old exchange rate. The resulting mess was a predictable result of trying to enforce an exchange rate between currency and gold that no longer applied; such attempts have the same issues as all other forms of price-fixing. Bimetallism -- two simultaneous commodity currencies with a rigid exchange rate -- consistently fails for similar reasons.

      Of course, there are also several different types of "gold standard": actual trade in gold coins, trade in "warehouse receipts" exchangeable 1:1 for gold (like e-gold), and trade in bills denominated in (but not actually redeemable for) gold. My personal favorite is the system the U.S. had before treasury notes replaced gold as the base international currency, where their currency was bills denominated in quantities of gold ($1, $5, etc.) but said bills were only redeemable to other governments -- not individuals -- and only at an exchange rate so antiquated and artificial ($4.25 vs. $20+ market rate) as to heavily penalize any attempt to exercise even that limited priviledge.

      --
      "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
    25. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just use the top 100 traded commodities every year. As business changes, so does the list.

    26. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by bytesex · · Score: 1

      Some say the Western Roman Empire eventually came to a stand still (and was subsequently walked all over) because of a gold standard; those nasty army generals just kept minting new coins with their face on it to pay their soldiers. Inflation, of course, became rampant. In other parts of the empire, where they produced it, gold was a commodity as you say. The Romans' grasp of economics wasn't all that after all.

      --
      Religion is what happens when nature strikes and groupthink goes wrong.
    27. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by i+kan+reed · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, he supported his arguments with the things following that. Being indignant is no way to prove him wrong either.

    28. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Hatta · · Score: 2, Interesting

      No state can make something legal tender, but if someone else (say the federal government) made it legal tender they are free to accept it.

      No, the federal government can't coerce the states into accepting dollars, but why would the states need to be coerced?

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    29. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by MSTCrow5429 · · Score: 2, Informative

      I don't think so. If I'm a State, and I accept Federal Reserve Notes as payment of taxes, this de facto renders Federal Reserve Notes to be legal tender. The Federal Government can coerce the several States to accept the debt-backed fiat currency of the Federal Reserve as legal tender, but I'm not sure this was ever necessary. If the States had decided to operate on Constitutional principles, then yes, that would be a point of contention. Most people have no clue how fiat currency and fractional reserve banking function, and I'm certain you could include many politicians.

      --
      Slashdot: Playing Favorites Since 1997
    30. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Rob+Riggs · · Score: 1

      Top 100 you say? The government would then need to be in the business of stockpiling currently illegal drugs and accurately tracking their prices. One assumes the current fiction is preferred for some reason.

      An even bigger problem with this idea (one that isn't political) is that our economy is no longer primarily based on goods, but on services.

      --
      the growth in cynicism and rebellion has not been without cause
    31. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 1

      . . . if your currency is backed by gold, what happens if the value of gold should go down due to a glut in the production market? Answer is nothing, because it *can't*.

      No, the answer is that all the prices would adjust to reflect the new state of the market, just as when the value of a fiat currency (e.g. the U.S. dollar) varies relative to other goods.

      If money is backed by gold then you can't logically trade gold separately from money.

      Obviously, since they're the same thing. You can't trade dollars separately from money either.

      This means that gold is artificially valued, and the prices of things that use gold would increase for no sound economic reason.

      There's nothing "artificial" about value resulting from marketability, but I will allow that a rising demand for use of gold as currency would lead to a price increase for items incorporating gold. The "sound economic reason" for the increase is simple: scarcity, combined with the fact that gold is about the best substance around for a commodity currency. Very few other substances are as uniform, durable and divisible, and at the same time have the right density and scarcity for convenient trade.

      --
      "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
    32. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by turing_m · · Score: 1

      "3) Increasingly huge portions of the economy are diverted to gold production during times of economic growth because that, rather than e.g. cancer cures, have the highest return."

      As opposed to now?

      The money is always in treating the symptoms, never in cures. And if you own a treatment, it also works out very well if you subsidize the cause.

      --
      If I have seen further it is by stealing the Intellectual Property of giants.
    33. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and the prices of things that use gold would increase for no sound economic reason.

      So Monster Cables would get even more ridiculously expensive? That's near impossible.

    34. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Original+Replica · · Score: 2, Interesting

      but why would the states need to be coerced?

      Because right now the value of the TexasDollar (oil and military) would be skyrocketing as compared to the value of MichiganDollar (US Automotive Industry) and Detroit would be even more screwed than it already is. Add to this having to exchange money when you crossed state lines and well basically the States can't print there own currency (Federal currency is standard) for the same reasons the the EU adopted he Euro.

      --
      We are all just people.
    35. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by jcr · · Score: 1

      peg the currency to a basket of commodities

      Better still to simply repeal the legal tender statutes, and let people trade in whatever currencies they chose, be it krugerrand, contracts redeemable for kilowatt-hours, or private gold warehouse receipts.

      The chief benefit of a gold standard is that it makes it more difficult for a government to tax us on the sly by debasing the currency.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    36. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Hatta · · Score: 2, Interesting

      We already established that the states can't issue money. That has no bearing on whether they have to accept the federal governments money. The states could go back to gold and silver as we saw in the constitution. But that would be dumb. That's why I said "why would the states need to be coerced[... to accept federal currency]"

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    37. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Hatta · · Score: 1

      If I'm a State, and I accept Federal Reserve Notes as payment of taxes, this de facto renders Federal Reserve Notes to be legal tender.

      The Federal Reserve Note is already legal tender because the Federal Goverment made it so. They get to do that because of Article 1 section 8.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    38. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With a gold standard, a glut of gold production produces inflation. I suggest reading Friedman's Money Mischief. For example, cyanide extraction of gold dust created inflation. The problem with fiat is that governments can't be trusted to not cheat the system when needed. The problem with the Federal Reserve is that it provides insurance to the financial system against failure which means the financial system will evolve to depend on ever greater amounts of insurance. An enormous amount of "money" is now dependent on insufficient mathematics. It is not a matter of if but only a matter of when the house of cards is brought down by over-leverage of inaccurate models. It all comes down to a matter of discipline in creating new money. Now is a critical time for the Federal Reserve. The credit markets are seizing up as the credit cycle turns. How much money will they create at the discount window for banks in trouble and how badly will the banks be punished for their mistakes and hubris? Even if the banks get off easy it will not be long before the Gini coefficient reaches the point that a political backlash will begin (ala Ron Paul) which should threaten the Fed's existence. The evil side effects of inflation will eventually destroy the concept of central banking, it might just take a long time. Some physicists ran simulations investigating the Gini coefficient and one factor that responded well was increased savings, which is exactly what central bankers destroy with inflation. And our economic progress seems to favor giant fascist megacorps, which is great for total output but might not be what the founding fathers had in mind for the idea of individual liberty.

    39. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by MSTCrow5429 · · Score: 1

      I believe this is not properly taking the entire document as an organic one, and ignoring an extremely salient fact regarding the Federal Reserve Yes, it gives the Federal government the power to coin money. However, why would the Constitution in Article 1, Section 10, prohibit the States from making anything but gold and silver legal tender, if Article I, Section 8 allows the Federal government to not only coin currency, but print currency? The Federal government is not empowered to print currency, only coin it, and it would be contradictory to ban fiat currency among the States, but allow it within the Federal government. The Federal government, one must recall, was quite minute at the time of the ratification of the US Constitution, 1789, and it would be rather silly to invent "special" money for internal transactions within the Federal government only. However, your entire thesis falls apart into dust when one points out that the Federal Reserve is not an entity of the Federal government, or any other government. It is a privately owned institution. Article 1, Section 8 cannot apply.

      --
      Slashdot: Playing Favorites Since 1997
    40. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by KudyardRipling · · Score: 1

      Real estate values are not called inflation. Medical costs are not called inflation. Education costs are not called inflation. Pay raise to afford these? Oh my GAWDD! IN-FOKKING-FLATION!! Hike the rates. Get those workers off the payroll! Too many workers are doing too well!

      stupid, stupid, ST(o)(o)PID! (slapping self in face), too many are doing to well to care!!

      --
      Submission as evidence constitutes plaintiff and/or prosecutorial misconduct.
    41. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) Under a gold standard, the (very high) volatility of gold is imposed on the general price level, making it that much harder to plan economic activity, and magnifying negative events. Compare the "volatility of gold" to the "volatility" of any government currency. We're talking factors of more stability for gold supply than fiat currency supply. Governments are the successful alchemists. They actually succeeded in turning paper into gold. Sure, it required violent force of "legal tender" and a mass delusion of paper being the Emperor's New Clothes. But it is what it is. We're still talking about a commodity no matter what! It just happens to be paper (with a copyrighted design) or digits.

      2) Significant amounts of gold must be held out of production, just for use as money, with signficant opportunity cost. Or gold was used as money because significant amounts of it already could be held out of production, or synthetically the same, gold can be easily recycled into different products, and is thus just as useful in bar ingot form as it is in microchips or jewelry.

      3) Increasingly huge portions of the economy are diverted to gold production during times of economic growth because that, rather than e.g. cancer cures, have the highest return. That's always a good thing, as gold has a fundamental value for a multitude of differing uses, from money to industry and vice versa in potentially perpetual recirculation. Society is wealthier with 2X Gold than 1X Gold. Society is not wealthier with 2X Fiat Currency than 1X Fiat Currency. So you could argue diverting resources away from gold production is a bad thing. And of course, if the original money was backed by Oil, we would easily understand that more oil production is better for the economy.
    42. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > An even bigger problem with this idea (one that isn't political) is that our economy is no longer primarily based on goods, but on services.

      Yeah, speaking of the shady goods indeed... the government would have to determine a price index on the international market value of a blowjob.

    43. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by jcr · · Score: 1

      e supported his arguments with the things following that.

      Really? In what post was that? All I saw was a bit of trivial blather that insisted without any support that gold would be "artificially" valued.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    44. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No Roman ever traded away anything valued MORE for something valued LESS. So, no, the Romans' grasp of economics was very similarly as advanced as our modern grasp of economics, perhaps barring an explicit conception of marginal utility (just as it's certain they understood the implications of gravity whence firing and throwing their weapons even though Sir Isaac Newton wasn't around to coin his laws of physics). Human nature doesn't change. Trade only occurs because that which is received is valued more than that which is given away in exchange, no matter what is being exchanged, including gold. So a "gold standard" would be completely irrelevant to your argument. However, an argument of inflation and currency debasement would fit as a possible cause, as the Empire attempted to garner voluntary trade from its citizens by bamboozling and forcing them into accepting something in exchange which was valued less by those citizens.

      The Romans had subjectively valued products and massive trade networks which increased wealth, just as the world does today.

    45. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by p0ss · · Score: 1

      "he government would then need to be in the business of stockpiling currently illegal drugs and accurately tracking their prices" it is. see the CIA

    46. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Profound · · Score: 1

      I am not an American but http://www.constitution.org/constit_.htm says:

      Section. 10. No State shall enter into any Treaty, Alliance, or Confederation; grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal; coin Money; emit Bills of Credit; make any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts; pass any Bill of Attainder, ex post facto Law, or Law impairing the Obligation of Contracts, or grant any Title of Nobility.

    47. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by budgenator · · Score: 1

      Shipping gold around is scary stuff, ships sink and trains get robbed. More often the title to the gold was transfered, and that was called money! Many goevernments used to just hold US Dollars instead of gold, untill Nixon screwed them by stopping the backing of dollars by gold. When I was in Germany in the late seventies I got a twenty dollar bill from one of the german banks that was a 1936 series silver certificate, when compared to one of the '70s series FERN twenty in the picture of the White House on the back you could see how much the trees had grown.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    48. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by derEikopf · · Score: 1

      The only people who argue for reinstatement of the gold standard are those who do not have a fundamental grasp of macroeconomics.
      Like Alan Greenspan?
    49. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Yunzil · · Score: 2, Informative

      However, why would the Constitution in Article 1, Section 10, prohibit the States from making anything but gold and silver legal tender, if Article I, Section 8 allows the Federal government to not only coin currency, but print currency?

      Probably because they wanted to keep the States from being able to declare any old thing as currency. You don't want Virginia using tobacco leaves as money, or Florida to declare it will accept foreign banknotes, etc.

    50. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      But in theory, a gold standard assigns an intrinsic value to money.

      This is the part where I get confused about why some people think the gold standard is so great. Gold has no intrinsic value. For that matter nothing has any intrinsic value. Everything is only worth what people think it's worth. Once you get past that, then you might as well eliminate the middle man and forget about the gold.

      Maybe this is why I didn't like economics in college. :-b

    51. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, the trouble with the Gold standard is financial manipulation possible by withholding it from circulation or suddenly supplying it. If no one can make any other money that Gold, and all contracts are in Gold prices, someone gets screwed when supply suddenly shrinks.. or expands...

      There has to be an ever changing supply of money such that one unit of it buys the same thing. Of course it is impossible to define 'the same thing' over the years but we can get close. When there is much economic progress and there is a lot more goods around, but the money supply stays the same, then people can be wealthier just by holding cash. But that is not what we want. We want people doing real productive things to get wealthy, not sitting on their mattress full of money all day. We want a non-volatile amount of money in circulation at all times so that contracts can be made with confidence. So the problem with the gold standard is that there is no way to control its supply in this way. Maybe we could think of money like oil, that there has to be just the right amount of it.. keep it between 'add' and 'full'. Bigger engines need more oil... smaller ones less..

      I can see why people don't want artificial money like this, because they feel whoever controls it will abuse their power. Better for the money to be something they can't print an unlimited amount of! And certainly the gold standard is better than what we have now... but I'm just saying it isn't ideal.. there might be a better way, if we could only get honest people in government.

    52. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by pugugly · · Score: 1

      Yeah, right until someone starts running arbitrage on the pegged commodities, which in turn will create a black market on those commodities, and the whole thing goes straight down the toilet.

      Which, in an internet based culture, will happen at speeds measured in cpu cycles,

      I'm thinking, ah, no. Floating currency despite the obvious problems, work lots better because you can't run them that way.

      Pug

      --
      An Invisible Entity of Vast Power whose existence must be taken on faith alone: Liberal Media
    53. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by markov_chain · · Score: 2, Funny

      1) Under a gold standard, the (very high) volatility of gold is imposed on the general price level, making it that much harder to plan economic activity, and magnifying negative events.
      Dude what are you talking about, gold is not volatile--it's a metal, and highly inert one, at that.
      --
      Tsunami -- You can't bring a good wave down!
    54. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Le+Marteau · · Score: 1

      Not being an American, you may have misunderstood the meaning of the word "state"

      Section. 10. No State shall

      "State" in the US Constitution means one of the constituent units of the United States federal government.. It does not mean "nation".

      --
      Mod down people who tell people how to mod in their sigs
    55. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by WhiplashII · · Score: 1

      To put this idiotic issue to bed, here is the basic problem with pegging money to gold:

      Gold supply fluctions cause money supply fluctuations.

      What that means is that Evil Foriegnors(TM) can go into your country, and redeem for a largish portion of the gold. You now have less gold, so you have less money. You can't get more gold, so you just have to make do with less money. In other words, deflation happens - there is less money, but the same amount of "stuff" (except for gold), so the stuff is worth more. The problem is that this crashes the economy, just like too much inflation does (see Japan).

      So what you end up with is this: Evil Foriegnors(TM) now have the power to crash your economy at will.

      In addition, if anyone at all counterfiets the currency (including the government, as in printing too much money) the economy can be exploited - just like one of those fake economies in an online game. Here is the scenario: I am smart, so I assume that someone, somewhere has counterfieted US money. That means that while the government says that 1 dollar equals 1 gram of gold, it actually only equals 0.99999 grams of gold. So I take a trillion dollars, and ask the government for my gold. There are two possible outcomes:

      1) It becomes obvious that I was right, and that someone somewhere printed some extra dollars. The US government now has to re-base the currency to 1 dollar equals 0.99998 gold (remember, I took most of their gold, so it is no longer just 0.99999). I can now trade back, and make a couple hundred million dollars.
      2) It becomes obvious that I was wrong, and I just cause a recession through my monetary influence (or possibly not), but the key fact is that I still have the gold, and can easily reverse my position.

      This means that any country that has a currency backed by gold can be exploited. Get their currency, and convert it to gold. Keep doing that until you crash the economy, and they have to repeg. Profit!

      And how do we know about this, you ask? Why do you think we went off the gold standard in the first place? Europe did this to us multiple times, and then we finally realized what the problem was... this is the base cause of "runs on currency".

      (And you thought exploits only worked on servers - bah, in my day we would crack entire economies!)

      --
      while (sig==sig) sig=!sig;
    56. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Rudd-O · · Score: 1

      Of course it didn't work proplerly. Nixon spent all the gold!

      --
      Rudd-O - http://rudd-o.com/
    57. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Rudd-O · · Score: 1

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold

      To remove the stoopid from your brain.

      --
      Rudd-O - http://rudd-o.com/
    58. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Rudd-O · · Score: 1

      But the difference between gold and fiat currency is that no one can print gold, debasing the economy as they go on.

      --
      Rudd-O - http://rudd-o.com/
    59. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by QuietObserver · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Not to discredit your statement, which is perfectly valid, you misspelled foreigners; I know, it's one of many words that breaks the bloody i before e rule.

    60. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      fuck off

    61. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by jcr · · Score: 1

      Well, that's about the level of discourse I expect from an AC.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    62. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Time to review the "ad hominem fallacy" fallacy.

      http://plover.net/~bonds/adhominem.html

      Cliff notes version: calling you an idiot doesn't invalidate the rest of my argument. (You idiot.)

    63. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by KevinIsOwn · · Score: 1

      Excuse him for paraphrasing the argument, and only including one piece of a large argument against a gold standard. His post is nonetheless correct, and just because you don't seem want to understand it or read it doesn't make it "trivial blather".

    64. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      1. Gold is generally stable. For example a gold coin would have bought a toga in roman times and some nice sandals etc. Now the same amount would buy a nice suit. Gold prices are volatile, not because of gold, but because of the other factors (mainly interferece in to the economy) Think how markets can change even just when the Fed chairman says some stuff. Greenspan etc choose their words carefully.

        If the main medium of exchange for a large area was gold then it would be easier to plan long term. It wouldnt' be possible for the government to arbitarily set interest rates etc

      2. For this point, and 3, the advantages would outweigh the disadvantages. Booms mean capital is allcoated in the wrong places. And think what happenned during the Great Depression etc
    65. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by patiodragon · · Score: 1

      "This means that gold is artificially valued"

      You really haven't demonstrated this at all. It sounds like people who say, "I can't find a job that pays me what I'm worth." The definition of worth/value in the market is what people are willing to pay for it. Gold has worked as a standard of exchange for as long as there is recorded history.

      The Federal Reserve Bank is a fraud. It is NOT federal and has nil reserves. If you or I finagled people out of their gold and replaced it with paper, AND got them to believe they owe you interest because you created "wealth" out of thin air, we would be sent to jail for fraud.

      Do you know who owns the Federal Reserve bank, hmmm?

    66. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I don't see where that authoritative and peer reviewed article says gold is magic.

      P.S. It's spelled "stupid". You ought to be quite familiar with the word by now.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    67. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by UbuntuDupe · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Okay, I'll respond, but I don't really have a the hatred of the gold standard that a lot of people do. Also, the WP article seeme to have significantly shortened by the time I posted my original comment.

      1) Yes, gold follows supply and demand, but the problem is that these S/D curves result in significant daily volatility. It does not steadily increase like you seem to think. The problem with the volatility is that it exposes people to sharp, unpredictable price changes. (Yeah, yeah, "price changes are good, because they reflect..." I know. But that doesn't mean you have to tie all of your exchanges to a good that has "too much" volatility) The magnitude of these volatility cost is reflected in option prices on gold. If you think of it this way: all people must, in effect, buy a hedge against gold shifting in price.

      It's true that you have to do this with government currency too; however, historically, it has been less volatile, so the risk is limited to the so-called "systematic risk" -- it requires a truly drastic crisis to have a major shift.

      2) When you have to store gold to back the currency, you *are* that much closer to "running out of gold" because it's forever out of production. (If people actually start redeeming the notes and using the gold, the money supply contracts significantly, which can precipitate a crisis.) Storing it doesn't delay this event, but hastens it.

      3) The analogy to oil seems valid, except that if more resources are diverted to extracting oil (or more generally, energy), that energy is put directly into production, instead of simply adding more backing to the currency.

    68. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by benzapp · · Score: 1

      You want to look at Article I Section 8:

      The Congress shall have Power To coin Money, regulate the Value thereof, and of foreign Coin, and fix the Standard of Weights and Measures;

      This where the idea of the commodity index comes from - Congress can regulate the value of money to be whatever they like. It is also where the criticism of the Fed comes into play. Congress can delegate its powers, yet Congress no longer regulates the value of money... That is illegal.

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    69. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by THEbwana · · Score: 1

      The only people who argue for reinstatement of the gold standard are those who do not have a fundamental grasp of macroeconomics .. ah, you mean ignorant people like - for instance - Alan Greenspan ? ( http://www.lewrockwell.com/bonner/bonner336.html )

    70. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by WhiplashII · · Score: 1

      Well, you see, it's spelled differently when they're evil.

      Um, yah, thats it!

      --
      while (sig==sig) sig=!sig;
    71. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by dch24 · · Score: 1

      I think you've got me on 2. I suppose people could "buy gold" by redeeming notes and create a deflationary spiral. But explain to me what a deflationary spiral would look like when the currency is backed by gold? I'm having a hard time imagining this.

      For 1, it would be a win-win to tie gold to a large currency system: it would stabilize the currency system, and it would stabilize the gold price. For example, a lot of the volatility of gold prices right now is (by some) attributed to the devaluing US Dollar, so if that is the case often enough, tie the two to each other and everybody wins. What am I missing?

      For 3, it's not the amount of oil in reserve, it's actually the amount being traded. As the amount of oil produced (and traded) increases, the value of the US Dollar increases. Thus Hurricane Katrina was a big deal.

    72. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by doctorcisco · · Score: 1

      In this whole discussion, I see no one discussing the bad things a gold standard has caused.

      1. Americans, remember William Jennings Bryan, "We must not crucify mankind on a cross of gold?" In the late 1800's the U.S. economy was expanding exponentially, far faster than growth of the gold supply. The result was falling prices -- very good for banks, very bad for farmers and businesses. Every year, the farmer with a mortgage would make his payments with dollars more valuable than the dollars he borrowed, and pay interest besides! His wheat/corn/eggs/milk/etc. brought ever-lower income, but his debt payments remained. Millions of people were ruined, or eked out a precarious, poverty-stricken existence. This was not due to market conditions for or overproduction of farm products. It happened because the money supply wasn't growing as fast as the economy.

      2. 16th Century Europe experienced a dangerous and destabilizing rise in prices, which contributed to peasant revolts and other very bad things. Martin Luther (mostly mistakenly) attributed it to greedy merchants. The real problem was a sudden rise in Europe's money supply. Spanish conquests in South and Central America brought many tons of bullion to Spain. A lot more money chasing the same amount of stuff == inflation.

      Ironically, all that bullion probably contributed to Spain's decline as a great power. Money was easy, work was hard. It became much easier to import foreign goods with all that Incan gold than to produce them in Spain.

      With a global economy, problem #1 becomes a virtual certainty. China and India are rapidly industrializing. Global production of goods is expanding very quickly. The gold supply is not. On a gold standard, we'd be seeing worldwide price declines on almost everything. In that environment, the rich get richer just by putting money in a mattress and doing nothing.

      Yes, the Fed is very powerful. But put away the tinfoil hats. Except for 1929-1940 (a bubble burst sparked by the Smoot Hawley tariff bill, made worse by government attempts to fix it) and 1970-1982, when rising energy prices and misguided Keynesian policies made a mess of things, the U.S. economy has experienced incredible growth throughout our history. The national debt, as a percentage of the economy, is lower now than in 1980. The greatest health problem of the poor is obesity. Things are certainly not perfect, but clearly, the Fed's policies have been superior to the problems we'd have had on the gold standard. What happens on the gold standard when the GDP doubles after inflation, as has happened in the U.S. since the early 1980's?

      doctorcisco

    73. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by jcr · · Score: 1

      No, its triviality is independent of my observation. He complains about gold as money, on the grounds that gold cannot then be valued separately from a currency. DUH! That's the whole point of a commodity-backed currency.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    74. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the late 1800's the U.S. economy was expanding exponentially, far faster than growth of the gold supply. The result was falling prices -- very good for banks, very bad for farmers and businesses. Every year, the farmer with a mortgage would make his payments with dollars more valuable than the dollars he borrowed, and pay interest besides!

      This is why "macroeconomics" was a huge mistake which failed to take account that every exchange is a trade, done always only because that which is received is valued more than that which is given away. The error of falsely equivocating value from exchange involving "money" is enormously magnified over time, in analysis, and especially in effects of overzealous corrupt government institutions like the Federal Reserve. Exchange involving money is *still* barter. It's just a more economically efficient barter because "money" is the most commonly known and exchanged commodity. But even today there are all sorts of barter swaps not involving "money" which still occur, from lunchtime exchanges of sandwiches in cafeterias to swaps of cds and games, to people who lost their wallets paying for hotel rooms with watches, etc.

      An increase in wealth supply production does not necessarily make anything which previously exists worth a proportionate amount less than the newly created value. Say there are 1 apple and 2 plums in the economy. If you grow an extra apple such that there are now 2 apples and 2 plums in the economy that doesn't mean plums are necessarily now worth one half less than before in terms of apples. I think that's a false hidden assumption in economics money formulas. There's more net wealth in the economy, not less (and this is very evident if you contrast that with fiat anti-counterfeiting prohibitions). Or if a new orange is grown such that there are now 1 apple, 2 plums, and 1 orange in the economy doesn't mean apples and plums are worth less after a new orange enters the economy. If anyone trades a piece of previously existing fruit for the new orange, both parties and the net economy will by definition be wealthier solely from that exchange, in addition to being wealthier from the new production of the orange.

      Yet critics of the gold standard claim increases in apples, plums, and oranges increase the "price" of gold, which results in "deflationary falling prices" for every good which is not gold. This is exactly the sort of erroneous general conclusion which results from the mistake of falsely equivocating value in exchanges involving "money". But even if this was a valid criticism, the criticism would apply equally to absolutely every single good and service which exists in the economy (and potentially could be the most commonly traded thing called "money"), including fiat paper money, and nothing whatsoever could change any possible future subjective valuation changes based on supply change events. The difference is most things other than fiat money have their economic subjective value *voluntarily* determined, as opposed to being "legal tender" forced. By definition something which depends on continuing violence force to uphold it's temporary *artificial* value is inherently far less stable than something which has it's value voluntarily established. So critics of the gold standard who claim fiat currency is more stable than gold couldn't be more wrong.

      The fundamental error made in monetary macroeconomics is the assumption that the total value of "money" must equate in some ratio formulaic measure to the total value of all other goods and services. But it has never been the case that the total value of all gold, or the total value of any "money" equated to the total value of all other goods and services, of all other subjectively valued *things (many of which are extremely hard if not impossible to measure in monetary terms, such as a clean environment or a rainy day). It's always been a "random" variation, even in spite of fiat monetary policy. Such a conception goes back to the errors which preceded the discovery of m

    75. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      But the difference between gold and fiat currency is that no one can print gold, debasing the economy as they go on.

      The amount of currency in circulation has nothing to do with debasing the economy or inflation. Most "money" is in checking and savings accounts. Actual cash is a fairly small percentage of the total amount of money. And it's not the Fed that creates money, it's the banks. Here's an old Straght Dope article about it.

    76. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by doctorcisco · · Score: 1

      You also fail to account that when deflation is expected, competition among bankers could possibly result in negative interest rate loans.

      Ummmmm, no. No one will ever lend money at "negative interest." Why pay someone for the privilege of loaning them money? It's much safer, and more profitable, to stick the money in a mattress. You really don't understand much, do you?

      doc

    77. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by coolGuyZak · · Score: 1

      Reinstating gold-backed currency would do several bad things, because it artificially constrains the value of gold as a commodity metal.

      With that reasoning, currency artificially constrains the value of debt as a commodity. I honestly don't like currency. You have to stick it to something to derive value, and everything we could use is (or becomes) commodified.

      Directly before I wrote this post, I was thinking "Hey, time would be great"... but time has been a commodity since man discovered the inclined plane, if not before that. (Not to mention that relativity makes for a particularly interesting conundrum given this state of affairs). Sovereign fiat would likewise be interesting, but (at least in the US), the will of the people is traded as well.

      On the other hand, it's not like we can scrap currency altogether--the market wouldn't stand for it, and everything would get incredibly confusing for a while. Damn catch 22s.

    78. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by UbuntuDupe · · Score: 1

      I think you've got me on 2. I suppose people could "buy gold" by redeeming notes and create a deflationary spiral. But explain to me what a deflationary spiral would look like when the currency is backed by gold? I'm having a hard time imagining this.

      It would look the same as any deflationary spiral: gold would surge in value, people would be unable to repay their loans (or exercise the option they arranged on the loan) because what they sell is no longer worth enough to make money to service the debt, and anyone not holding the physical gold itself would be screwed because of that option exercise or illiquidity.

      For 1, it would be a win-win to tie gold to a large currency system: it would stabilize the currency system, and it would stabilize the gold price. For example, a lot of the volatility of gold prices right now is (by some) attributed to the devaluing US Dollar, so if that is the case often enough, tie the two to each other and everybody wins. What am I missing?

      To squeeze out arbitrage opportunites, gold's price (the dollar's price) would have to fluctuate as new gold hit the market. The fact that more people are influenced by this makes it worse, not better. The "no-arbitrage" constraint is more powerful than the "we just want to use it as money" constraint.

      For 3, it's not the amount of oil in reserve, it's actually the amount being traded. As the amount of oil produced (and traded) increases, the value of the US Dollar increases. Thus Hurricane Katrina was a big deal.

      I'm not sure how that contradicts the point I made. Oil is being put to use, instead of being held off the market to back the currency. So we get all the oil that's in the ground, plus get a currency. Under a gold standard, there would still be a currency, but no one could use the gold.

    79. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ummmmm, no. No one will ever lend money at "negative interest." Why pay someone for the privilege of loaning them money? It's much safer, and more profitable, to stick the money in a mattress. You really don't understand much, do you?

      It depends on what good or service the interest is payable in. If the dollar is expected to decline 50% in one year, $100 this year will be worth $50 next year. A nominal positive interest of 10% on a one year loan would mean the borrower traded the promise of $110 next year for $100 this year. But that's a real negative interest rate, as the borrower is trading $55 real dollars next year for $100 real dollars this year. But the lender is still $5 *less* worse off then he would have been holding the money. So thus, it is demonstrated that someone would pay someone for the privilege of loaning them money in an inflationary environment at a nominally positive yet real negative interest rate (because money is losing purchasing power relative to the rest of the economy like which occurs when the government prints more currency). Losing less is still preferred to losing more, and the borrower is doing the lender a favor by taking possession of the risky hot potato declining value money.

      But let's demonstrate from the other side as well.

      Let's say the value of the dollar is expected to increase 100% in one year (real economic growth as the economy out-paces money and increases the value of money purchasing power, what "they" call "deflation"), $100 this year will be worth $200 next year. And note: an even relatively lesser increase in gold is still a simultaneous real increase in net economic wealth because "money" gold is valued in and of itself, and not just as a "means of exchange". If the lender traded $100 this year for the promise of $55 next year, he would still profit $10 real dollars lending at a nominal negative interest rate of negative 45%. Though it is true "he would profit more" not lending. But that would also mean consumers would profit more not lending banks their dollars either. And only people who were real savers would have money with which to invest or not invest. But that *does not* mean there wouldn't necessarily not be investment opportunities that would increase the future wealth of the savers even more then just "putting their money under the mattress", just like people would choose to eat sometime in the near future rather than attempt to starve themselves for a year while deflation promised more food tomorrow, but never food today. So

      It's much safer, and more profitable, to stick the money in a mattress.

      is not always true, and thus not demonstrated.

      And just to top off a frosting demonstration of a case where

      Why pay someone for the privilege of loaning them money?

      is always true. Investors in mutual funds, investors in hedge funds, already do this. Investors are buying the possibility for a higher future real return, investors are simultaneously buying the possibility for a lower real complete 100% loss.

      But in all cases, the future is unknown, total knowledge is non-omniscient, information is imperfect. A banker trading a borrower $100 today for the promise of $90 in one year is a real possibility that includes the possibility of both nominal and real interest rates actually being negative. There's the possibility that actually one year from now $100 today will be worth $80 next year, $100 next year, or $120 next year.

      So like I said, "it depends upon competition among bankers". The extent that farmers paid bankers back in ever more valuable dollars could also have been the possibility that farmers paid bankers back in ever less valuable dollars.

      In every instance whatsoever, bankers (and savers) trade *for* the opportunity cost of investing/lending the money themselves (including both investing it and/or letting it sit in storage like fine aging wine or sticking it under the mattress in the form of Scrooge McDuck pr0n) whenever they lend. And

    80. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by doctorcisco · · Score: 1

      Still you miss the point. Can you point to even one example of someone who has loaned money at negative interest? Just one?

      In deflation, my $1 will have $1+ in purchasing power next year. My choices are:

      1) Put my $1 in a mattress. Next year I have $1, which is now worth more goods/services, let's say now its purchasing power is $1.10. My gain: 10%. My cost: 0. My risk: 0.
      2) Loan you money at say -5% negative interest. Next year, I have $.95, and you have a nickel. My $.95 is now worth $1.045 in purchasing power. My gain: 4.5%. My cost: $.05. My risk: next year you might be broke and not pay me back, and I lose my $1.

      What rational economic decision says #2 is EVER of ANY advantage to me? Higher risk, higher cost, lower return than the mattress.

      doc

    81. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by j-pimp · · Score: 1

      I believe this is not properly taking the entire document as an organic one.

      The constitution is a living document indeed. The institution that it governs and amends it still exists, and it can be changed with the approval of the states and congress.

      --
      --- Justin Dearing http://www.justaprogrammer.net/ We're just programmers.
    82. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by MSTCrow5429 · · Score: 1

      Um, organic as in taking it as a whole, and not only by section or phrase.

      --
      Slashdot: Playing Favorites Since 1997
    83. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by j-pimp · · Score: 1

      Um, organic as in taking it as a whole, and not only by section or phrase.

      My apologies. Wiktionary lacked such definition but definition 7 of on dictionary.com had a definition that matched your usage.

      However, do to the obscure usage, and ability to inflame the constitution originalists that misinterperet the word, I suggest you use different wording.

      --
      --- Justin Dearing http://www.justaprogrammer.net/ We're just programmers.
    84. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by MSTCrow5429 · · Score: 1

      I'd disagree that it's at all obscure or novel among strict constructionists.

      --
      Slashdot: Playing Favorites Since 1997
    85. Re:Gold Standard == Bad by Rudd-O · · Score: 1

      So what's your point? With a gold standard currency system, the money in checking and savings accounts is all backed by existing gold.

      The Fed just lends the money to the Gov't. Since it's so easy to overborrow when money isn't backed by a commodity, you get inflation. See?

      --
      Rudd-O - http://rudd-o.com/
  22. Understanding Money by WickedLogic · · Score: 1

    If you don't understand money as a concept, you will forever be trying to get ahead.

    http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-515319560256183936&q=money+masters&total=1491&start=0&num=10&so=0&type=search&plindex=0

  23. History of why we need the ... by iknownuttin · · Score: 1
    Federal Reserve System.

    As a fan of business history (yeah, I'm weird), in the past private citizens did what the Fed does today Want an example? Read any biography about J.P Morgan. In every biography that I've read, he stepped in and kept the US from going into horrible depressions. Did he do it for his own interests? Yes. But his interests were in line with the well being of the country's financial health. BUT, folks were quite suspicious of his interest and demanded a Government solution to the problem of our country's boom's and busts and money supply issues - we got the Fed. My opinion: Morgan did it better but he's gone and I don't there's anybody alive today that would have that kind of character.

    --
    I prefer Flambe as apposed flamebait.
    1. Re:History of why we need the ... by nomadic · · Score: 1

      My opinion: Morgan did it better but he's gone and I don't there's anybody alive today that would have that kind of character.

      So you think we should go back to a system of rolling the dice and hoping that for any economic crisis there's at least one person principled and rich enought to singlehandedly fix what's wrong?

  24. The Invisibility of Money by klenwell · · Score: 2, Informative

    I was a lit major in school but often found myself led stangely enough to the subject of money, currency in particular, as it's a subject that seems to have had much more relevance in people's everyday life in that past than it does now. I find the Federal Reserve, especially the institution of FDIC after the Great Depression, one of the greatest innovations of the 20th century. As Milton Friedman points out, it effectively ended the terrible plague of bank runs that wracked economies in the past.

    To get a sense how invisible money as an instrument is to most people in modern stable economies, you can look at the plays of Shakespeare and all the reference to coinage and especially "debased" currency during the period. One of the most insightful history books I've read is E.C. Challis's The Tudor Coinage. It really gives you a sense of how much we take a stable currency, as the bedrock for a stable economic system, for granted.

    Anyway, if you have any curiosity about that subject at all, you can check out this article:

    http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0013-0117(196712)2%3A20%3A3%3C441%3ATDOTC1%3E2.0.CO%3B2-H

    I've been looking for a good stimulating non-fiction read. I think I'll pick up G. Edward Griffin's book. Thanks for the review.

    --
    Innovation makes enemies of all those who prospered under the old regime... -- Machiavelli
    1. Re:The Invisibility of Money by istewart · · Score: 1

      Bank runs occur due to the practice of fractional-reserve banking, which was considered a type of fraud in many historical legal systems. The Federal Reserve acts to stabilize and regulate these practices, but if such a system is unstable in the absence of regulation, why should it continue to exist at all? Keynes' "General Theory" is the cornerstone of the mainstream answer to that question, but it serves only as an ex post justification of a system that was, by then, already prevalent; not as a description of human trade practices in the absence of state and banking cartel intervention.

    2. Re:The Invisibility of Money by klenwell · · Score: 1

      Bank runs occur due to the practice of fractional-reserve banking, which was considered a type of fraud in many historical legal systems. The Federal Reserve acts to stabilize and regulate these practices, but if such a system is unstable in the absence of regulation, why should it continue to exist at all?

      The Merchant of Venice could be read as one response to this question. Such a reading squares with more fashionable modern readings of Shylock as a kind of hero (a necessary evil whose services the hypocritical Christian characters in the play depend upon but don't wish to acknowledge.)

      The more obvious answer is that, otherwise, a lot of capital that could go towards productive (and, of course, unproductive, frivolous, and even exploitative) economic activity gets bound up or worn away in inefficient transactional anxieties (e.g. dickering over how many heads of hog a new copy of Halo is worth.)

      --
      Innovation makes enemies of all those who prospered under the old regime... -- Machiavelli
  25. This guy is a conspiracy theorist by br00tus · · Score: 1, Informative
    This is not a mainstream reporter who decided to do a book on the Federal Reserve, in the manner of James Bamford writing about the NSA, or Robert Caro writing about the TBTA or the like. Griffin is a conspiracy theorist of the 9/11 truther, Alex Jones/Art Bell type. I know he is one of those people who think the Rockefellers secretly supported the Soviet Union and that type of thing. I suggest you Google his name before plonking down your money for this book.


    If you want to read about what central banks are up to, I suggest you read some books on economics - from the 19th century. It was clear to people back then why governments wanted to create fiat money, whether it was sustainable and that sort of thing. They hit it right on the money back then, any other commentary nowadays is just an addendum to what was figured out then.

    1. Re:This guy is a conspiracy theorist by Skorgu · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It never fails to amaze me how smart, educated people can completely lose their rational thinking skills when money comes into the discussion. Think of how silly tinfoil hats sound to an engineer, that's how silly people like this sound to economists.

    2. Re:This guy is a conspiracy theorist by aminorex · · Score: 1, Insightful

      What do you call it when a conspiracy theory becomes a proven fact? Does it remain a conspiracy theory nonetheless? If conspiracies do not exist, then it seems we should remove conspiracy laws from the books, as many people are in prison for non-existent crimes. But then, it is as absurd to attempt a response to anyone who opposes truth as it is to attempt to reason with anyone who denies the law of the excluded middle.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    3. Re:This guy is a conspiracy theorist by MSTCrow5429 · · Score: 1

      Actually, a great many economists are well aware of the fundamental contradictions of fiat currency, and it's obvious you yourself aren't an economist, or you wouldn't be spreading FUD on it. I'm in finance, a close partner to economics, and I can tell you that you're absolutely 100% mistaken in not taking these arguments seriously. Common sense indicates if everyone has 100 dollars, and then everyone is given an extra 100 dollars, your purchasing power will be exactly the same as it was before. Now guess what happens if you don't get that extra 100 dollars, but one or two people get an extra 10,000 dollars? What do you think happens then?

      --
      Slashdot: Playing Favorites Since 1997
    4. Re:This guy is a conspiracy theorist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and common sense would tell you that once you belabor a simplistic analogy, you should explicitly tie your general analogy back to the real life issue, so we idiots (ie, non-experts a finance) get how it relates to the real life issue. But back to the subject at hand...The problem with this guy's book is that it is being touted as a guide to the Reserve, but in reality it is not objective research. It's really a polemic. Maybe it's a polemic on the right track, but it certainly isn't balanced since the author calls for the destruction of the Fed. So, don't blame any of us for taking his "balanced" research with a grain of salt. He obviously is trying to get us to believe in his particular cause, so his intention sullies the objectivity of his arguments.

    5. Re:This guy is a conspiracy theorist by Mr+Z · · Score: 1

      Hey wow, the VHS version was produced with the help of the John Birch Society. Hmmmm..... :-)

    6. Re:This guy is a conspiracy theorist by nate+nice · · Score: 1

      It's fractional reserve banking and in essence a pyramid scheme. It's not crazy to believe that this monetary system is immoral and potentially very dangerous.

      For some people it doesn't sit easy that an elite group of people have the right to print money at will and loan it to people with interest. This same group of people can buy assets and then print a lot of money, inflating the value of the currency and have obtained in essence, the assets at a huge discount.

      I'm not going to read this book because it isn't breaking any new ground. People have known since 1913 that the Fed was more or less a scam. But this book should also cover the benefits it generates for people. That is, it makes credit viable and allows people to spend a lot more than they have, generating more things for everyone. It's a funny perpetual system based on debt and the promise to pay later.

      As for the Fed, they didn't create real fiat money until the 1970's. This is also the time of super inflation. If you bought a lot of stuff on credit in the early 1970's, you made out very well. :)

      One thing I really enjoy about this system is that if you do understand it (and it's rather simple in its essence) you can make informed decisions on when to borrow, when to invest, etc. Taking advantage of inflation through loans is the trick to making easy money.

      --
      "If you are a dreamer, a wisher, a liar, A hope-er, a pray-er, a magic bean buyer ..."
    7. Re:This guy is a conspiracy theorist by Skorgu · · Score: 1

      First of all, finance isn't a close partner to economics. Fiat currencies allow non-market entities to regulate market economies. Without an "artifical" currency (not that gold is any less artificial, it's just a finite shared delusion) there is no (or very little) room for long-term actors to intervene in short-term crises. With a gold standard, one rich person can control an improbably large percentage of the (finite) money supply. Or a million individuals can simply hoarde their money, reducing the supply in circulation, and the government has no easy way of resolving it, short of revaluing the currency which makes a gold standard into a slower fiat currency. Sure, fiat currencies can get governments into trouble (i.e. Zimbabwe), but gold standards can, and have gotten large economies into trouble, namely us in 1929.

    8. Re:This guy is a conspiracy theorist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I love how calling someone a "conspiracy theorist" is meant to, and often does, immediately discredit everything that person has to say. So there are and never have been any conspiracies in relation to important world events and no theories as to how they are being and have been carried out? So I guess world domination is just a historical oddity and that nobody would want to accomplish such a thing today.

      Not a mainstream reporter?!? Since when have mainstream reporters been trustworthy and believable? It seems ludicrous to only pay attention to mainstream reporting and scholarship when they are mostly controlled and funded by the same monied interests that want to create a global dictatorship. Crazy? What do you think is the purpose of the European Union? Now go research the North American Union and APEC. Sovereignty is being systematically destroyed around the world and the manipulation of our currencies via privately owned central banks is a major factor. We can no longer trust the mainstream as it has been co-opted by the elite and is about as relevant as the music played by Clear Channel radio stations. Look around you at the chemtrails in the sky and the poisons in your food, medicine cabinet, and water as just a few examples of what these benevolent elite really think of us sheeple and then tell me again why I should believe their official view of things and not some "conspiracy theorist". Move along, nothing to see here. Go back to sleep, obey, believe........

    9. Re:This guy is a conspiracy theorist by MSTCrow5429 · · Score: 1
      First of all, finance isn't a close partner to economics

      That's a blatant falsehood. Finance tends to deal with individual markets and microeconomics, whereas economics tends to deal with macroeconomics. Try being a finance major, there's a reason why you have to take a number of courses in economics. If you had a Venn diagram, you'd see a huge amount of overlap. They both deal with the economy, only with a slightly different attitude, and a nudge in scope.

      "Fiat currencies allow non-market entities to regulate market economies. Without an "artifical" currency (not that gold is any less artificial, it's just a finite shared delusion) there is no (or very little) room for long-term actors to intervene in short-term crises"

      You mean it allows governments to control the money supply, which has led to depressions, recessions, the boom and bust business cycles, and the inflation tax. Of course, depressions and recessions existed prior to the founding of the Fed, but they were far less serious and far more short term. Do you really think central planning works? If not, why are you making a special exception in this case?

      With a gold standard, one rich person can control an improbably large percentage of the (finite) money supply. Or a million individuals can simply hoarde their money, reducing the supply in circulation, and the government has no easy way of resolving it, short of revaluing the currency which makes a gold standard into a slower fiat currency.

      Gold cannot be a fiat currency, unless you have gained the ability to print gold. I'm sorry, but you don't even know what fiat currency is, and yet you're propounding upon it as if you understand its complexities, to say nothing of your self-awarded mastery of monetary policy.

      I'm truly astounded this thoroughly discredited canard is still being circulated. You could read Professor Rothbard's "What Has the Government Done to Our Money?," but as the audience appears to be little trained or educated in basic economics, here is the relevant except, "II: Money in a Free Society, "The Problem of 'Hoarding' (http://www.mises.org/money.asp/):

      The critic of monetary freedom is not so easily silenced, however. There is, in particular, the ancient bugbear of "hoarding." The image is conjured up of the selfish old miser who, perhaps irrationally, perhaps from evil motives, hoards up gold unused in his cellar or treasure trove--thereby stopping the flow of circulation and trade, causing depressions and other problems. Is hoarding really a menace? In the first place, what has simply happened is an increased demand for money on the part of the miser. As a result, prices of goods fall, and the purchasing power of the gold-ounce rises. There has been no loss to society, which simply carries on with a lower active supply of more "powerful" gold ounces. Even in the worst possible view of the matter, then, nothing has gone wrong, and monetary freedom creates no difficulties. But there is more to the problem than that. For it is by no means irrational for people to desire more or less money in their cash balances. Let us, at this point, study cash balances further. Why do people keep any cash balances at all? Suppose that all of us were able to foretell the future with absolute certainty. In that case, no one would have to keep cash balances on hand. [35] Everyone would know exactly how much he will spend, and how much income he will receive, at all future dates. He need not keep any money at hand, but will lend out his gold so as to receive his payments in the needed amounts on the very days he makes his expenditures. But, of course, we necessarily live in a world of uncertainty. People do not precisely know what will happen to them, or what their future incomes or costs will be. The more uncertain and fearful they are, the more cash balances they will want to hold; the more secure, the less cash they will wish to keep on hand. Another r

      --
      Slashdot: Playing Favorites Since 1997
    10. Re:This guy is a conspiracy theorist by macshit · · Score: 1

      This is not a mainstream reporter who decided to do a book on the Federal Reserve, in the manner of James Bamford writing about the NSA, or Robert Caro writing about the TBTA or the like. Griffin is a conspiracy theorist of the 9/11 truther, Alex Jones/Art Bell type.

      And, indeed, it's glaringly obvious after reading about three words of the "review" that the book is basically a very long rant by a conspiracy freak.

      Please, editors -- be more careful about what you put on the front page!

      --
      We live, as we dream -- alone....
    11. Re:This guy is a conspiracy theorist by smithmc · · Score: 1

        If you want to read about what central banks are up to, I suggest you read some books on economics - from the 19th century. It was clear to people back then why governments wanted to create fiat money, whether it was sustainable and that sort of thing. They hit it right on the money back then, any other commentary nowadays is just an addendum to what was figured out then.

      You might also consider reading a paper by former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, called Gold and Economic Freedom, which suggests that the central banks might not always know what they're doing, or at least always do the right thing...

      --
      Downmodding is the refuge of the weak. Don't downmod, make a better argument!
  26. The Fed's book by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  27. Golem Standard? by ackthpt · · Score: 1

    Reading about Making Money atm, met the author at Kepler's last night.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    1. Re:Golem Standard? by MarcoG42 · · Score: 1

      Vetinari for President! Seriously, we could do with a few of our current officials hanging upside down in the scorpion pit.

      --
      If nothing else works, a total pig-headed unwillingness to look facts in the face will see us through.
  28. Redaction by klenwell · · Score: 2, Informative
    Just noticed this section in the review:

    The author also provides an index, as well as an impressive bibliography, reflecting his extensive research on the topics. In addition, the author invites readers to join Freedom Force, an organization dedicated to increasing liberty in the United States, curbing federal totalitarianism, and abolishing the Federal Reserve -- all through peaceful participation in government, and the shaping of public policy starting at the grassroots level.


    On second thought, maybe not the impartial history of the role of currency in American society, nor the impartial review of a new book, that I was looking for.

    In any event, thanks for pointing out the author's agenda in the review.
    --
    Innovation makes enemies of all those who prospered under the old regime... -- Machiavelli
  29. Other sources of information on the Fed by BunkAsInBed · · Score: 2, Informative

    A good video on the subject is From Freedom to Fascism (http://www.freedomtofascism.com/) You can purchase the DVD for a $1. The movie cites the book and includes some video commentary from the Author of Creature from Jekyll Island. If you are alarmed about what you learn you may want to consider throwing some support behind Congressmen Ron Paul, who is running for president. He entered politics because of his concerns about monetary policy and the Federal Reserve. He is currently the ranking chair of the house finance committee and there is some great YouTube videos on his exchanges with the Fed during committee meetings.

    1. Re:Other sources of information on the Fed by nuzak · · Score: 1

      > He is currently the ranking chair of the house finance committee

      I'd be very surprised to see a Republican chairing any committee in the current congress. And a quick look shows that the current chair is Rep. Barney Frank, (D) MA.

      --
      Done with slashdot, done with nerds, getting a life.
    2. Re:Other sources of information on the Fed by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

      Freedom to Fascism is full of the same nuttery that Griffin's book it. May I be blunt? You conspiracists are all nutbags. As in a burlap sack full of pecan halves. You have make Griffin, Russo and Banister high priests in your religion, a religion based on faith and half truths, rather than on facts, logic and rationalism. I've posted some debunking links up above, go read them if your religion allows you to.

      Russo keep asking throughout his movie, "show me the law". I went looking for that law, and it took me all of five seconds to find it! Here it is: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/uscode26/usc_sup_01_26.html! Here's a link debunking Russo's film: http://docs.law.gwu.edu/facweb/jsiegel/Personal/taxes/F2F.htm. An even better link debunking the tax deniers, from a solidly libertarian perspective, is this: http://www.fff.org/freedom/fd0608b.asp.

      If you notice my sig, you'll see that I support Ron Paul also. But please note that Ron Paul IS NOT a conspiracist. He IS NOT one of you. He is not a Truther, not a tax denier, and not a jekyllite. He wants to get rid of the IRS, NOT because it is an evil conspiracy, but simply because it is evil.

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    3. Re:Other sources of information on the Fed by jratcliffe · · Score: 1

      I would hardly call Freedom to Fascism a source of "information" on the Fed. If the movie constitutes "information," then Scientology is a source of "information" about astrophysics and geology.

      Freedom to Fascism is mainly a screed by someone who has convinced himself that he has no obligation to pay income taxes (the IRS disagrees, hence the $2MM in tax liens against the director). Good debunking here: http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/31/movies/31russ.html?_r=1&oref=slogin&pagewanted=print

  30. The FED is.. by prxp · · Score: 2, Funny

    Where does money come from? It depends on your currency. In the case of Dollar, it comes from the FED, the one and olnly source for dollar bills. How does money get distributed among the nation? Through the Baning infrastructure which lends money to people and companies and gets interest in return. How banks get money? From the FED! And not the magic happens: Summing up: 1) FED prints money (the paper itself is legal tender, no need for gold to back it up) 2) FED lends this paper to the Banks 3) FED gets the interest from the paper loan from the Banks How do the Banks pay the interests to the FED? Getting new loans! From who? From the FED! So, the FED prints worthless money that is turned into debt that is only payable through new debt! And the thing goes on and on! Basically, THE FED is MAGICAL MONEY MACHINE! Awesome!

    1. Re:The FED is.. by mpapet · · Score: 1

      Not really. The dollar gets its value from what other currency holders are willing to pay for it using another currency.

      Books like this disguise the fundamentally boring/abstract issues that few American citizens, want to deal with, much less so the politicians that represent them in any way shape or form. The outcome of these issues is all but the richest Americans will be poorer. Sadly everyone will be standing around yelling "something must be done!" sooner or later. When the time long ago passed when something could be done.

      --
      http://www.maxineudall.com/2010/02/should-economists-be-sued-for-malpractice.html
    2. Re:The FED is.. by HikingStick · · Score: 1

      Actually, the FED does not print money. The US Bureau of Printing and Engraving prints money. The Federal Reserve DISTRIBUTES money--BIG DIFFERENCE.

      --
      I use irony whenever I can, but my shirts are still wrinkled...
    3. Re:The FED is.. by grumling · · Score: 1

      More like, "sadly, no one will be standing around yelling"

      --
      "Well, good luck finding a judge that doesn't run a bestiality site."
    4. Re:The FED is.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please, please, PLEASE stop calling it the "FED". The Federal Reserve System is not abbreviated the "FED". There is no set of words to describe it that start with the letters F, E, and D. It is just the Fed. If you really have to use an acronym, try FRS (Federal Reserve System) or FRBS (Federal Reserve Banking System) or FRBs (Federal Reserve Banks), but please stop with the FED crap. Thank you. /rant

  31. Cheaper gold would actually be quite useful by vlad_petric · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ... to electronics at least. Gold has high conductivity, malleability, ductility, resistance to oxidation and is also not toxic to humans.

    --

    The Raven

    1. Re:Cheaper gold would actually be quite useful by hardburn · · Score: 1

      Only for the contacts, due to it's oxidation resistance. For the internal wires, silver is better and plain copper isn't that far behind.

      --
      Not a typewriter
    2. Re:Cheaper gold would actually be quite useful by mindstrm · · Score: 1

      Not would be useful - IS useful... but no more useful or rare than many other elements.

      hes' not saying gold is worthless.. only that, as a medium of exchnage, it's value is based on perception, just as with a modern fiat currency.
      To pretend a gold standard was somehow "more real" is absurd. It was different... it favored nations who had the resources to caputre or mine gold... but tha'ts it.

  32. Totally worthless... by Dareth · · Score: 1

    From reading the summary, I don't believe this book tells you at all how to make money.
    I expect ink, green and the new multi-colors, to be all over my fingers by the end of it.

    I often dream of winning the lottery. Then I can spend the majority of the time learning what to do with the money. Another, almost perhaps, equal grind as my current day job.

    --

    I only look human.
    My mother is a halfling and my dad is an ogre, so that makes me an Ogreling
  33. Child Porn is not "fine"! by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

    Reply to Anonymous Coward: Even if your score level is below this, a comment was called for. Child pornography is not "fine".

    1. Re:Child Porn is not "fine"! by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      Child pornography is not "fine".
      Indeed - like most pornography it's rather coarse.
      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  34. Damned policiticans by jamie(really) · · Score: 1

    I read some of the reviews of this book on Amazon. I particularly liked the one that pointed out that in countries where the politicians influence their Fed equivalent, their economy does worse, so our politician-free Fed is better. I like this argument! In fact, following this logic, we should replace every aspect of the running of our country with privately owned, independent institutions. After all, such private companies will do a better job of roads, education, health-care, military etc. Why have an elected government at all - clearly such people are incompetent.

    1. Re:Damned policiticans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Would you really trust someone who is only interested in 4 year cycles to manage the long term economy? I can tell you what would happen (and what has happened every time.) They want the economy to GROW GROW GROW as fast as possible for the next 4 years. MORE MONEY! MORE MONEY! It works for a little while, but eventually you end up with massive inflation, shortages, and a complete inability to plan for anything, followed by a spectacular crash and depression. But hey, it's not that guy's problem anymore, his term is over and the people look back at him as a genius for instituting so much growth while he was in office.

    2. Re:Damned policiticans by jamie(really) · · Score: 1

      Two points:

      1. And this is different to what is happening right now how?
      2. I am wondering why you would advocate this for fiscal policy, but not for roads, health-care, the military etc? Roads are short-lived things are they? How about my health? And there's no evidence of the military being used for policital gain I'm sure.
    3. Re:Damned policiticans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Step 1: Privatize the military. This is what has happened in Iraq with Blackwater.

      Step 2: Drive down the street next to a private army escorted convoy.

      Step 3: Be killed by random gunfire when one of the untrained guards in the convoy is spooked and start firing for no good reason. Remember, he was hired because he was the cheapest guy for the job.

      Step 4: Stay dead and have no one accountable for you murder.

      If you think that private armies are so great, why don't you go to a place where there is not government based rule of law: Baghdad, Somalia, Darfur, the tribal areas in Pakistan. Everyplace in the world where there are private armies there is no rule of law, and the residents suffer horribly.

      You are a typically moronic neo-conservative who takes advantage of a stable law based democratic government and then criticizes the rule of law that makes it all possible. You drive on roads paid for by generations of tax payers and then say taxes are too high. You are protected by a legal system that traces it's roots back to the Magna Carta and then you applaud when the Bush administration destroys Habeas Corpus. You really deserve to live in a state like North Korea or Saudi Arabia or the old East Germany, not in the USA. Although I don't support Heinlien's libertarian political fantasies (see the short story Coventry), I wish that all you anti-government types were shipped to a restricted area where you could wreak havoc on each other and let the rest of us build a decent civilization based on the rule of law.

    4. Re:Damned policiticans by jamie(really) · · Score: 1

      So do you also believe that the Federal Reserve shouldn't be run by a private company, but should, like the military and roads, be run by elected officials of the government?

  35. Re:OFFENSIVE, ILLEGAL CONTENT! PLEASE DELETE! by king-manic · · Score: 1

    Can the parent comment be deleted? It is extremely offensive and possibly illegal.

    You must be new around here.

    --
    "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
  36. "Troll" for objecting to child porn??? Outrageous by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    The parent post is not just off-topic, it is gross child pornography. Someone had the gall to mod me as "Troll" for objecting to child porn? Where do you get your modders, anyway? If that person were here in person, I would beat him/her with a stick. Sick bastards.

  37. you have to increase with more by geo.georgi · · Score: 1

    The _real_ economy also tends to increase by a few percent each year, so the money supply needs to be increased a few percent each year to compensate for this No, you have to increase it with more in order to have (mild) inflation. That way there is a pressure to invest the money, knowing you lose some (small) value of them if you do nothing.
  38. No, not new. Just disgusted. by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I can tolerate a lot. Someone mentioned that nobody was hurt in the process, and that is a good point. Perhaps it is not illegal in that form. But while I am a believer in free speech, I also believe that society must have SOME limits, and I shall not apologize for objecting to deliberate child pornography, even if it is fantasy.

    1. Re:No, not new. Just disgusted. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Listen Lady,

      We all like children here. Whether we want to protect the from predators or fantasize about engageing in unspeakable acts of sexual torture is irrellivent. You need to stop trying to force your views on the rest of us.

    2. Re:No, not new. Just disgusted. by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      No, it is not irrelevant. First, I am not trying to "force" my views on anyone. I (perhaps incorrectly) thought the content was illegal and said so. If I was wrong, then I was wrong.

      But this is a public forum, and I have as much right to object to someone's comments as they have to make them. I do not do it often, but this was a rather extreme case. If YOU do not like MY comments, then stop trying to get ME to shut up. Either you believe in free speech or you don't. You are trying to have that both ways, but you can't. It doesn't work that way.

    3. Re:No, not new. Just disgusted. by king-manic · · Score: 1

      I can tolerate a lot. Someone mentioned that nobody was hurt in the process, and that is a good point. Perhaps it is not illegal in that form. But while I am a believer in free speech, I also believe that society must have SOME limits, and I shall not apologize for objecting to deliberate child pornography, even if it is fantasy.

      The "you must be new here" is not a critique of your position. Merely outlining that that you may not be aware but unless ordered by a court of law or at the whim of a editor, slashdot does not delete posts. It get modded into oblivion quickly and if you view at 0 and higher or 1 and higher you wont' see such garbage.

      Now a critique of your position: Freedom of speech is the prohibition of the government from censoring ideas. The spirit behind it is very much "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it" vein. So while we can all agree such content is objectionable it is not right to outlaw it if it does not pose or derive from the harm of another. So child pornography in the form of videos, pictures recording etc.. involve and harm a child. Thus should be outlawed. Fiction ought not be. As we may disagree with it, ti harms no one. We do not have to give it a free pass. We can of course limit it's distribution (mod -1 troll) and react negatively to it's author. But we must tolerate the persons right to say it/write it. Because cherry picking rights leads to some unpleasantness and the more you do so the easier it becomes. First it's grow indecent fiction, then artistic works involving children (pretty baby), then it's protecting children from ideas we deem harmful etc.. the whole slippery slope things is cliche but if you draw then line at anything except freedom you risk the progressive redrawing of that line through inaction.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
  39. Go Buy a NEW Book and Read It. by Velcroman98 · · Score: 1
    WTF - this book was first published in 1998 - just as we were finishing up the whole S&L fiasco with the RTC, and how has gone through a series of silly updates to correct grossly inaccurate predictions. Without reading more than the first few paragraphs, this is a book of history in 2007 written by a conspiracy theorist.

    If you are looking for a book explaining how money works, try reading Secrets of the Temple: How the Federal Reserve Runs the Country. It also is older having been first published in 1987. It was written and annotated by an accomplished author -- William Greider. It gives a remarkable account of the wild interest rate changes when rates were tied to the money supply.

    When you are finished with Secrets of the Temple, go read Greenspan's book! It's been out for a whole week.

  40. Re:OFFENSIVE, ILLEGAL CONTENT! PLEASE DELETE! by ChefInnocent · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure, but you might have been marked troll because the gp has been deleted, and someone may have attributed your comment to the article instead. Combine low comprehension with the tin-foil hats, and it looks like a troll.

    I don't know, I'm just guessing.

  41. Is in the eye of the beholder... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Gold is one of the only elements that does not deteriorate (ever), is not destroyed by any acid or chemical process, nor susceptible to environmental changes (rusting, corrosion, etc). Because of this, gold DOES have massive value as one thing: a store of value.

    Except for the radioactive elements, NONE of them decay. Now, compounds (made of multiple elements) may break apart or reform into different compounds, and various metals certainly do corrode (usually forming oxides with the oxygen in the air or something). Also, gold can be dissolved in aqua regia, so you might want to open a chemistry book sometime. Further, you can create gold (and other elements) via neutron bombardment, it's just not economical at this point in time.

    Also, gold does corrode in solutions containing a small amount of chloride ion when an electrical voltage of approximately +1 volt is applied, and alloyed gold corrodes as well.

    > It is hard to come by (rare) -- industry uses up about as much gold as is mined per year.

    Which can hurt the economy, because now we have to horde gold as money instead of using it to make useful things. You know, like the gold in that computer you're using.

    > Paper money can be printed at will, tootsie pops can be manufactured by the billions. Only gold has the rare aspects of its composition and rarity that make it valuable as a store of value.

    Only? No, there are plenty of other things like that, you did better with your earlier description saying "one of the only". I mean, I have to assume you at least know of platinum (which we need for catalytic converters, among other things) ...

    Also, the "printed at will" part isn't entirely accurate. I mean, it is forgery for the general public to do that and the mint doesn't print it up just for fun.

    > Bull. The poor have no savings because they have no incentive to save -- their savings is destroyed by inflation.

    They have nothing TO save to begin with... It's damned hard to save when you're in debt, they tend to take your savings away from you if you can't pay your bills.

    > And those assets are often-times in asset bubbles because of inflation's drive to create malinvestments. See the current housing market, see the stock market in 2015.

    Smart people saw that coming for a long time now. There was plenty of time to adjust before each bubble popped. I mean, they were only warning about them on every single financial program...

    > Hoarding money IS good for the economy -- when money is "hoarded," it creates a demand for money, and a demand for money brings prices DOWN for those who are not hoarding. Inflation makes prices go up, and not everyone should invest in something. I only invest in myself.

    Maybe, but having that money be a commodity that's useful in its own right can be disastrous for those things which require it. Make gold our currency again and we need to save it aside for that, instead of using it to make all the electronics we rely on.

    Also, if the economy *can't* expand, it won't. I don't see how that's a good thing here.

    Now, I'd like to point out that I'm talking about fiat currency in general here vs. a gold standard. If you want to apply that to US monetary policy decisions, that's another case. Fortunately, the US dollar isn't the only fiat currency available.

    1. Re:Is in the eye of the beholder... by dada21 · · Score: 1

      Except for the radioactive elements, NONE of them decay. Now, compounds (made of multiple elements) may break apart or reform into different compounds, and various metals certainly do corrode (usually forming oxides with the oxygen in the air or something). Also, gold can be dissolved in aqua regia, so you might want to open a chemistry book sometime. Further, you can create gold (and other elements) via neutron bombardment, it's just not economical at this point in time.

      I know the chemical properties of gold, and aqua regia does not destroy gold in a way that makes it difficult to return to its metallic non-solution properties. It is quite easy to extract gold from aqua regia. As for creating gold from neutron bombardment, it surely could be done (from mercury, likely the easiest candidate) but the energy requirements would be enormous. If you found a solution to the energy requirements, I'd say that society would change overnight. By having nearly unlimited energy at will, people's lives would be changed much more than if someone found a way to counterfeit gold. I'm hedging that we'll never discover a cheap way to add or subtract neutrons and protons from heavier element easily.

      Which can hurt the economy, because now we have to horde gold as money instead of using it to make useful things. You know, like the gold in that computer you're using.

      Which is why it makes sense to motivate more people to extract it. Of course it would be an inflationary process (possibly) but it isn't done as easily as printing a dollar or two billion.

      Only? No, there are plenty of other things like that, you did better with your earlier description saying "one of the only". I mean, I have to assume you at least know of platinum (which we need for catalytic converters, among other things) ...

      Platinum is not easily divisible -- it is expensive to divide platinum. It is not as ductile or flexible as gold, making it a bad medium of exchange. It is not easily recognizable, it is not useful as a transitionary savings tool such as jewelry, and it does not have anywhere near the uses that gold does.

      Smart people saw that coming for a long time now. There was plenty of time to adjust before each bubble popped. I mean, they were only warning about them on every single financial program...

      Sure there were, and yet smart people were hampered from investing because of the asset bubbles created. When people like me (saver) want to start a business, it is hard to read a market when you have so much malinvestment.

      Also, if the economy *can't* expand, it won't. I don't see how that's a good thing here.

      You're saying we can only call the economy as "expanding" if prices are going up, or GDP is going up, correct? I see it differently. In a relatively fixed-reserve standard (such as gold), we could say the economy was prospering if prices were falling, making things more affordable for even the poor. Instead of having wages go from $10,000 a year to $20,000 a year in a decade, and have consumer prices go from $5 to $10, you could have wages go from $10,000 a year to $7,000 a year for commodity wages, but consumer goods go from $5 to $2. $10k/5 = 2000 affordability ratio, 10 years later $7k/2 = 3500 affordability ratio. Affordability goes up, which is a good thing.

    2. Re:Is in the eye of the beholder... by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Also, the "printed at will" part isn't entirely accurate. I mean, it is forgery for the general public to do that and the mint doesn't print it up just for fun.

      I think this is more accurately called "counterfeiting". "Forgery" generally applies to making copies of things like artwork, official documents, illegitimate signatures, etc. When you're talking about creating fake paper money, "counterfeiting" is the preferred term.

    3. Re:Is in the eye of the beholder... by hardburn · · Score: 1

      [platinum] does not have anywhere near the uses that gold does.

      Platinum is fantastically useful as a catalyst. It's only being held back from many practical uses because it's extremely rare.

      You're saying we can only call the economy as "expanding" if prices are going up, or GDP is going up, correct?

      I won't speak for the GP, but prices alone have nothing to do with whether the economy is expanding or not. Economic expansion happens when money moves around more. Keeping money under your mattress doesn't help you or anyone else. That money has to be buying goods or making investments to be of any use. Which is one reason why civilization has moved from barter, to metal coins, to paper money, and then to fiat--each step has made it more convenient to move that money.

      --
      Not a typewriter
  42. Re:"Troll" for objecting to child porn??? Outrageo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So assault and battery is fine? It's text, which means that no children were harmed in the making--or if they were, the crime's in the harming, not in the text. Seriously, can you give me one reason why the original comment is bad, other than being badly-written and off-topic? Or why it's "child porn" in the first place, given that it contains no real children?

  43. As one who knows... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative
    I've been an employee at one of the twelve Federal Reserve Banks for eight years. During employee orientation, they asked us noobs what we knew about the Fed. I was the only one in the room with more than a rudimentary knowledge. They educate the new hires, AND they educate the public. We employees are almost always explaining what the Fed is (or myth-busting assumptions about the Fed).

    • The Federal Reserve System is the collective title for the Federal Reserve Board of Governors and the twelve member banks.
    • The Board of Governors IS a government agency; the district Federal Reserve Banks are not.
    • The Federal Reserve Banks are owned by member banks in each Federal Reserve District.
    • Federal Reserve District boundaries were established based on population and economic centers at the time of the Federal Reserve Act (that's why they seem weighted toward the east coast).
    • The Federal Reserve Board has been given responsibility by Congress to oversee and manage monetary policy, distribute currency, and to ensure depository institution compliance with various regulations.
    • The Federal Reserve Banks act under delegated authority (from the Board of Governors) to ensure that member banks in their districts comply with regulatory standards and other sound banking practices. This is the function that sends bank examiners (auditors) out to supervised institutions to review bank lending practices, risk portfolios, and overall management. If not for these guys, we never would have had "It's a Wonderful Life" (which features bank examiners as the pseudo-villans).
    • Each Federal Reserve Bank has its own board, made up of representatives from the banking and business communities within the district. This board, aided by research conducted by the Reserve Banks or within the market, works to understand the local/regional economy. Reserve Banks then bring their views and concerns to the Federal Open Market Committee.
    • The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) is a twelve member board that includes seven members of the Federal Reserve System's Board of Governors, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and four presidents from the remaining eleven Reserve Banks (who serve one-year, rotating terms).
    • Federal Reserve Banks serve as banks to banks, making available overnight loans to cover transfers between institutions, and holding required reserve funds for member banks (reserve funds are cash reserves each member bank must maintain--they were designed to prevent liquidity in the event of a bank-run event like that which occurred in the 1930s).
    • Federal Reserve Banks conduct community outreach and educational activities, both for bankers and community groups, to educate them regarding pertinent topics, especially the Consumer Reinvestment Act, minority issues and banking, reaching underserved populations.
    • Federal Reserve Bank employees are not Federal employees.


    There's much more I could say, but that's an example of the type of information I pass on to friends and neighbors all the time when they hear that I work "at the Fed."
     
    [I'm posting anonymously just in case my employer might think this post violates some policy or other. I don't think it does, because this is public information, but I rather like working here, so I'll play it safe.]
  44. Re:"Troll" for objecting to child porn??? Outrageo by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I have already addressed that point. Please read the whole discussion before commenting. Thanks.

  45. Re:OFFENSIVE, ILLEGAL CONTENT! PLEASE DELETE! by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

    It happened right away... not long after the "story" was posted, and almost immediately after I made the comment. Someone just did not like my objection. Simple as that.

  46. Isn't this a setup for a conversation of Ron Paul? by GI+Jones · · Score: 2, Interesting

    When I saw the review of this book posted, I puzzled to myself how such a review would find its way into Slashdot 13 years after a book was published. My curiosity was peaked because I personally just read this book, sparked by the documentary already mentioned in other posts. While I am not a conspiracy theorist, I found myself thoroughly spooked by the nature of the Federal Reserve and the fact that our country pays the Reserve billions of dollars in interest each year; "for what?" you may ask... simply because the Fed printed a bunch of money so that our government could pay for things like the war in Iraq and other unchecked spending. During WWI and WWII the dollar was backed by gold and the government couldn't simply print money to pay bills, because they had to have gold in the reserves to back the dollar that was printed. For this reason, the government had to sell War Bonds to raise money to pay for the war. Today, they simply ask the Fed to print more money for them to borrow. Paying interest on this borrowed money is one of the single largest expenses of our federal tax dollars.

    I said all of that to say this: when I saw this review go up, I thought for sure it was an attempt to discuss Ron Paul simply because I am willing to bet that the one of the main reasons someone on Slashdot might read this book is because it is one of the issues behind the candidacy of Ron Paul. If you are asking the question, "who the hell is Ron Paul?" you are not alone. Among Paul's goals is the elimination of the Federal Reserve and the return to the gold standard, the elimination of the IRS, Federal Taxes and the Department of Education, the return to a constitutional government and the removal of our country's nose from the rest of the world's business. I know that sounds crazy, but when you scratch the surface and see what is behind all of this stuff, your interest might be peaked as mine was.

    While I am not stumping for Ron Paul, I find it strange that his name hasn't come up in this conversation.

    Just my $0.02,

    --
    "Perhaps most amazingly, votaries of 'diversity' insist on absolute conformity." -- Tony Snow
  47. SLASHDOT'S BIGGEST HYPOCRITE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lady,

    You opened your little tirade with an all caps subject of OFFENSIVE, ILLEGAL CONTENT! PLEASE DELETE!

    Now you wan't to pontificate about free speech like you are not yourself actively trying to censor it?

    You are a total hypocrite even by American standards.

  48. Re:OFFENSIVE, ILLEGAL CONTENT! PLEASE DELETE! by hasbeard · · Score: 1

    Somebody was hurt in making it. The person who thought of it in the first place.

  49. Corrections by mpapet · · Score: 1

    Inflation does not tax the poor: They have no cash savings.

    Using the term "taxes" confuses things a bit. The price of goods is going up faster than anyone's wages during an inflationary period. In the case of the poor, it definitely makes them poorer. The rich? They'll complain as if their situation was different, but the harm is negligible to them.

    Inflation does not tax the middle class: They keep their assets in real-estate and mutual funds.
    -If there is a large property-owning middle class in the system, you may be right. But the general trend in wealth distribution over the last 30 years the U.S. does not support this notion.
    -A mutual fund does not act as an automatic hedge against inflation. For those of you surprised by this, consider reallocating your mutual funds NOW and learn how to benefit from the dollar devaluation.
    -The value of a home does not keep up with inflation. It might look like it in some areas, but this is a grossly oversimplified statement.

    Inflation forces everyone else to invest in something
    No. It harms everyone but the wealthy. That's about it.

    --
    http://www.maxineudall.com/2010/02/should-economists-be-sued-for-malpractice.html
  50. Re:OFFENSIVE, ILLEGAL CONTENT! PLEASE DELETE! by hasbeard · · Score: 1

    It hasn't been deleted. Just marked down to -1 territory.

  51. Do you understand what you read? by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Did you even read my reply above? If I was wrong, I was wrong. And if so, I even apologize for that... but I will NOT apologize for objecting. There is nothing hypocritical about that.

    However, YOU come here implying that I do not have the right to object to something I find offensive. If YOU believe in free speech, then you know that YOU are being hypocritical. As I stated before, you can't have that both ways.

    If you do not understand that concept, fine. But that is your failing, not mine.

  52. Good one by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

    How true.

  53. Another good one by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

    I never though I would get an actual laugh out of this discussion, but you proved me wrong.

  54. opening a credit union by slew · · Score: 1

    My sister was a credit-union auditor/consultant at one time and pointed me to this basic step-by-step guide to start a credit union...

    http://www.ncua.gov/GuidesManuals/ecp/ecp.html

    As to how realistic it is, well unless you can get together at least 5 people with banking experience (at least at the VP level), give it up. You will not be able to get a charter. Even then, unless you can find/raise funding committments around $2M (or equivalant initial subsidies) forget it.

    FWIW, credit unions generally start losing money the day they open the door. People who have agreed to be the monthly depositors start putting their money in to the pool and strangely may want interest and/or services and the people that write share-drafts and obtain loans dilute the pool coming out of the gate. Not until the credit union creates a reasonable current loan portfolio or offers other profit generating services will they start to turn the red ink (and that generally takes years).

    Having said that, there are lots of credit unions around so if you are actually serious, it's not out of the question. As to getting funding committments, you'd be surprized how many companies there are that donate stuff and how many foundations there are that put money into this kind of stuff. For a /.-er, probably the biggest obstical would be to find the people with banking experience to get a charter in the first place.

    Banks, however, are another story. I'm guessing it would be nearly impossible to change a credit union into a bank (because all those share holders would have to agree), so you probably have to start by being a state-chartered bank (and maybe later turn it into a federally chartered bank). A bank is basically a non-closely held corporation with a license with the state to practice banking (not unlike a car-repair shop or other small business). Mostly states have pretty minimal requirement other than a business plan, list of directors (so they can do background checks), and reserve requirements (generally around $5M) and proof of insurance (of course if you want to offer FDIC insured deposits, that's another thing, but state insurance is generally easier to come by).

  55. Movie by synonymous · · Score: 1

    Watch "America: Freedom to Fascism" google video.

    Good Day!

  56. PLEASE read the rest of the discussion first by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

    Thank you for your attempt at explanation, but those point have already been covered here.

    First, I admit that I was probably wrong about that being "actual" child porn. Therefore, it is probably not illegal. At first blush I thought it was, and was trying to point that out. But I have since realized that I was probably wrong about that. I was not trying to "censor" anything, I was simply trying to point out that there was material there that could get Slashdot in trouble. I was wrong.

    However (and I am repeating myself here) the right to object to (not censor) material that one finds offensive is very much part of free speech, and I will not apologize for objecting.

    1. Re:PLEASE read the rest of the discussion first by king-manic · · Score: 1

      However (and I am repeating myself here) the right to object to (not censor) material that one finds offensive is very much part of free speech, and I will not apologize for objecting.

      You certainly have that right. In fact deleting it wouldn't have really crossed into censorship either. As he had the right to say it and the government didn't intervene and imprison him or to forcefully attempt to stop him.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    2. Re:PLEASE read the rest of the discussion first by bored_engineer · · Score: 1

      Thank you. I read ALL of this thread excepting the entirety of the offensive grand (et c.) parent post. (It was just too much even for me.) I was equally offended by the questionable post and at the idea that Ms. Public should not have objected to the content of said post: The whole notion that "free speech" necessarily extends into the private sphere (Slashdot, for example, or my home for another) is ridiculous.

      If some wanker expresses such ideas on my property, I'm free to (and will) toss him on his arse out the front door. Equally, if I have only a suspicion that he said such a thing, I'm still free to toss him out just because I think that he's ugly.

      Ms. Public MAY have done something that some judge reprehensible, but she did nothing wrong by asking editors to toss (delete) this particular AC (or her comment) out on her arse.

    3. Re:PLEASE read the rest of the discussion first by king-manic · · Score: 1

      The whole notion that "free speech" necessarily extends into the private sphere (Slashdot, for example, or my home for another) is ridiculous.

      f some wanker expresses such ideas on my property, I'm free to (and will) toss him on his arse out the front door. Equally, if I have only a suspicion that he said such a thing, I'm still free to toss him out just because I think that he's ugly.


      The first amendment does not apply to private entities. However "censorship" is not the explicit domain of governments. Censorship can be and often is committed by private entities. it's definition does not preclude this. The level of censorship that ought occur is debatable. Censorship is merely the suppression of some information. Any large organization which is actively attempting to suppress a piece of information (true or false) is practicing censorship by definition. Some forms are censorship are widely support (ban on pornography in public) others not so (DMCA use to suppress any media related to the HD DVD private key).

      Also, you may be able to arbitrarily ask any person to leave your home and call the police if they do not do so. However for a business they aren't allowed to discriminate in such a free fashion. You may ask someone who is rude and troublesome to leave and with asking someone to leave because they're ugly (it would definitely be bad pr), but you can't ask someone to leave explicitly because their black or Chinese or a women. This varies from jurisdiction to jurisdiction.

      In regards to the original post. Slashdot is very progressive and one of the core ideals is to allow each to say what they want but live with the consequence, even remaining a anonymous has some consequences. Slashdot will not delete content unless they are compelled legally because they believe in a ideal of free speech broader then that which is defined by the first amendment.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
  57. I understand that you are a hypocrite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But while I am a believer in free speech, I also believe that society must have SOME limits, and I shall not apologize for objecting to deliberate child pornography, even if it is fantasy.

    Fast Forward

    Either you believe in free speech or you don't. You are trying to have that both ways, but you can't. It doesn't work that way.

    We all know what "free speech must have some limits" means. You are a hypocrite.

  58. You'be been bitten by the fold bug by Tungbo · · Score: 1

    "Oh, I definitely agree that some of the assets you listed have value to SOME individuals, but there is generally NO asset that is valuable to all individuals -- except for gold, which I can not believe that another individual would not covet or desire if offered in trade for a profitable outcome (for both parties)."

    Say you were Robinson Crusoe and shipwrecked on an island with no hope of rescue, would you trade your machete, food, and gun for this bag of gold galleons?
    I doubt it very much. 'Value' is always relative to personal perspective and conditions. Remember King Midas? And what happens if we found a cheap way to produce gold, say from sea water?
    Then the gold economy would be sunk. Aluminum used to be very expensive, afforable only to royalties. Then, the electrolysis method make it very cheap and common place. Is it wise to pin an entire economy to one commodity?

    1. Re:You'be been bitten by the fold bug by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course not. If anything people supporting the gold standard should be asked why we should use a random element as the unit of currency. Most people in favor of the gold standard will pull out an appeal to tradition, or out-and-out magical thinking.

  59. Aaron Russo by AnyThingButWindows · · Score: 1

    Aaron Russo's film, America From Freedom to Fascism explains it all, and how it got started, and how the Fed in it's existence is entirely illegal.

    http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-1656880303867390173&q=freedom+to+fascism&total=1121&start=0&num=10&so=0&type=search&plindex=0

    --
    When government fears the people, there is liberty. When the people fear the government, there is tyranny. - Jefferson
  60. Very Intersting Essay by nate+nice · · Score: 1

    Read this:

    http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200507/fallows

    It's an interesting essay written by an economist who is highly respected. It's potentially FUD, but this guy has a history or predicting things accurately. It's fictional (takes place 8 years form now) but he makes a good case for why we're fucked.

    Essentially it's about the run on the dollar.

    --
    "If you are a dreamer, a wisher, a liar, A hope-er, a pray-er, a magic bean buyer ..."
  61. You need a mirror. by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    You take two sentences out of context... out of different messages even. Then you put them together, and call that an argument?

    One was about my right to object, and the other was about free speech. And you see something hypocritcal about that? Neither statement was about "censoring" anybody. And yet, here you are objecting to my objection, and YOU don't see anything hypocritical in THAT??? That is the third time I have made that point and you just don't seem to be getting it.

    Go get an education. I will wait. But until then, I am done with you.

  62. Because the disconnect doesn't matter by snowwrestler · · Score: 1

    Why this disconnect? Why do Americans care so little about the origins of that which they spend a third of their time pursuing, and seemingly another third spending? Why do Americans know so little about electricity, which they spend 100% of their time using every day? Because origins, while interesting, are not practical guides to success. You don't need to know the history of physics to use a cell phone and you don't need to know the history of biology to take your Claritin every day. Likewise, you don't need to know the history of the Federal Reserve to make money, live comfortably, and have a retirement.

    I guess one could argue that we should know all that stuff, but think about all the black boxes we use every day. I thought the whole point of an organized, specialist society was that it freed us develop and share narrow, deep expertise.

    The secret assumption behind this kind of question is usually that if people only knew the truth, they would be as outraged as the author/revealor. But that's a pretty big assumption.
    --
    Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.
    1. Re:Because the disconnect doesn't matter by grumling · · Score: 1

      Some people don't want to think about the infrastructure that makes modern life possible. Some of them are the same people who think internet access should be free (and ad blocked), and that there are no consequences to using inefficient products. Since the Fed controls the money supply, they are part of the modern infrastructure (maybe the most important part). Some of us like to find out how things work, and the money supply is no different from other large systems.

      While I agree with you on one level, I feel I have a much richer life by attempting to be well rounded and informed on a variety of subjects, instead of just one or two. I know that is the unpopular view these days, but I've never been popular anyway.

      --
      "Well, good luck finding a judge that doesn't run a bestiality site."
  63. G. Edward Griffian Creature - RealAudio file by transporter_ii · · Score: 1

    I have a good Realaudio file by G. Edward Griffin giving a lecture on the Federal Reserve.

    It can be found here:

    http://www.reformed-theology.org/realaudio/griffin_1.rm

    Yes, RealAudio sucks, and the audio wasn't that great to begin with, but it is a very good lecture.

    You can listen to it using RealAlternative, too:

    http://www.reformed-theology.org/downloads/realalternative.htm

    Transporter_ii

    --
    Doctors destroy health, lawyers destroy justice, universities destroy knowledge, religion destroys spirituality
  64. 6% of the Dividends are paid to private sharehold by Dan+Ferguson · · Score: 1

    This is the think most people don't seem to understand about the Fed.

    1. The Fed does make a profit (Interest, national debt).
    2. 6% of the profit earned by the Federal Reserve is paid in dividends to the twelve member banks each year.
    3. The twelve member banks have private shareholders (usually private banks) profiting heavily at our expense.
    4. In one year the 6% dividends were over $350 Billion.

    If people wanted to find out the real value of the dollar then we could stop the Fed from tacking on interest to "made up currency" and make up $10 trillion and pay the national debt in one shot. Unfortunately, I think most people would be shocked at how little that dollar would be worth then.

  65. I wrote this last year by zogger · · Score: 1

    plug and disclaimer- A variation of an idea I have had for a long time now, and it fits in this conversation so I will just paste it in.

    "You didn't ask me, but here is my idea of monetary economic reform, cliff's notes version, open for review, this must be my 20th or so version of this I have written. The basic idea is the same though..

    Fire the Fed *imediately*, pay them off (we have a provision to do so, it's cheap really) No need to pay them guys interest on our own money forever, that is beyond ludicrous. They can go back to being a private bank consortium if they wish and compete with all the other banks normally.

    Freeze the current dollar supply until an audit is taken, as fast as possible obviously.

    analyze the last quarter's, and the quarter's before that, top 100 traded commodities and national production levels. (wealth is grown, harvested, mined and manufactured, or a combination thereof, there are our tangibles that back the buck in quantifiable form)

    Note the diff between the two quarters, if an increase (most likely always is, a percent or two usually, a decrease would be zero production in *anything*, highly unlikely), check the proportion with dollars in existence, then issue that much more "new money" bills into existence, that represents that tangible wealth increase, and that's it, no more, no less. An exact "open source" money system, with an incentive to work and produce, no more voodoo fed czar calling the shots behind closed doors with some of his billionaire drinkin buds. that's just been a congame forever..

    In this new system,the harder you work, the more your money is worth, not just more bills into circulation, but the more the bills are really worth. You could actually just ..save money to save money if that is what you wanted to do with it. You could still invest, or just put aside cash, and it would most always increase in worth as time went on,not DECREASE like the fed serf-perpetual-debt note has (currently worth 2% of what is was originally, if that)

    The money is now stabilized, open to inspection (it would have to be), and be inflation and deflation proof because it would be based on quantifiable tangible wealth creation, not figures picked out of someone's nether regions. (It will also attract a ton of foreign investment because of that)

    The government now is completely self funding-we can trash the income tax immediately! Trash it, not needed! Think of *that* boost to the economy in the next quarter once instigated. No need for the social engineering that the regressive tax represents, no more carrot and the stick to make states and individuals toe the line of wild @$$ schemes and wealth transference and rearrangement, which is all our current tax and statute conjob is, mass social engineering..

    As the government pays its various bills,nationally and internationally, the new money gets into general circulation. Yep, just like that. We might devise a proportional scheme to use half for the federal government and the other half gets divvied up with the states according to best estimate population figures. I would reserve sales taxes for local municipalities only, possibly with a very minimal cap (2%?) to stop abuse and encourage competence in governing, and keep the current limited federal "use" taxes, like the fuel tax, and earmark it totally for the actual "use". Fuel tax goes for road upkeep, endstop, etc. So, we've eliminated the bulk of the taxes, corporate, private, no income taxes, no "death" tax, none of the controversial stupid taxes in other words. Wealth goes to the producers with 100% assurance they WILL get to enjoy the fruits of their labors. Really free and fair trade anyone now?

    Combine that with an exact quid pro quo with other nations for import and export duties, with THEM setting the rates...everyone wins.

    We use the top one hundred traded commodities/items because it will be a diverse enough reference for the economy in general, and our mone

    1. Re:I wrote this last year by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is generally referred to as indexing for constant value. The concept has emerged a number of times but never implemented. Walter Baghot advanced the concept in the 1890s, Irving Fisher again in the thirties, and Ralph Borsodi - check with Schmucher Society - about the 70s (memory fails me). Just search for Borsodi Constant. Constant was the name of his currency.

      Bernard Lietaer has been attempting to create a constant value currency with a demurrage feature.

  66. Dollars are not a store of wealth by snowwrestler · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You're right--if you put dollars in your mattress in 1913, they would be 95% devalued today. (Although actually, they would be 100% devalued today because that physical design is no longer accepted.)

    On the other hand if you'd put your money into Ford stock in 1913, today that stock would be far more valuable than it was during that time. The truth is that the only true stores of wealth are assets. Dollars are not assets--they are currency. They are handy for exchanges, but are not wealth themselves.

    You don't have to put your money in banks. You can instead put your money in IBM stock. Or you can put your money in bonds if you'd prefer to invest in governments. Or you could buy property if you'd prefer to put your money in real estate.

    If you do this, and pick your assets well, you will accumulate wealth. If you focus on the value of a dollar bill I think you're shooting yourself in the foot.

    --
    Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.
    1. Re:Dollars are not a store of wealth by jdjbuffalo · · Score: 1

      Although actually, they would be 100% devalued today because that physical design is no longer accepted. That's actually not true.

      While you may have trouble getting a store to accept the money, you would be able to at least get a bank to give you the same face value of the dollars you had for new ones. Or in most cases you could actually sell it for more than the face value because there are coin collectors that would buy it from you at the market rate for a collectible item.
      --
      We have four boxes with which to defend our freedom: the soap box, the ballot box, the jury box, and the cartridge box.
  67. US Dollar and Oil? by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
    Can someone explain to me something I've seen on /. before? Something about how oil is tied to the US dollar...and if they switch to the Euro instead...it will be a bad thing for the US...

    What is the deal with this? Links to explanations, etc? I guess I don't understand what difference it makes in what currency you use to buy something?

    --
    Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    1. Re:US Dollar and Oil? by Colin+Smith · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Until 15th August 1971, the US dollar was backed by gold. The US was fighting the Vietnam war and spent all the gold paying for the war. Nixon broke the link between the dollar and gold because they couldn't pay the bills in gold any more, they didn't have any.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nixon_Shock

      The dollar was then simply being printed, unbacked by anything. This increases the supply of dollars and the value falls massively. Huge inflation.

      1972-3 Nixon or someone went to the Saudis and "persuaded" them somehow to remain only US dollars in return for oil. No idea what they promised, but it was big. From that point, the US dollar is pretty much backed by OPEC oil. It was denominated in dollars before, but the dollar had been backed by gold, so basically the oil price was based on gold. Not so after 1971.

      So. All oil all over the world has to be bought in US dollars... The demand for US dollars (not gold) rockets, all the central banks across the world have to keep reserves on hand so the countries can buy oil. Billions of them. Trillions in total.

      Do you see what this does? It does 2 things.

      1: America gets paid first for any oil which other countries want to buy. They have to get the requisite number of dollars. And they get paid simply for running a printing press.

      2: It allows the USA to print and spend as many dollars as they want to. The demand from outside the country means that inflation can't take off. The entire world is subsidising the US economy.

      Now... 35 years later, there are trillions of US dollars out there sitting in central banks waiting to be spent on mostly oil. If oil were to be available in Euros, the dollars would be useless. They would come back to the USA.

      Ask yourself what a million dollars would be worth if everyone had a million. ok, imagine what a trillion dollars or so would do coming back into the country. The value of the dollar would fall and as the value of the currency falls, the price of everything else increases.

      As to the size of the effect... who knows.

      http://www.ccc.nps.navy.mil/si/nov03/middleEast.asp

      --
      Deleted
    2. Re:US Dollar and Oil? by Strider-BG · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Currently, the only way to buy oil from an OPEC nation is with "Petrodollars" which are actually US dollars. What this means for the American economy is that oil importing countries (which is pretty much all of them) have to hold lots and lots of US dollars in their treasuries in order to pay OPEC for their oil (and then they have to "buy" more dollars to buy more oil). So if OPEC were to one day decide that they wanted to accept Euros for their oil instead of dollars, then mountains of US dollars would hit the world currency markets to be exchanged for Euros. This would crush the value of the US dollar and leave us in a very bad situation.

      It's been said that one of the reasons we went into Iraq was because Saddam was accepting Euros for his oil.

    3. Re:US Dollar and Oil? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My economics might be a bit rusty, but I'll give it a go.

      Under normal circumstances, the main use of US dollars is to buy US-produced goods and services. Since the US has run a continuous trade deficit for years, there should be an accumulated surplus of dollars floating around the world and driving down the buying power of each individual dollar over time. In reality, this effect is largely masked by a combination of foreign oil producers accepting payment in dollars, cheap credit creating replacement dollars within the country, and foreign capital interests using surplus dollars to buy American assets. The downside is that if the masking effect is suddenly removed, several decades' worth of latent inflation will be forced out of the woodwork in rather disruptive fashion: rapid currency devaluation. For example, Mexico's economy was thrown for a loop in 1995 when devaluation of the peso raised import prices and lowered export prices dramatically, forcibly flipping their trade balance from deficit to surplus, clobbering import-dependent businesses and raising prices relative to wages.

      Of course, I might have this all wrong, so feel free to correct me...

    4. Re:US Dollar and Oil? by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      Well, in order to buy one euro worth of oil, you'll have to buy one euro. This means that when the euro goes up, the US dollar cost of oil increases by that amount. When the euro goes down, US dollar cost oil decreases by that.

      It's fine when the US dollar is doing well, but when the US dollar does poorly, it takes a lot of money to buy something.

      You'll find this out first hand if you're American. your dollar is doing VERY poorly, you're going to start seeing your cheap imported goods getting very expensive soon.

      --
      It's been a long time.
    5. Re:US Dollar and Oil? by pugugly · · Score: 1

      IANAE, but my layman's understanding - It makes a difference in terms of how strong the dollar is, which in turn affects how much we can borrow - keeping oil in dollar amount means that to buy oil country 'X' has to have U.S. Dollars, which in turn means they have to *buy* U.S. dollars, increasing our foreign reserves without the U.S. actually doing anything.

      This artificially strengthens the U.S. Dollar relative to everything else, but as long as the U.S. Dollar is naturally strong anyway, it's to the advantage of the OPEC nations to do that, because it means *they* get more bang for their (our) buck in turn, and can buy things at better rates of exchange.

      Of course, if our dollars were to become weaker somehow (coff coff), then the Saudi's etcetera would no longer have that advantage to their favor, and might go shopping for a better currency, which in turn would artificially strengthen *that* currency instead of ours.

      There would be other effects that make this not quite the great deal for OPEC that it immediately seems - they already maintain large dollar reserves that instantly become less valuable, and it would tick off any *other* trading partner also maintaining those reserves, as well as having destabilizing effect in the global economy that they wouldn't be sure would work in their favor, but it would be really bad for us, regardless.

      Particularly with Bonzo Boy in the W.H. - Tax cuts would *not* help, and it's the only thing he's knows about economics.

      Pug

      --
      An Invisible Entity of Vast Power whose existence must be taken on faith alone: Liberal Media
    6. Re:US Dollar and Oil? by roesti · · Score: 1

      1972-3 Nixon or someone went to the Saudis and "persuaded" them somehow to remain only US dollars in return for oil. No idea what they promised, but it was big.

      The supposed reasons for Saudi co-operation range from US military support for Saudi Arabia, to heavy US investment in the Saudi oil industry, to the need for the US to import oil after its domestic production peak in 1970. It's probably a combination of these factors that got the Saudis on board. Remember, too, that the USA had far more business influence on the oil industry in 1970 than it does today (being the largest producer at that time).

    7. Re:US Dollar and Oil? by bmajik · · Score: 3, Interesting

      You are absolutely spot on. Want to know something else?

      What do Iran, Iraq, and Venezuela have in common? (besides being the subject of US animosity, chest-thumping, invasion, and a coup-attempt?)

      They threatened to sell oil in Euros.

      The reason Ron Paul is always talking about the Fed like he's some kind of nutcase is NOT because he's some kind of nutcase. It's because the Fed is the bouncer at "I want to run the planet" club. Want to go running all over the world invading countries? No problem when you can just print all the money you want with no accountability.

      Once the dollar jumped off of the gold standard, the only thing propping up the dollar was the threat of military action by the US. That's very uncomfortable, so some folks wisely decided to use the world oil market as an intermediary. The dollar is supported by oil; oil is supported by military might. Any crack in US control of world oil is a crack in the dollar, and thus, the US economy.

      The entire history of state-managed currency shows a steady trend of the ruling entity devaluing the currency to persue wars or other ambitions not generally related to the well being of society, with the obvious result that the citizenry become measurably worse off.

      --
      My opinions are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.
    8. Re:US Dollar and Oil? by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "Ask yourself what a million dollars would be worth if everyone had a million. ok, imagine what a trillion dollars or so would do coming back into the country. The value of the dollar would fall and as the value of the currency falls, the price of everything else increases."

      Thank you, very interesting answer....I guess I'm going to need to work more to understand the 'backing' of money. I guess I, as I guess many of John Q. Public, just think of money as intrinsically 'worth' something, not that something backs it for value.

      But, one thing...if all that cash came back to the US, could the govt. just not take it all out of circulation...store/destroy it....and keep the value closer to 'normal' to prevent inflation?

      Sorry for the stupid questions, but, I only took one econ. class...and slept through most of that...

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    9. Re:US Dollar and Oil? by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      I have often asked myself the same question. I don't see what, apart from hedging/speculation, it matters what oil is priced in. The recipient pays in their own currency which a bank somewhere converts into the seller's currency.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    10. Re:US Dollar and Oil? by Bloke+down+the+pub · · Score: 1

      I can agree to buy X amount of very nice beer from J Random Belgium SA/NV, and the price could be marked in dollars. Assume it's 100 dollars. Rough figures, what would happen in practice is that I'd send 50 quid and he gets 75 Euro. I don't know why he'd do that - maybe most of his customers are in the US - but the point is, nobody actually needed to have any dollars at any point during that transaction.

      --
      It's true I tell you, feller at work's next door neighbour read it in the paper.
    11. Re:US Dollar and Oil? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's been said by a rag-tag assortment of islamists, communists and nabmy-pamby treehuggers that one of the reasons we went into Iraq was because Saddam was accepting Euros for his oil.
      Fixed.
    12. Re:US Dollar and Oil? by pugugly · · Score: 1

      Because he's not actually enforcing getting paid in $US, sure. He's losing money by not doing so (Or would be if the $US was strong), because he can turn around and use those strong U.S. bucks to buy bullets at a discount.

      But the discount doesn't amount to that much on a $100 transaction.

      When you are dealing with an accummulated $100,000,000 dollar transaction, he becomes a lot more concerned with actually getting that money in U.S. Dollars, because it makes the difference between whether or not he can afford to buy that new aegis cruiser he's been wanting, so your bank needs to have dollars on hand.

      --
      An Invisible Entity of Vast Power whose existence must be taken on faith alone: Liberal Media
    13. Re:US Dollar and Oil? by Lost+Race · · Score: 1

      If they do send all that money back it won't be in a big box addressed to the US government with a note saying "don't need this any more, please recycle". They'll send it back by buying things that are still sold in dollars, like American real estate. The money will go to individuals and companies, not to the government. The huge influx of dollars will cause lots of inflation. The only way the government can take the money out of circulation is by collecting it (i.e. taxing) and not subsequently spending it. Tax and not spend? The US government? Ha!

    14. Re:US Dollar and Oil? by Colin+Smith · · Score: 1

      Thank you, very interesting answer....I guess I'm going to need to work more to understand the 'backing' of money. I guess I, as I guess many of John Q. Public, just think of money as intrinsically 'worth' something, not that something backs it for value. Money is just a medium of exchange. It lets you get things you really want. It has no other real purpose. Paper money is often backed by the promise of some other commodity because it's literally just paper. Otherwise it's monopoly money. People must have confidence that they'll be able to exchange it for something of real value.

      But, one thing...if all that cash came back to the US, could the govt. just not take it all out of circulation...store/destroy it....and keep the value closer to 'normal' to prevent inflation? They could, but they'd have to drastically reduce spending and increase taxation. Run a huge surplus basically.

      I don't know if you've noticed, but the US government is trillions in debt because they spend more money than they earn in tax. This debt actually pushes more money into the economy because cash is created when a loan is taken out. The government are in the process of increasing inflation right now, not decreasing it.
      --
      Deleted
    15. Re:US Dollar and Oil? by Bloke+down+the+pub · · Score: 1

      he's not actually enforcing getting paid in $US
      Nothing to enforce. Currency the price is denominated in isn't necessary the transaction currency. That was the entire point.

      I have no idea what relevance warships have to the question, but if what you mean is "USA! NUMBER ONE!" then you're probably right, at least for the moment.
      --
      It's true I tell you, feller at work's next door neighbour read it in the paper.
  68. The argument AGAINST a gold standard? by Colin+Smith · · Score: 1

    The entire disadvantage you just listed as stemming from a gold standard is: "Things requiring gold would be unjustifiably expensive." The single biggest argument against a gold standard is this:

    Our Kings, leaders, politicians have already proven they can't stick to it.

    They simply can't resist debasing the currency. The N thousand year history of gold and silver standards is one of debasement. Basically. The gold standard, isn't. They have to have that extra pet project, the extra promise to voters, or the war. And people won't pay the tax so they slip the tax in under the guise of inflation.

    It's more obvious what they're doing, but it happens nonetheless.

    In order for currency not to be continually debased or devalued it has to be removed from bank and political control... And I'd like to see you (or anyone) try that. Even if you were successful, the politicians and the bankers would always be looking at ways of getting their mitts on the system so that they can print to their hearts desire.

    I'm coming to the conclusion that the best option would be to use a (non debt based) system which has big red "inflate" and "deflate" buttons attached to a press and a shredder which allows the politicians to manipulate the currency.

    --
    Deleted
    1. Re:The argument AGAINST a gold standard? by AtariEric · · Score: 1

      It's more obvious what they're doing, but it happens nonetheless.

      This would then be the biggest argument FOR a gold standard.

      Granted, if under a king, emperor, or dictator, this wouldn't matter. But under a democratic system of government, where public opinion can make or break a ruler's reign, this may be our greatest weapon against monetary hijinks - the fact we can SEE them pulling this horseshit, and therefore call them on it.

      --
      Don't trust any concentration of power.
    2. Re:The argument AGAINST a gold standard? by Colin+Smith · · Score: 1

      They did it several times in the 20s and 30s because the fractional reserve system meant they were printing dollars anyway.

      http://www.gold-eagle.com/editorials_05/lundeen123105.html

      Still happened. Admittedly inflation since 1971 has gone mad, but then, you just keep out of cash.

      --
      Deleted
    3. Re:The argument AGAINST a gold standard? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They simply can't resist debasing the currency. The N thousand year history of gold and silver standards is one of debasement. Wrong. Gold cannot be debased. It is always of a certain quality and a certain weight. Gold coins "claiming" to represent a certain quantity at a certain weight can be debased, by changing the number on the coin or fraudulently clipping part of the coin which was supposed to contain a certain quality at a certain weight. Regardless, it's coin CURRENCY which was debased, not "gold".
  69. JEWISH CONTROLLED FEDS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The federal reserves are controlled by Jews, who has now cooperating with the Russian KGB, and works for anti-American interests,

  70. So vote for Ron Paul by CranberryKing · · Score: 1

    He talks extensively about returning the US to sound money and has been criticizing the Fed for years. You can see some of his speeches from congress to the fed on c-span or youtube.

    Believe it.

    1. Re:So vote for Ron Paul by 808140 · · Score: 1

      For this reason alone I would never, ever vote for Ron Paul.

    2. Re:So vote for Ron Paul by CranberryKing · · Score: 1

      Okay. Which reason? Why?

  71. Re:RIAA vs. the Fed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The _real_ economy also tends to increase by a few percent each year, so the money supply needs to be increased a few percent each year to compensate for this (or else there would be deflationary pressure because of real growth). False. No matter how the relative supply of anything changes through time (including for "money"), nothing can "compensate". Everything which exists will still be subjectively valued at every moment in time. Society is net wealthier when one extra house is built. How is society net wealthier when one extra dollar is "produced"? That's the Harvard Economic Idiot Paradox: "if we turned every one dollar bill into a one million dollar bill, we could solve world poverty". Though what's hilariously scary is every major economic school embraces some version of that fallacy in their macroeconomic programs and theories on money. Fiat paper currency is the biggest mirage bubble in history. We have many examples of currencies collapsing from hyper inflation.

    Perhaps, firstly, you should look at an accurate historical record of the change in "money supply" versus the change in "inflation". Every government pumps out way more "money" than official inflation indexes, pumps out a much higher percentage increase in "money" than the percentage increase in "GDP".

    So again, there is no "need" for the money supply to be increased. That "money" isn't real voluntarily created productive economic wealth. If it were, then everyone running xerox machines 24/7 to COPY "money" would be productive increases in real wealth.

    Again, to repeat the One_Dollar.mp3 analogy, the supply of fiat currency is relatively potentially easily infinite. It only has the limited value it has because of violent government enforcement as "legal tender" and copyright prohibitions against competitive money production (counterfeiting). Just like in Casino, the government doesn't like it if you "skim the skim". Now this might make for a very interesting relational discussion between copyright and money. The RIAA behaves very similarly to the Federal Reserve. The only difference is the Federal Reserve can force you to "buy" (aka trade other goods and service for) some amount of their One_Dollar.mp3 songs.
  72. Question about FOMC by bjs555 · · Score: 0

    IANAE but, as I understand it, one of the tools that the Federal Open Market Comittee uses to control the money supply is buying and selling treasuries on the open market. My question is: who do they buy them from and who do they sell them to? When they buy or sell treasuries does someone or some private company profit?

  73. Real worthless... by lelitsch · · Score: 1, Troll

    Man did some reviewer drink the Cool Aid.

    One not so minor flaw is, for example this statement "The US dollar has real value, i.e., it represents tangible wealth, such as gold securely stored at Fort Knox."

    The gold standard was abolished on June 5th, 1933. After WWII, the Bretton Woods agreement fixed currency exchange rates in a narrow 1% band around the value of gold, but there was no 1-1 relation between the amount of gold a country had and the total money in circulation. In 1971, the US abolished convertibility from currency to gold, and for all intents and purposed ended any relation between gold and currency. Many banks, including the Fed have been slowly selling off gold reserves ever since.

    So either the author or the reviewer doesn't know even the most basic historical facts. Fun additional fact, in 1999, the total worth of all the world's gold was $1.1 trillion, the US GDP alone was $9.3 trillion. So all the world's gold couldn't even have paid for 1/8th of the good and services produced that year in the US alone.

    1. Re:Real worthless... by justinlee37 · · Score: 1
      FTFAS (from the fucking article summary):

      As G. Edward Griffin makes clear in his book, none of these beliefs are true

  74. I just watched this series yesterday by Some_Llama · · Score: 1

    seems timely..

    Money is Debt, raises some good points and made sense to me.. but i guess i'm not an economist.. check it out

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cy-fD78zyvI&mode=related&search=

    1. Re:I just watched this series yesterday by Some_Llama · · Score: 1

      sorry for the dupe post.. someone posted a google link to this in the beginning of the overall thread but when i searched prior to posting for "money is debt" i obviously didn't see the post.

  75. MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The fact that someone finally mentioned Mises gives me some hope. Also check out Friedrich Hayek.

  76. A word of caution by Un+pobre+guey · · Score: 1
    Go to Amazon and look at the one star and two star reviews of this book. This is a wise practice when considering the purchase of any book, not just this one.

  77. Money as debt documentary by Zugok · · Score: 1

    Here's a web documentary about money that I thought was good but worth the watch.

    --
    "I just can't sit while people are saying nonsense in a meeting without saying it's nonsense" J Watson, Sci Am 288:(4)51
  78. Note about that link by zCyl · · Score: 1

    The parent post's link is pre-selected to contain ONLY the 1-star reviews. That is not the regular distribution of reviews on Amazon for this book. In the general distribution it appears to be a generally well-liked book with minor controversy (as one would expect).

    (Disclaimer: I have not read the book.)

  79. RTFA by nexeruza · · Score: 1

    Referring to... One not so minor flaw is, for example this statement "The US dollar has real value, i.e., it represents tangible wealth, such as gold securely stored at Fort Knox." ... He was speaking as though he was the average ignorant citizen that thinks thats how it works. That's what that entire paragraph was about. Drink more Kool-aid.

  80. The next depression. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    mild inflation tends to be good for the economy and deflation tends to be disastrous.

    Mild buildup of leaf litter tends to be good for forests and fire tends to be disastrous.

    Add up mild inflation over the course of a century, and yes, you will find that the dollar has lost 95% of its value - but you'll also find the largest, most impressive economic expansion in the history of the world.

    Add up the leaf litter build up over the course of a century, and yes, you will find that there is enough fuel to feed a wildfire that will blacken hundreds of thousands of acres - but you'll also find the largest, most impressive set of suburbs in the history of the world...

    ...Just begging to be burned to the ground. It may be the most impressive economic expansion in the history of the world, but it's hanging precariously on the edge of another "Great Depression." We are now just waiting for the spark that ignites the wildfire.

  81. And where is Steve Forbes now? by A+nonymous+Coward · · Score: 1

    Look how far his wisdom has got him.

    1. Re:And where is Steve Forbes now? by Bloke+down+the+pub · · Score: 1

      Don't knock him, he seems to have chosen his parents very well.

      --
      It's true I tell you, feller at work's next door neighbour read it in the paper.
  82. Money is.. by Burz · · Score: 1

    ... a method for motivating people by making a currency prerequisite for certain transactions (hence, certain resources). In the case of the USD, one has been reliably able to buy oil and gas imports exclusively with dollars (thanks largely to the US military's presence abroad) for at least a couple decades. With other currencies, the resources being tied to them may take the form of labor, land, an array of utilities (either controlled by banks or governments) or some combination thereof.

    Money is an abstraction allowing people to convert the value of particular, even idiosyncratic goods and services into a more "liquid" or universally desired form. Its a bit like having a gizmo that takes rotational energy from a single axis and can convert it to any other axis of your choosing X, Y or Z... so people create a fourth axis called 'money' to stand for all the others. Unfortunately, if everything becomes valued exclusively in its relationship to money, you can end up with a one-dimensional value system that obscures any realistic valuation of essential goods and services. In our case, the 'gizmos' proliferate instead of real wealth like education, manufacturing ability, conserved resources, etc. and eventually we find ourselves awash in 'gizmos' that have little or no energy stored in them.

  83. The Tin Foil Hat Crowd ... by kalidasa · · Score: 1
    The Gold Standard Edition.

    By the way, the Wikipedia article on the Gold Standard claims that a return to the gold standard is supported by objectivists. Funny thing is, there's only one objectivist who's also a famous economist, and not only does he disapprove of a return to the gold standard, he used to be the chairman of the Federal Reserve. That's right, boys and girls, Alan Greenspan was a personal friend and disciple of Ayn Rand herself - see Age of Turbulence.

    1. Re:The Tin Foil Hat Crowd ... by grumling · · Score: 1

      Still trying to decide if I'm an objectivist or not, but I understand why fiat is not generally considered a good thing to the objectivist philosophy. It depends on faith instead of "hard" fact. But the problem with that thinking is that there is no assurance that anyone will take gold in exchange for goods and services, either. The reason Greenspan is in favor of fiat is because there isn't enough gold in the world to divide up and still have a manageable money system. For example, as I write this, gold is at $727.60/oz. That would mean I would need a currency equivalent to 0.00137438153oz to equal the same purchasing power as a dollar (or go to the dollar store and buy some junk). By inflating the dollar, it makes the low end purchase possible, and ultimately makes it possible to create great volumes of inexpensive merchandise. It also makes it impossible for anyone to corner the market. Think about a few years ago, Warren Buffet was going to corner the silver market, buying as much as possible. The problem was that there was just too much of it out there and he lost his shirt when the market collapsed (since he was the only buyer).

      Greenspan was the best guy to put in charge of the system, because he knew that keeping the supply of money somewhat stable was the best thing to do. Remember hyperinflation in the 1970's? That was in part because Nixon took away the last of the metal backed currency and started a panic. He did this to fund his police actions and to screw with the oil industry. Did a lot of good, too. Almost bankrupted NYC and led to a lot of disasters (and shitty movies like Saturday Night Fever).

      --
      "Well, good luck finding a judge that doesn't run a bestiality site."
    2. Re:The Tin Foil Hat Crowd ... by kalidasa · · Score: 1

      If I recall correctly, Warren Buffet didn't lose his shirt; I suspect that you're conflating his attempts to corner the silver market with the Hunt brothers' attempt (they did lose their shirts).

  84. Memoirs of former chair of U.S. Federal Reserve by iamstan · · Score: 1

    And opinion piece came out today in a local paper with another view of the function of the U.S. Federal Reserve.

    "Alan Greenspan, that mystifying Yoda of the global economy who sat for a century as chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve, has published his memoirs." http://www.canada.com/components/print.aspx?id=b1f1d78d-ce1e-4e53-a2eb-c6e829b01d7b

  85. Gold standard == continued slavery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
    Despite its smokescreen of legitimacy, the Federal Reserve is owned and operated by a small group of international criminal banking cartels. These people are no better than petty criminals and gangsters, they just operate on a far larger scale.

    The problem with switching to a gold-backed currency is this: the US owns no gold. After FDR confiscated the gold from the American public in the 30s, over the next decades Fort Knox was illegally emptied. All the gold was stolen and is now in the hands of the same criminal element that operates the Fed. Since they control the gold, a gold standard would prove to be WORSE for the American people than operating on the Federal Reserve system. They'd still be able to freely manipulate the currency at will and continue to put the screws to us.

    The solution is a fiat currency issued by the American people through their representatives. This is what the founding fathers, having witnessed firsthand the destruction caused by the Bank of England, had intended.

    An FASCINATING movie detailing the history of the Fed and fractional reserve lending in general is the Money Masters.

    1. Re:Gold standard == continued slavery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh great. Looks like we've got another Ron Paul supporter spouting his nonsense.

      "Clean up, aisle 2"

    2. Re:Gold standard == continued slavery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Notice the personal attack with absolutely no attempt to refute the facts stated in the parent post? This is exactly how these criminals (and the minions and useful idiots brainwashed by them) operate.

  86. Petrodollar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You hit the nail on the head.

  87. The one stars are damning by xeno-cat · · Score: 1

    Check out the distribution on this utter garbage:

    http://www.amazon.com/What-Bleep-Know-Discovering-Possibilities/dp/0757305628/ref=pd_bbs_sr_3/002-2908185-7396820?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1190857645&sr=8-3

    11 one stars, 36 5 stars. I have seen this DVD and it is literally propagandist pseudo science put out by a cult for recruitment. Check into it on Google. Yet it has a pretty stellar rating on Amazon.

    The author of the book in this review is supposedly a member of the John Birch society, real wackos. It's likely propaganda for their organization.

    Kind Regards

    --
    "A few great minds are enough to endow humanity with monstrous power, but a few great hearts are not enough to make us w
  88. MOD PARENT DOWN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I won't call you a moron as it might be rude.

    Gold is a retainer of value, it is universally recognised as something to be traded for. Its real strength is that its supply is low. Go look at the value of gold from the early 1900s to today and you will see it has supposedly gained in value but the truth it his merely retained value and your precious currency has lost this value and will continue to do so. Also go look up what Nixon did when France demanded that the US dollar be redeemed for what its supposedly worth in gold.

    Governments have a license to print money, are you surprised at the excesses that we see today in military spending and other wasteful parts of the public sector? One thing you can't deny, the gold standard would have kept the governemnt a lot smaller than it is today.

    Also:

    Inflation does not tax the poor: They have no cash savings.
    The poor are defined to have fixed income that almost never changes throughout their lives, this means that for the same money they can purchase less and less due to inflation. You can consider this a tax.

    Inflation does not tax the middle class: They keep their assets in real-estate and mutual funds.
    As long as the return on this keeps up with inflation. It certainly penalises the workers and the savers. This sort of thinking encourages debt and debt is what will bring down the American economy. You could almost say inflation leads to debt and debt expects to be paid in interest which is influenced by inflation. For every dollar you borrow your creditor will want $1.50 back due to inflation (and profit of course). Feel richer yet? Of course if your investments do not keep up with inflation, well you're fucked aren't you?

    Inflation forces everyone else to invest in something,
    True

    because hoarding money isn't good for the economy.
    Bullshit.
    China hoarding all of the US's money certainly will be bad for the economy.

    If you don't think the dollar is a scam, go to the reserve bank and go ask for it to be redeemed by something of equal and near universal value. That used be gold.

  89. Earth 6000 years old by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It really bugs me some Christians/whatevers assume the earth is 6000 years old. I guess the reasoning is this: Archbishop Usher's calculations say 4004BC was the date of Adam's creation. It is 2007 AD. 6011 years. End of story.

    The first problem is that Adam's creation was probably 1000-2000 years before that according to the new estimate. The second problem is science has determined man is much older than this, and the earth is much older than man. So lets just throw the bible out the window.. right?

    Well its not that simple. If you go read Genesis you will see that in chapter one God created man and in chapter 2 God created Adam some undisclosed amount of time later. It is obviously not the same thing because when Cain was expelled:
    1: Where did he get his wife
    2: Why did he build the first city if he was the only one around

      Moreover, the chapter one 'creation' is really a recreation. God 'moved upon the face of the waters'. The idea is that the darkness and the waters were all that was left after some kind of catastrophe. If you look around someone will be able to explain why the Hebrew translates this way.

    The trouble with this right now is it is racist. Nobody dares advocate it in today's political climate. This is because Adam was the first white guy. Try and find evidence of Caucasians 8000 years ago.. In fact the bible is a very racist book.. in the old testament and even parts of the new. The sad fact is to reconcile the bible with science we have to come to some very politically incorrect conclusions these days.

    The Asians were here first by far... millions of years ago. the blacks second (less than 100000 years ago). And the earth was created who knows how long before this.. The 7 literal days creation is nonsense.

    Some of you guys seem open minded enough to explore 'forbidden' topics. So there you go, explore that one! You may find yourself suddenly a believer. Happened to me....

    Btw yes it's true the Fed is robbing us blind. Some of you might be interested in Kennedy's "united states dollar" which was to be created out of nothing, but interest free. He issued an order to print these but then a very short time later he was killed. Lincoln and Mckinley apparently messed around with the money system too. Look what happened to them! They weren't obeying their masters....

    1. Re:Earth 6000 years old by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      It really bugs me some Christians/whatevers assume the earth is 6000 years old. I guess the reasoning is this: Archbishop Usher's calculations say 4004BC was the date of Adam's creation. It is 2007 AD. 6011 years. End of story.

      The first problem is that Adam's creation was probably 1000-2000 years before that according to the new estimate. The second problem is science has determined man is much older than this, and the earth is much older than man. So lets just throw the bible out the window.. right?


      Well what's really annoying about it is that it's all based on one extremely literal interpretation of the Bible. Many parts of that book are very open to interpretation. But not all Christians even believe this nonsense; however, the ones that do somehow are becoming very numerous very quickly (at least here in the USA), so it's pretty scary.

      Also, the Bible is just a collection of ancient writings from various sources. Somehow, many Christians have decided that it's somehow infallible, even though it was just assembled by a bunch of people around 300AD in Rome. So the book of Genesis, which is obviously just allegory made up by someone to inspire people, or mythologically explain how things came to be, somehow becomes supposedly as accurate as other books, which describe people and events in a lot of detail and are backed up by other documents.

      The trouble with this right now is it is racist. Nobody dares advocate it in today's political climate. This is because Adam was the first white guy. Try and find evidence of Caucasians 8000 years ago.. In fact the bible is a very racist book.. in the old testament and even parts of the new. The sad fact is to reconcile the bible with science we have to come to some very politically incorrect conclusions these days.

      The Bible has a lot of nasty stuff in it to be sure. Check out evilbible.com (or .org, I forget). There's stuff in there where the Hebrew god tells his people to rape women of conquered tribes, cut the men's genitals off, etc. etc. The Hebrew god, if he had any basis in fact at all, must have been a really horrible being. I wouldn't worship any being that thought that was the proper way to behave. The whole Old Testament is really just "Hebrews are superior to everyone else, and have the right to do what they will to them." It's not just racist, it's "tribist" if you will, as the Hebrews were just a single tribe of people at that time. There were other neighboring tribes who were the same "race" (which is a bit of a controversial and not-so-scientific term anyway).

      The Asians were here first by far... millions of years ago. the blacks second (less than 100000 years ago). And the earth was created who knows how long before this..

      Huh? No, my understanding of current scientific consensus is that humanity started out in Africa, and spread out from there. Asians and Caucasians came about from migrating to colder climates. Asians have one very interesting trait, however: a significant percentage of them can be trace their ancestry back to probably one ancestor, who is believed to be Genghis Khan. The genetic evidence points to a strong possibility he basically went around impregnating all the women he could!

    2. Re:Earth 6000 years old by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh say whatever you like about the Hebrew god, but his rules are my rules. He can do whatever he wants.. He's god. He makes the law. Most of the noble sounding rules really apply only to fellow Israelites, as I understand it.

      Yeah, you are right the Bible is open to interpretation, it is not all literal but not all figurative. Much of the figurative comes from the fact the translators were poor theologians, they would pick the wrong english word for the hebrew word written, since just like in our language, their words can mean different things.

      You are right, the Hebrews were a single tribe, at least until the Israel part. But they married into other white tribes too. Josephs wife was not of Israel but was described as tall and fair. So tribalist, racist.. whatever.. I just used the word that would be screamed at me if I preached this on the street.

      You are also right to bring up the 300 AD thing. The book of Ester, for instance, doesn't 'fit' with the rest of the bible. It doesn't even have "god" written in it anywhere. Song of Solomon is also very weird.

      But there are books that they excluded that should have been included. Like, say, the book of Enoch. I know theres some people that run around and say the king james bible is perfect but it is not. You have to 'hunt' for the truth. But seek and ye shall find...

      And you shouldn't be surprised about the growing amount of zealots in the US. In fact the US is the 'promised land' where Israel was to regather. But why do I even bother... Just go on believing what you want, if it makes you happy. But let me tell you, I may be crazy, but this stuff makes 'scary' sense to me.

    3. Re:Earth 6000 years old by Risen888 · · Score: 1

      But not all Christians even believe this nonsense; however, the ones that do somehow are becoming very numerous very quickly (at least here in the USA), so it's pretty scary.

      noisy and obnoxious != numerous

      They just want everyone to believe they are (numerous, that is). In reality, which is certainly frightening enough, their public voice and sway is vastly out of proportion to their numbers. I live in the upper midwest, YMMV, but most Christians that I've had this discussion with are pretty embarrassed by "those people."

      --
      Hey, I finally got my first freak! Took you long enough!
    4. Re:Earth 6000 years old by QuietObserver · · Score: 1
      I would like to say I agree with much of what you say. Furthermore, the KJV, which, I personally believe, is a fairly faithful interpretation, does have mistakes that were created at the time of its composition; there is at least one line in the sermon on the mount that I'm sure doesn't belong. Also, I would argue that anyone who says that the Bible hasn't been tampered with over the ages is full of it, IMO, as it is in the hands of men. Good point in stating that many of the translators had little theological background; I'd hope that more mistakes in the Bible are innocent errors than those that are deliberate assaults on the truth.

      As for Esther, the story is more one of faith than anything else; her determination to defend her uncle, who refuses to worship the king, is what I personally feel earns it its place in the Bible, though the Song of Solomon, which, from what little of it I've read, doesn't appear to be particularly religious, may not be something that belongs. A number of the 'racist' rules in the Bible are also subject to scrutiny, as much of what we need to know might possibly be missing; I, personally, believe that the Bible is somewhat incomplete, missing a, hopefully, small portion, not that it doesn't contain critical doctrine and advice.

      The New Testament also includes a number of references that indicate missing books, such as Zenos (might be misspelling his name or thinking of someone else), who might be Enoch, as he is frequently reference by Jesus. Also, if I remember correctly, most if not all of the New Testament wasn't written in Hebrew, but Greek, which is why there are odd 'mistakes', like references to Jonah as Jonas; the Greek translation of the name might turn out different than the Hebrew.

      Other things to consider: Genesis 2 retells the creation of the world, in a sense, but reorganizes the way things supposedly happened; we really don't know much about how the world itself was actually created and pieced together. Also, the term day in Genesis 1 is very unlikely to mean one of our 24 hour days, but rather a time period that God observes; the fourth 'day' refers to the creation of the sun, the moon, and the stars, and designated their use in ruling day and night then, which means that what he considered day evening and morning may have had dealt with a very different period of time.

      All of this indicates that the creation may have happened in a way we can scarcely imagine; we cannot say exactly what happened, or how God did what he claims to. I'd rather believe that we know very little of how God's word relates to science, and that one day, all those who choose to remain open minded will come to a far greater understanding of the principles that allow religion and science to merge without hostility.

      One final note; I am a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, so I do have a few other sources that I can use in explaining what I believe with regards to the Bible, and for those who think that Mormons, as we are commonly referred to, do not believe in the Bible, I'd like to point out that it is, one of our standard works; the Book of Mormon is not a replacement of the Bible, it is a companion, and we are, and have always been, urged to study the Bible as vigorously as we do the Book of Mormon.

      P.S. The LDS belief on Genesis chapters 1 and 2 is that Chapter 1 was a spiritual creation of the world, whereas Chapter 2 was a physical organization of the matter that had been spiritually created on the newly formed earth. It's a little difficult to explain this principle clearly to those who don't have a doctrinal understanding of our beliefs, so I hope my explanation hasn't confused anyone who reads this hopelessly.

    5. Re:Earth 6000 years old by QuietObserver · · Score: 1
      Couple of quick points; I disagree with some of what you say, and I agree with some of your other interpretations. The creation was, I believe, more of an organization; I go into a little more detail in another response on a different branch of this post. I also believe you're correct about the seven literal days nonsense; if the world didn't exist at that time, why would God consider a day to be the same thing that we do? My religion believes that a day in God's reckoning is the equivalent to a thousand years in ours, but we also believe that the Genesis 1 creation wasn't quite what most people believe it was; again, see my other post.

      As for your interpretation that Adam was the first white guy, I believe that there are many things we, as mortals, do not understand; we don't know how God does what he does any more than we know why he does things the way he does them. Also, consider that Seth, Adam's successor, was born, by the Biblical account, one hundred thirty years after Adam; as man was commanded in Genesis chapter 1 to be fruitful and multiply, why would Adam and Eve wait over a century before bearing children, or why would they have stopped after Cain and Abel were born? Anyway, good post; enjoy.

    6. Re:Earth 6000 years old by jcr · · Score: 1

      Dude, you're just pulling this out of your ass. Do you even realize that?

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    7. Re:Earth 6000 years old by jcr · · Score: 1

      Oh say whatever you like about the Hebrew god, but his rules are my rules.

      That being the case, you must not be a Christian. Jahweh was quite explicit about the "no other gods before me" thing.

      Not that it matters, it's all just another bundle of mythology.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    8. Re:Earth 6000 years old by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      I don't know about this. I believe I've seen several articles stating that fundamentalist churches are gaining large numbers of members.

  90. Score 5 insightful? His numbers are bullshit! by MacDork · · Score: 1

    How does total bullshit like this get modded up? How much gold is there? Total: 145,000 tonnes.

    145,000 tonnes * 1000 kgs/tonne * 2.2 lb/kg * 16 oz/lb = 5.1 Billion oz. At a current spot price of about $720/oz, that's $3.7 Trillion for all the gold ever mined on Earth. Not even enough to cover half of the US national debt.

    If we actually started USING the 95% of the worlds gold that wastes away in vaults, the value of gold would be almost nothing due to inflation (19x increase in supply).

    Wow... you are totally making this shit up as you go along. Fact check: How many tonnes of gold are in reserves? The sum of the top 40 government reserves around the world comes to 29,846.7 Tonnes. 29,846.7/145,000 = about 20%. This means about 80% of the world's gold is in private hands. If all the nations of the world dumped *all* their gold on the market tomorrow, it would be a 0.25 times increase in supply. Somehow, I don't see gold investors fleeing in terror from such action. Most of us would giggle in glee at the buying opportunity.

    I'm sick of all the "money is a scam" articles on the internet recently.

    Maybe you should try reading a few of them. You might learn something.

  91. Don't feed the troll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your moderation was correct. For all we know, you posted the off-topic story yourself, and then feigned indignity to draw more posters into the fray. The surest way to deal with a troll is to ignore the troll. Not posting AC due to the child porn angle. Posting AC because I'm ashamed of feeding this troll with a response.

  92. Conspiracy Fools by Brandybuck · · Score: 1, Interesting
    --
    Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
  93. fractional reserve banking parasitism by vzn · · Score: 1
    griffin is a brilliant writer & was a major inspiration for a paper I wrote on the subject. for those who would like to go deeper than the history.

    "fractional reserve banking as economic parasitism"

    endorsed by two phd economists. printed in nexus magazine, 60k world circulation. #1 top downloaded economics paper. used by economics teacher in australia as standard classroom material.

    more info on request.

    as for the book, for those saying that it is a conspiracy theory, who says? which part? it is true that history in retrospect often looks like a conspiracy.

    as for those who ask, whats the point? well think about it this way. theres a lot of new online services that are experimenting with currency and microcurrency. consider Linden Labs & 2nd life. they have a fully functioning online/cyber economy with an exchange rate. what is the dynamics of that system? the paper considers that.

    also, economics is a complex system. there is a new science of complex systems. cyberspace is a complex system. the web is a complex system. understanding one complex system will help us understand other complex systems. the economic system has many parallels to engineering fields also, such as electrical engineering. but because there is so far no science of "money engineering", few are aware of this connection.

    many slashdot readers are interested in security, such as regarding viruses etcetera. the paper reveals that the banking and economic system can have worms, viruses, parasites, trojan horses, very much like cyberspace. in fact the security of our banking system may be very poor, and in dire need of improved engineering approaches to increase its security. it really needs the kind of first rate minds that build complex software systems.

    the money system is in fact very much like a massive electrical or energy system. if you are concerned with cooling your cpu or optimizing its performance, imagine a machine that spans entire states, countries even. how can it be optimized? to what degree is it failing us? what are its design deficiencies?

    consider the goethe quote. "none are more enslaved than those who falsely believe they are free"

    some very interesting recent supporting material:

  94. Normal response by mindstrm · · Score: 1

    The normal response of many people, when they find out money doesn't really represent something simple and limited, and instead is part of a complex system, that at it's root seems to be a "federal reserve" that lends money out of thin air and expects interest, is to feel that this process is evil.

    The reason they feel this is because they had no idea what money really was, and how it worked, before this. It is NOT because the system is inherently a scam. There certainly are alternative ways to run a monetary system, and there are probably many ways to improve it, or not, but it's not fundamentally evil.
    I'm not speaking for or against how the fed is run... only pointing out it's not so simple.

  95. End of Economic Man by moogyboog · · Score: 1

    That's another title worth considering reading along with "Jekyll Island", the "End of Economic Man" was written by a former CEO for Norton Publishing in the early 90's. It points out how Economics is more or less a belief system, nothing at all similar to a science such as Physics, yet many people are bumped over the head with a Ideology of Economics as certainty or "science", when in fact it's a belief system. The only question I would like to know is how people can pledge allegiance towards a belief system that hides it's identity from the public, though it's understandable in the light of other certain fundamentalisms throughout the world.

  96. Ha that is funny by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, I am sitting in a youth hostel in good old Chi-Town(Chicago) checking out slashdot and what do I see. Well it is a book review on the monetary system. This may not seem to funny to most but what they don't know is that I am in Chicago for a reason. I am at a American Monetary Institute Conference on Monetary Reform. Ha what a day. Well the conference starts tomorrow, so I shall see how it goes. If you are interested check out http://www.monetary.org/.

  97. No; go watch the video from earlier in the thread. by Kadin2048 · · Score: 1

    The $250,000 was not "created", in truth, the "house-dollars" are actually other people's "savings-account-dollars", "rainy-day-dollars" and "retirement-dollars". The bank gives you some of those other people's dollars, and in turn, gives those other people "interest-dollars" from you and others. This is absolutely untrue. If you read about fractional-reserve banking, you'd understand that when a bank makes a loan, it really does create the money; it does not simply loan out previous deposits. Or at least, only a small fraction of the loan is from deposits, the majority of it is created by the bank. Understanding this is absolutely critical to any discussion about the modern financial system.

    The idea that a bank takes in deposits and then loans them out is a gross oversimplification, and ignores one of the largest effects of banks in a modern economy, namely that they create money on an as-needed basis, and back the newly-created money with mortgaged assets. That's what the whole argument over fractional-reserve vs full-reserve banking is about: some people (the ones advocating full-reserve) think this is not a great idea.

    And indirectly, fractional-reserve banking is part of why so many people are upset about the current "sub-prime" mortgage crisis. Because banks create money when they make loans, if a bank loans out money to someone whose assets aren't worth as much as they claimed they were (e.g., they said they make a lot more money than they do, or the house's value was inflated at the time of the loan), then the money that the bank created while making the loan isn't backed up by anything. That is generally, to put it lightly, considered to be a bad thing.
    --
    "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
  98. Re:RIAA vs. the Fed by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 1

    Society is net wealthier when one extra house is built. How is society net wealthier when one extra dollar is "produced"?

    I didn't say that creating more money makes us wealthier. I said that if the money supply didn't increase, we would experience deflation because the real economy normally grows (because of increased population and production efficiency). The Herd panics when it sees deflation.

    Fiat paper currency is the biggest mirage bubble in history.

    I'm not sure exactly what you mean by this. While fiat currency is indeed a "mirage" (and only a couple percent of the money supply is represented by pretty paper), it is very obviously not a "bubble". Any "bubble" would have collapsed decades/centuries ago.

    We have many examples of currencies collapsing from hyper inflation.

    When a currency collapses, it is because a society is experiencing severe problems, such as being crippled by losing a war (Germany) or being run down by a genocidal dictator (Zimbabwe), not because of anything inherent in the nature of fiat currency.

  99. Brilliant troll... by 808140 · · Score: 1

    I have to say, this must be the best way to get people to pay attention to trolls that I've ever seen. First, write something sexually obscene and post it. Nothing new there, Slashdot has at least one of these in every story, sometimes more. "Unfortunately," thinks the troll, "these are immediately modded to -1, and no one pays attention to me -- I know! I'll create a user and respond to my own, anonymous post, expressing horror and outrage! Then all the Slashbots will be forced to read my ridiculous drivel when otherwise they would have just ignored it!"

    Fucking brilliant. I hope this shows up on Trolltalk. This is why I read at -1.

    Keep on trollin'!

    1. Re:Brilliant troll... by hasbeard · · Score: 1

      I don't think Jane Q. Public is the troll here. I think the troll is "probably" the AC who posted the story, and then hung around to argue about "free speech."

  100. Take it up with Milton Friedman. by Kadin2048 · · Score: 1

    I can't imagine a more ignorant economic theory than one that implies production or wealth has anything to do whatsoever to a government monopoly "currency". The supply of currency (if currency == money supply) can indeed affect economic growth and production, because they can affect inflation and deflation, which in turn affect things like the labor market, capital investments, and personal savings behavior. If you had a fixed amount of currency in the world, prices for goods would deflate slowly over time, as more new things of value were created. (Assuming you have an expanding population and resource bases, as has been true historically almost forever, although it's probably not sustainable for very much longer, admittedly.)

    Inflation and deflation have fairly significant and (at least within the world of economics, which is by its nature fuzzy) well-understood relationships with other parts of the economy, including unemployment* and purchasing behaviors, which have obvious effects on production. Since the money supply can affect inflation and deflation, it has a definite -- although admittedly indirect -- impact on overall production.

    Now, it's an open question whether an inflationary or deflationary market is better. The generally accepted truth among mainstream U.S. economists today is that a small degree of inflation (say 3% per year or less) is healthy. However, there are some people who have some decent arguments for why a softly deflating market, as you would get with a finite, nonexpanding currency, could be good also. I'll be honest and say that I don't really have the basis to evaluate most of these arguments on their merits, so I won't try to summarize them. But it's easy to see how people will act differently in an inflating and deflating market: in an inflating market, it makes sense to keep all of your money invested, since anything you have sitting under your mattress will lose value, all by itself. In a deflationary market, your money gains in purchasing power just by sitting untouched, so it makes sense to delay expenses as long as you can, since they become cheaper over time. There are other, more subtle effects, also.

    * For the relationship of unemployment to inflation, see Phillips curve.
    --
    "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
  101. Ron Paul v. Alan Greenspan ("Inordinate Power") by triclipse · · Score: 1
    2/11/2004

    Dr. PAUL. "Maybe there is too much power in the hands of those who control monetary policy, the power to create the financial bubbles, the power to maybe bring the bubble about, the power to change the value of the stock market within minutes? That to me is just an ominous power and challenges the whole concept of freedom and liberty sound money."

    Dr. GREENSPAN. "Congressman, as I have said to you before, the problem you are alluding to is the conversion of a commodity standard to fiat money. We have statutorily gone onto a fiat money standard, and as a consequence of that it is inevitable that the authority, which is the producer of the money supply, will have inordinate power."

    --
    No Inflation Taxation without Representation
  102. Don't think that's quite right. by Kadin2048 · · Score: 1

    Banks aren't allowed to loan out more than they accept as deposits, so they always have assets on the books that are worth more than their debts. The second part of this sentence is true, the first part of it is not.

    Under fractional-reserve rules, a bank can make loans in excess of its deposits -- that's what fractional-reserve banking means. However, it should never, at any time, have more loans outstanding than it has in total assets, including all the collateral that people have pledged in order to secure the loans. (Whether this is actually always true is debatable, and in fact I think it's probably not; when the housing market slumped, suddenly the banks had a lot more money loaned out than the collateral on those loans -- the houses -- was actually worth. Ideally, this would not happen.)

    The key to fractional reserve banking is that it allows a bank to treat the borrower's promise to repay a loan as an asset, which it can then loan out again (in part).
    --
    "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
  103. LISTEN TO THIS MAN (mod up) by Ayanami+Rei · · Score: 1

    NT

    --
    THIS THING CAN TURN ON A DIME, MACROSSZERO STYLE ALSO FUCK BETA, ~NYORON
  104. What the fuck is brilliant about it? by Ayanami+Rei · · Score: 1

    Anyone can do that... that's kid stuff. The most effective trolls are (at least periphially) on topic, shy to the left or the right of the most vocal posters in the thread, push the right buttons, subtle in logical inconsistency, and posted from accounts with UIDs less than one million.

    --
    THIS THING CAN TURN ON A DIME, MACROSSZERO STYLE ALSO FUCK BETA, ~NYORON
    1. Re:What the fuck is brilliant about it? by 808140 · · Score: 1

      That goes without saying. A really good troll is by nature one that people don't notice and take seriously. I was being ironical. It seems a lot of other folks fell for it.

  105. Not fools. Just learning. by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 1

    There are several points to be made here. . .

    I've been impressed for some time now with the work done by the guys at http://www.debunking911.com/index.html and http://www.911myths.com/. There's a lot of rational thinking going on there. Since the day of 911, I couldn't understand the assertion that the towers had been destroyed through controlled demolition. It didn't make sense; a series of jet liners being hijacked in an orchestrated manner, and the crashing of them into the twin towers would have been entirely adequate to start a war. If the buildings had not come down, the deaths of the people and the hampered rescue efforts and the fires would have been a huge tragedy which people would still be talking about today. The buildings collapsing was icing on the cake, if you'll pardon the glibness of the term.

    I remember early on, within the first couple of months, a proliferation of conspiracy ideas all landing at the same time. There was one link forwarded to me, which showed a missile striking one of the towers. It was very convincing, upon checking it thoroughly and looking at other samples of the same footage, it turned out to be a very poorly compressed video. The background, which moved very little in the frame looked fine, but the moving object, (the plane), devolved through the encryption process and really did look like a torpedo or cruise missile. I pointed this out loudly, and then never saw that clip ever again. It struck me as odd at the time that such an article would make its way on to the web. Surely the guy who compressed the video and posted it as, "Look! A Missile!" knew that he was creating something very misleading. Perhaps it was a series of mistakes; a poor compression found by somebody else who posted it. But it did seem weird that it and a dozen or so other theories and bits of misleading evidence showed up all at once, several of which continue to hold sway to this day. The process through which disinformation is known to be deliberately distributed to confuse and divide the public seems to me to be a large part of what may be going on here. Covert perception management has been a large part of conducting war in the U.S., and there is plenty of documentation to support this.

    I really didn't think much more about the controlled demolition claims until much later when some very well produced items, like "Loose Change" came along and raised doubts again, but for the most part, after looking through all of this stuff, I really don't think that the buildings were deliberately demolished. --I think there is some strong argument of foreknowledge of those attacks, and I noticed that de-bunk sites linked fail to address the more damning of those claims.

    And the Pentagon is another matter. I have yet to see anything which convinces me that a passenger jet struck that building. There are a multitude of questions which the de-bunking sites, again, either ignore or answer with very stretched and unconvincing arguments. --The best piece of evidence in my mind in favor of a large jet is the combustion chamber debris, but the first thought which struck me was, "Why not just load some 757 engine parts into the attack vehicle?" I'm surprised that nobody has ever considered this. It seems to me that it would have been a rather obvious ploy. The nature of the wreckage and the missing parts and the withholding of camera images, among numerous other points, are also very awkwardly addressed, if addressed at all by the debunkers. I tend to think that it was not a missile, but perhaps a different type of aircraft which could have been remotely controlled to ensure a 'safe' show-piece disaster at the Pentagon.

    In any case, the larger issue is not really in much question. --As one of the sites you linked to put it, "The evidence for a conspiracy to use 9/11 to invade Iraq is significant. While there is not one

  106. Wow! I must have really pissed off some modder. by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

    You should see what he did.

  107. Don't be an ass. by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

    "For all WE know"?? Are you one of the modders? Why don't you have the guts to show your username?

    But more to the point: First, I am hardly new here, which is usually a characteristic of "trolls". Second, I have obviously taken the trouble to respond in a reasonable manner to those who responded. Also not a characteristic of "trolls". Be honest: you didn't even read the rest of the discussion.

    1. Re:Don't be an ass. by Knara · · Score: 1

      You have a UID of 1010737 and you're "hardly new here"? I guess it's possible.

    2. Re:Don't be an ass. by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      I did not say I had been here continuously for many years. I did have another account some years ago, but I have had this account for a while. The fact that you are a long-time Slashdot obsessive does not make me exactly a newbie, except by comparison. So what's your point?

  108. Can't take credit by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

    It was a mistake, not a hint of troll. Can't prove it, of course... but then you don't really have any evidence, either, you are guessing. And you guessed wrong.

    But if you are interested in the truth at all, this has been my legit username for a couple of years now.

  109. Some more books by slysithesuperspy · · Score: 1

    The Mystery of Banking, another by Rothbard. And an audio version of What Has Government Done to Our Money?

  110. Jane Fucktard said "But until then, I am done" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is one way you can prove you are done fucktard.

    Find a razor, run a hot bath, and slit your fucking wrists fucktard.

    By doing that you will have proved you are truly done and we will have one less fucktard to put up with.

  111. Re:Another good Listen... by sipatha · · Score: 1

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1T-Lc9BweRo

    What have they done for me?

  112. Anatomy of the Great Oil Swindle by nido · · Score: 2, Interesting
    1972-3 Nixon or someone went to the Saudis and "persuaded" them somehow to remain only US dollars in return for oil. No idea what they promised, but it was big.

    According to John Perkins' Confessions of An Economic Hitman, it was a variety of things:
    • Modernization of the country: all Saudis were too good to be garbage collectors, so goats eating garbage was common. Western companies got large contracts to 'westernize' the place. Garbage collectors were imported from Asia. Desalinization plants were built, etc.
    • Military support for the Saudi Royal Family: "We'll keep you in power, all you gotta do is accept our 'dollar' and only our 'dollar' for your oil"
    • A certain Saudi prince had a thing for blonds. So Mr. Perkins got him a blond escort.
    • etc.


    Perkins covers the many reasons why common people in non-westernized nations tend to hate the U.S. Feral Government - the things 'our' government has done/supported aren't especially nice. From the link above:

    "Economic hit men," John Perkins writes, "are highly paid professionals who cheat countries around the globe out of trillions of dollars. Their tools include fraudulent financial reports, rigged elections, payoffs, extortion, sex, and murder."

    John Perkins should know--he was an economic hit man. His job was to convince countries that are strategically important to the U.S.--from Indonesia to Panama--to accept enormous loans for infrastructure development, and to make sure that the lucrative projects were contracted to U. S. corporations. Saddled with huge debts, these countries came under the control of the United States government, World Bank and other U.S.-dominated aid agencies that acted like loan sharks--dictating repayment terms and bullying foreign governments into submission.


    Now... 35 years later, there are trillions of US dollars out there sitting in central banks waiting to be spent on mostly oil. If oil were to be available in Euros, the dollars would be useless. They would come back to the USA.

    The dollar will be worthless in the near future - 6 months? 12 Months? Hard to predict exactly when, but if the 'Neoconvicts' do eventually wage another illegal war of aggression against Iran, China and Russia will likely repudiate the dollar immediately thereafter. If I had much cash, I'd be buying Euros...
    --
    Learn the rules so you know how to break them properly.
    www.teslabox.com
    1. Re:Anatomy of the Great Oil Swindle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      A certain Saudi prince had a thing for blonds.

      Really? Blond or Blonde? I heard about the Qatari crown prince being barred from G.A.Y. in London, but I didn't know this was popular in Saudi too...

  113. The government does not borrow money from the FED by mosb1000 · · Score: 3, Informative

    "Today, they simply ask the Fed to print more money for them to borrow."

    The FED only lends money to banks, who lend it out for loans to private industry. Believe it or not, the majority of the domestic national debt it owed to . . . the U.S. government. Social security has been collecting a surplus of money since its inception, and the government has been spending that, and issuing bonds to repay what they took from the program at a later date (presumably they will pay for it by raising the federal income tax). The rest of the national debt is owed to private investors who purchased bonds from the government at a fixed rate of return, much of this money is owed to foreign entities. To finance a deficit, the government issues more bonds, which it must repay later with interest.

    The FED isn't some huge conspiracy, a bunch of banks got together and tried to find a way to end the volatility that the money market was continually facing. The primary goal of the FED is controlling inflation. People always say that inflation is out of control, I don't know what country they live in. We have very low, but always positive inflation. Most economists agree that this is the best situation. Anything else you can think of (including a commodity standard) would be much worse. It would be more volatile, and it would be hard to control inflation.

  114. Technology has made the Gold Standard unfeasible by nido · · Score: 1

    But in theory, a gold standard assigns an intrinsic value to money. Since gold is mined at around a 3% increase every year, inflation is under control. The reason Gold worked so well for so long is that, before the 20th century, Gold took a lot of manpower/man-hours to get out of the ground. An economic system based on gold gave people a unit to trade their labors in.

    Suppose one man spends his time digging gold out of the Alaskan tundra/California Gold Country/etc. Others spend their time farming, making jewlery, making leather for saddles, making tools, making cloth, and so forth, fulfilling all of a society's various needs. Gold-backed currency allowed all these different trades to trade their time in a pretty equitable manner. 1/2 month of gold-mining == 1 saddle == a nice suit of clothes, or something like that.

    The gold standard is no longer feasible because one Caterpillar earthmover (and a little chemistry) can do the labor of 1000 men in 1/10th the time. Many mines were taken offline in the 90's because extracting gold had become too easy, and the price of gold had fallen accordingly. The present rise in the price of gold is not so much a return to the historical norm, as reflective of the debasement of the dollar by the 'Feral' Reserve.

    The Feral Reserve needs to be replaced with a bank that supports the monetary needs of the middle-class. A fiat currency is fine, as long as the rate of increase in the currency is strictly controlled, and is evenly distributed throughout the system (as, say, 1% interest on all checking deposits - no idea how exactly to do this, but someone could surely find a fair method for disbursement).

    Presently the recipients of the newly printed 'dollars' benefit the most, because Haliburton gets to spend it's brand-new $1billion before anyone else realizes that yet another billion dollars has been injected into the economy. A good deal if your name is "Darth" Cheney and you own lots of Haliburton stock, but a giant screwing of everyone else.
    --
    Learn the rules so you know how to break them properly.
    www.teslabox.com
  115. Re:RIAA vs. the Fed by BitGeek · · Score: 2, Insightful


    Actually the herd does not panic when it sees deflatin-- the period when the US was really growing, while on the gold standard and when we went from being a backwards nation to a world leader-- was a period of deflation.

    Why would people get mad when their wealth gets more valuable?

    No, all the anti-deflation propaganda comes from those who profit by printing money, which is literally a form of theft.

    --
    Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
  116. for tinfoil adjustment techniques, see by Nazlfrag · · Score: 1
  117. And as jewelry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    if I buy an oz of gold as a ring, if the purchasing power of gold goes up, I can sell on the gold ring at the new rate if I so wish.

    How is this a problem?

    1. Re:And as jewelry by brunes69 · · Score: 1

      If money is backe dby gold then the purchasing power of gold can't go up seperate from the currency.

      You have to think globally about the issue.

      For example. Say for simplicity that 1 oz of gold is worth $100 US by our "gold standard". That is the standard forever. That means that I can buy 1 oz of gold for $100 US and sell $100 for 1oz of gold whenever I want, guarenteed.

      Now, suppose in China/Africa/Wherever someone discovers a new big gold mine. In China/Africa/Wherever gold is now cheaper than copper. The world market is flooded with gold, the price drops 75%.

      This means, implicitly that the US dollar has now dropped 75%. Since it has a fixed backing of gold, people can now buy US dollars for 75% cheaper than they used to be. All of a sudden, the value of goods in the US has to skyrocket to cope with the required rapid price inflation.

      Gold backed currencies only work domestically. Once you start trading internationally with other countries who don't have gold-backed currencies, everything falls apart. And if every country had a gold backed currency, then the exchange rates between countries would be linked, forever. This would be even more of a disaster because it would mean as the economy of any given country goes up or down their currency can not be valued accordingly. Interest rates would be insanely volatile as countries used them as their only means to attract investment in their bonds.

      All this and the price of gold would go up exponentially as countries have to procure more to back their currencies - making legitimate uses for gold (like jewelry, electronics, etc) hyper-inflate in price.

    2. Re:And as jewelry by penguinrenegade · · Score: 1

      There is only ONE THING that you left out of this equation. GREED. If someone found a new big gold mine and it produced that well, they would buy enormous amounts of bling, waste it on women, fast cars, servants, etc.

      Let's replace gold with NBA contract. Someone got an NBA contract and it produced so well, they bought enormous amounts of bling, wasted it on women, fast cars, servants, big houses, etc. Every time someone gets a bigger NBA (or whatever sport) contract, they waste it, and it affects the world economy zero on the downswing as you indicate. Greed will override deflation EVERY SINGLE TIME. When was the last time you saw a corporation rake in the bucks and then use it to lower prices? Let's see - the biggest corporate gains in WORLD HISTORY - the recent profits of Exxon/Mobil - have you noticed gasoline prices going down since they made so much money? Did they return to $1 a gallon gasoline, or did gasoline simply continue going higher?

      Point made - greed trumps gold every single time.

      Let's address "interest rates would be insanely volatile." Countrywide, anyone? Have you even LOOKED at adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs)? The interest rates on them are INSANELY VOLATILE. People refinance a small home from $1400 a month and then get into a fixed mortgage for 50% more - $2100 a month - for a SMALL HOME. For 99% of the markets, $2100 a month is a LOT of money.

      Add greed in - "points" which is a nice way of saying "you pay us for the privilege of borrowing, PLUS interest," attorney fees; closing costs, fees, fees, fees EVERYWHERE.

      When money is backed by gold, it only means that inflation goes up very slowly, until you throw in greed. If money IS gold, then guess what? Inflation can STILL happen - 1849 gold rush for instance - things were priced at TODAY'S prices in dollars there, but elsewhere, fairly stable. Inflation happens regardless of gold backing or not, but gold backing will for the most part keep things more stable. Without it, you end up with hyper-inflation like at the end of WWII in Germany - a wheelbarrow of money for a loaf of bread. That was WITHOUT gold backing for the money. WITH gold backing - gas at 19 per gallon in 1970. WITHOUT gold backing in 1973 gasoline had doubled, then quadrupled. In 1979 gasoline hit $1 per gallon. In less than a decade, oil moved up 5x, where it had been relatively stable with gold backing the money. Gold backed money makes a society more stable, plain and simple, without it (like now), you end up with volatility.

  118. silly peoples by ticktickboom · · Score: 1

    just read the words about banking by neato dudes like tommy jefferson and ben franklin. use a silver standard. have congress print thier own money.
    the nation wasnt in debt until 1911, when the FED became a 'law'. it became a law without a 2/3 majority vote. why is it still on the books? why do people beat the IRS in cort about the illegal income tax? i mean, the constitution clearly states that the labor i produce is mine and cant be taxxed. however it is.. oh, there was no income tax before 1912 either.
    how is it the nation had no income tax, and could still afford everything. had the largest middle class in the world also.
    if you silly peoples still say the fed is a govt entity, jsut look it up in the phone book. it will not be in the blue pages. you will find it next to that other federal program...federal express.

    a silver standard is the way to go. tehre isnt enough gold around to supply the country, what we have split up evenly by 300 000 000 would be nearly nothing. but there is enough silver. i know only 1 or 2 percent of the people hold most of the money...

    another lil factoid, the value of the us dollar is 2 cents.

    i know my spelling isnt great, and i dont like capital letters. the first letters are no better than the last ones.

    neato book, i might have to give it a read...

    tick

  119. Re:Isn't this a setup for a conversation of Ron Pa by virgil_disgr4ce · · Score: 1

    I don't normally do this, but since it appeared twice: the word you want is "piqued," not "peaked." You could say, "My curiosity peaked" as in, "My curiosity reached a local maximum," but that would have a different meaning from "this piqued my curiosity," meaning "this stimulated my curiosity."

  120. Isn't it odd? by flyneye · · Score: 1

    The Federal Reserve is neither federal nor a reserve,but a privately owned company.Discuss.

    --
    *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
  121. Re:RIAA vs. the Fed by drsquare · · Score: 1

    Why would people get mad when their wealth gets more valuable?
    I think people would be pretty mad when they lose their jobs because people are putting their money in mattresses rather than buying their company's products. And the people who don't have any wealth and are unable to gain any would be pretty mad as well.
  122. Deleted From Wikipedia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just as a sidenote, the article for this book was deleted from Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/The_Creature_from_Jekyll_Island as non-notable conspiracycruft. WorldCat http://worldcat.org/oclc/50567478 shows it in 350 libraries, which
    isn't that bad for a "fringe" book first published in 1994.

  123. Re:Score 5 insightful? His numbers are bullshit! by Lord+Ender · · Score: 1

    You actually think that only governments store gold in vaults? That's not true. You are the one making things up now.

    --
    A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
  124. Try a civics class by gryf · · Score: 1
    Any good class covering american govt should have covered the role of the Fed, same as any Econ 101 class. Failure to recall these lessons is not a govt conspiracy. Most of the basics of what the Fed is and does has been taught to most people at one time or another, if they don't know, it's their fault.

    The way the news media treats the Fed as some mystical economic oracle and it's chief as some superstar is likely responsible for deflating any serious discussion among laymen. However, watch a financial segment between finance reporters and a lot of the cruft is washed away.

    A lot more about Fed can be learned from watching CNBC daytime than from CNN.

    --

    #-#
    Ad Astra Per Aspera
    A rough road leads to the stars
  125. Why the disconnect? human nature. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Why this disconnect? Why do Americans care so little about the origins of that which they spend a third of their time pursuing, and seemingly another third spending?"

    For the same reason that they all want a computer that will read their mind and perform miracles without their having to learn a single, solitary thing about the device.

    Ask the question on Slashdot, get a Slashdot answer.

  126. Re:Not fools. Just learning. by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

    And the Pentagon is another matter. I have yet to see anything which convinces me that a passenger jet struck that building.

    So the hundreds of witnesses don't count?

    The twists of logic needed to discount the existanct of a 757 is extremely tortuous. Occam's razor isn't infallible, but the grotesque deformations of rationality needed by the Truthers boggles the mind. Why would the perpetrators fly two airplanes into the World Trade Center, but then expend massive amounts of planning and resources to divert and hide the third plane that was supposed to hit the Pentagon? Why load a drone with 757 parts, when you could just fly the 757 into the Pentagon instead? It's thought processes are insane.

    --
    Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
  127. Re:Not fools. Just learning. by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 1
    So the hundreds of witnesses don't count?

    Hundreds of witnesses? Come on now. If you are going to complain about conspiracy theorists spouting wild claims, you had better keep your own boots clean.

    Nowhere have I seen data from hundreds of witnesses. Not by a long stretch. --The most comprehensive list I've looked at details interviews from 149 people, and of that number, there were numerous interviewed who were not actually witnesses, but rather felt the explosion from inside the Pentagon, or who were watching radar blips or who came to the site looking for family or what have you. My estimate is that perhaps 80 or 90 people actually reported seeing something fly into the Pentagon.

    The curious thing is that their reports are filled with peculiar contradictions and wide variances of conflicting details. As we know, witness testimony is not very trustworthy; human memory is just too malleable, especially when the witness is in a heightened state of fear or shock, as was the case on that day. Further, many of the interviews happened long enough after the event that by the time of the interview, the subject had been watching television news casts about the attacks, being effectively told what they had witnessed by a voice of authority. This is a great way to taint testimony to the point of making it almost useless except in terms of collecting only the broadest, most general of details. So no, the witness testimony has not convinced me of anything except that it is very likely a plane with a some red and blue stripes painted on it hit the pentagon. --Interestingly, one of my more fascinating sources said shortly after the event that, "even the windows had been painted on" [the jet], which is odd, because I noted that several witnesses observed that all the windows were blacked out on the plane.

    The twists of logic needed to discount the existanct of a 757 is extremely tortuous. Occam's razor isn't infallible, but the grotesque deformations of rationality needed by the Truthers boggles the mind. Why would the perpetrators fly two airplanes into the World Trade Center, but then expend massive amounts of planning and resources to divert and hide the third plane that was supposed to hit the Pentagon? Why load a drone with 757 parts, when you could just fly the 757 into the Pentagon instead? It's thought processes are insane.

    Actually, the logic is not all that twisted. It makes a lot of sense. If the 'terrorists' had failed to hit their targets in New York, it would have been a far less effective event in traumatizing the population. A remote controlled plane, however, could be assured to striking the Pentagon with the kind of accuracy needed to safely do no real damage while still providing a good show. And diverting the original plane would have fit right into the time frame of the event; there is a military air base in the region capable of performing the task, and there were drop outs on the radar path sufficient to account for the time such a maneuver would take. With the Pentagon strike, I can the rationale for such a plan far more easily than the New York claims, and the evidence, such as it is, appears to support this idea whereas the official story has numerous problems.

    But that's just my take. If anything else comes up, I'd be willing to alter my thinking accordingly.


    -FL

  128. Re:Not fools. Just learning. by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

    Hundreds of witnesses? Come on now. If you are going to complain about conspiracy theorists spouting wild claims, you had better keep your own boots clean.

    So I was off a bit. The point is, there are lots of witnesses. Doing a search I see numbers anywhere from 89 to 149. That's a LOT of witnesses. You can't dismiss them derisively away just because they don't support your predetermined conclusion.

    --
    Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
  129. Re:Not fools. Just learning. by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

    With the Pentagon strike, I can the rationale for such a plan far more easily than the New York claims, and the evidence, such as it is, appears to support this idea whereas the official story has numerous problems.

    The evidence does NOT support that idea, because there is no evidence for a missile. Show me the missile parts. Show me the results of a warhead explosion as opposed to a crash with flammables. Show me the witnesses (full quotes, not out of context). The problem with Truther (and all other conspiracy) theories is that they START from the conclusion then make hand picked evidence fit that conclusion. But the 757 "theory" doesn't do that. It doesn't reject any of the factual evidence. It starts from the existing evidence (airplane parts, witnesses, destruction patterns, hijacked plane, etc) and works to the conclusion that Flight 77 struck the Pentagon.

    --
    Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
  130. Re:Not fools. Just learning. by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 1
    So I was off a bit. The point is, there are lots of witnesses. Doing a search I see numbers anywhere from 89 to 149. That's a LOT of witnesses. You can't dismiss them derisively away just because they don't support your predetermined conclusion.

    You were off by a lot, and I also did a read through of the 149 interviews, and as I pointed out in my last post, less than two thirds of them were witnesses to the actual event. I also do not dismiss them derisively or out of hand. That's completely unfair. --I think if you read my last post again, you might see that. --And neither do I have any predetermined conclusions. I find the suggestion that there was foul play on the government's side to have some persuasive arguments and evidence to support it, and as such, it would be foolish to not explore such claims. It may indeed be that the alternative theories are completely wrong and that the U.S. government is honest and noble, but so far the evidence I have looked at, (and I've read everything I can find), doesn't support that. And if you'll pardon me, it sounds as though you are the one being derisive and predetermined. This does a good deal to undermine your position. If you want to champion reason and rationality, you have to be reasonable and rational. Failing this will quickly deposit you on the same level as the conspiracy 'nutbags' you are annoyed with. The fact of the matter is that you don't know what happened on that day any more than I do. All we can do is look at the evidence available and put it through the crucible.

    Peace.


    -FL

  131. YOU ARE NOT LISTENING!!! by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 1
    The evidence does NOT support that idea, because there is no evidence for a missile. Show me the missile parts. Show me the results of a warhead explosion as opposed to a crash with flammables.

    You are responding with great verve to things I did not write.

    I didn't say anything about thinking a missile hit the pentagon. In fact, I said I thought it was almost certainly an aircraft. --I actually wrote this twice. Clearly. Both times. I am beginning to understand why you continue to hammer away at me when no reasonable person would; I've said nothing untoward or irrational. I can only guess what else you imagine I have said or believe.

    Your knee-jerking and erroneous preconceptions are just like those of the worst-case conspiracy 'nut'. Fortunately there are de-bunkers and conspiracy theorists out there who have their act together, otherwise nobody would get anywhere with any of this.


    -FL

  132. thanks! by zogger · · Score: 1

    Thanks, I have heard of constants before, but not sure if it was any of your references (which I will check out). My idea was developed standalone, I had never read about anything like it, but am glad to hear some name brand economist guys thought it was a useful idea! the constants I recall were a very local and I think silver coin based currency, basically just tokens that retained value.

    I tell you, the scam and conjob with the fed is the longest running pure d ripoff out there, just a heinous robbery of the US public and productive class. There should have been a mass revolt against it way back when. It even hurts business tremendously when there is no need for it other than to keep a relatively small number of people-probably in the low thousands tops-in control of the nation. And none of them are elected.

    Yep, just checked it out, his ideas and mine are very similar, not identical but extremely close. His involves investing, mine treats the entire nation as one big investment, because it is. Mine combines labor and tangibles at the same time because it stays adjusted and the commodities can fluctuate better.

    thanks again for the links.

    Mostly whenever I present this idea I get ignored, or at best some trolls says "what about inflation?" or "you gold bugs are all the same", along those lines. It is such a simple idea but is so hard to get across to people, raised as they are with the way "things are done" and just accepting the most important thing for the economy, the simple basic currency, at "face value", giggles intended. It's very hard to get people to grok that the currency system in use is a tool of oppression and exploitation first before it is anything else.

    So, you are an economist, a big money man, an academic, or just a gifted layman on this subject or what? Who knows, this is slashdot, you could work for the Fed even, who knoweth. To be fair, I am just a dumbass farmer who understands the diff between stuff, and illusions/representations or simulacrums of stuff. Gary North had an interesting phrase he came up with to describe it, it being digits that are supposed to be worth something in theory, he calls them "electronic promises of money".