For the first time ever, the majority of Americans are scared of their own federal government. A Pew Research poll found that 53% of Americans think the government threatens their personal rights and freedoms.
Americans aren't wild about the government's currency either. Instead of holding dollars and other financial assets, investors are storing wealth in art, wine, and antique cars. The Economist reported in November, "This buying binge… is growing distrust of financial assets."
But while the big money is setting art market records and pumping up high-end real estate prices, the distrust-in-government script has not pushed the suspicious into the barbarous relic. The lowly dollar has soared versus gold since September 2011.
Every central banker on earth has sworn an oath to Keynesian money creation, yet the yellow metal has retraced nearly $700 from its $1,895 high. The only limits to fiat money creation are the imagination of central bankers and the willingness of commercial bankers to lend. That being the case, the main culprit for gold's lackluster performance over the past two years is something else, Tocqueville Asset Management Portfolio Manager and Senior Managing Director John Hathaway explained in his brilliant report "Let's Get Physical.
Hathaway points out that the wind is clearly in the face of gold production. It currently costs as much or more to produce an ounce than you can sell it for. Mining gold is expensive; gone are the days of fishing large nuggets from California or Alaska streams. Millions of tonnes of ore must be moved and processed for just tiny bits of metal, and few large deposits have been found in recent years.
"Production post-2015 seems set to decline and perhaps sharply," says Hathaway.
Satoshi Nakamoto created a kind of digital gold in 2009 that, too, is limited in supply. No more than 21 million bitcoins will be "mined," and there are currently fewer than 12 million in existence. Satoshi made the cyber version of gold easy to mine in the early going. But like the gold mining business, mining bitcoins becomes ever more difficult. Today, you need a souped-up supercomputer to solve the equations that verify bitcoin transactions—which is the process that creates the cyber currency.
The value of this cyber-dollar alternative has exploded versus the government's currency, rising from less than $25 per bitcoin in May 2011 to nearly $1,000 recently. One reason is surely its portability. Business is conducted globally today, in contrast to the ancient world where most everyone lived their lives inside a 25-mile radius. Thus, carrying bitcoins weightlessly in your phone is preferable to hauling around Krugerrands.
No Paper Bitcoins
But while being the portable new kid on the currency block may account for some of Bitcoin's popularity, it doesn't explain why Bitcoin has soared while gold has declined at the same time.
Hathaway puts his finger on the difference between the price action of the ancient versus the modern. "The Bitcoin-gold incongruity is explained by the fact that financial engineers have not yet discovered a way to collateralize bitcoins for leveraged trades," he writes. "There is (as yet) no Bitcoin futures exchange, no Bitcoin derivatives, no Bitcoin hypothecation or rehypothecation."
So, anyone wanting to speculate in Bitcoin has to actually buy some of the very limited supply of the cyber currency, which pushes up its price.
In contrast, the shinier but less-than-cyber currency, gold, has a mature and extensive financial infrastructure that inflates its supply—on paper—exponentially. The man from Tocqueville quotes gold expert Jeff Christian of the CPM Group who wrote in 2000 that "an ounce of gold is now involved in half a dozen transactions." And while "the physical volume has not changed, the turnover has multiplied."
The general process begins when a gold producer mines and processes the gold. Then the refiners sell it to bullion banks, primarily in London. Some is sold to jewelers and mints.
"The physical gold that remains in London as unallocated bars is the foundation for leveraged paper-gold trades. This chain of events is perfectly ordinary and in keeping with time-honored custom," explains Hathaway.
He estimates the equivalent of 9,000 metric tons of gold is traded daily, while only 2,800 metric tons is mined annually.
Gold is loaned, leased, hypothecated, and rehypothecated, over and over. That's the reason, for instance, why it will take so much time for the Germans to repatriate their 700 tonnes of gold currently stored in New York and Paris. While a couple of planes could haul the entire stash to Germany in no time, only 37 tonnes have been delivered a year after the request. The 700 tonnes are scheduled to be delivered by 2020. However, it appears there is not enough free and unencumbered physical gold to meet even that generous schedule. The Germans have been told they can come look at their gold, they just can't have it yet.
Leveraging Up in London
The City of London provides a loose regulatory environment for the mega-banks to leverage up. Jon Corzine used London rules to rehypothecate customer deposits for MF Global to make a $6.2 billion Eurozone repo bet. MF's customer agreements allowed for such a thing.
After MF's collapse, Christopher Elias wrote in Thomson Reuters, "Like Wall Street cocaine, leveraging amplifies the ups and downs of an investment; increasing the returns but also amplifying the costs. With MF Global's leverage reaching 40 to 1 by the time of its collapse, it didn't need a Eurozone default to trigger its downfall—all it needed was for these amplified costs to outstrip its asset base."
Hathaway's work makes a solid case that the gold market is every bit as leveraged as MF Global, that it's a mountain of paper transactions teetering on a comparatively tiny bit of physical gold.
"Unlike the physical gold market," writes Hathaway, "which is not amenable to absorbing large capital flows, the paper market, through nearly infinite rehypothecation, is ideal for hyperactive trading activity, especially in conjunction with related bets on FX, equity indices, and interest rates."
This hyper-leveraging is reminiscent of America's housing debt boom of the last decade. Wall Street securitization cleared the way for mortgages to be bought, sold, and transferred electronically. As long as home prices were rising and homeowners were making payments, everything was copasetic. However, once buyers quit paying, the scramble to determine which lenders encumbered which homes led to market chaos. In many states, the backlog of foreclosures still has not cleared.
The failure of a handful of counterparties in the paper-gold market would be many times worse. In many cases, five to ten or more lenders claim ownership of the same physical gold. Gold markets would seize up for months, if not years, during bankruptcy proceedings, effectively removing millions of ounces from the market. It would take the mining industry decades to replace that supply.
Further, Hathaway believes that increased regulation "could lead, among other things, to tighter standards for collateral, rules on rehypothecation, etc. This could well lead to a scramble for physical." And if regulators don't tighten up these arrangements, the ETFs, LBMA, and Comex may do it themselves for the sake of customer trust.
What Hathaway calls the "murky pool" of unallocated London gold has supported paper-gold trading way beyond the amount of physical gold available. This pool is drying up and is setting up the mother of all short squeezes.
In that scenario, people with gold ETFs and other paper claims to gold will be devastated, warns Hathaway. They'll receive "polite and apologetic letters from intermediaries offering to settle in cash at prices well below the physical market."
It won't be inflation that drives up the gold price but the unwinding of massive amounts of leverage.
Americans are right to fear their government, but they should fear their financial system as well. Governments have always rendered their paper currencies worthless. Paper entitling you to gold may give you more comfort than fiat dollars.
However, in a panic, paper gold won't cut it. You'll want to hold the real thing.
There's one form of paper gold, though, you should take a closer look at right now: junior mining stocks. These are the small-cap companies exploring for new gold deposits, and the ones that make great discoveries are historically being richly rewarded… as are their shareholders.
However, even the best junior mining companies—those with top managements, proven world-class gold deposits, and cash in the bank—have been dragged down with the overall gold market and are now on sale at cheaper-than-dirt prices. Watch eight investment gurus and resource pros tell you how to become an "Upturn Millionaire" taking advantage of this anomaly in the market—click here.


nothing beats the real thing.
Save in physical gold. BTC (moving capital) and CA$H (liquidity) both have their roles as well re preservation. Own some of both IMO.
Diversification!
Why the dumbed down "ain't"?
ZH is capable of a properly formulated headline, so please do it.
ALL words are made up. To imply that some words are less proper than others is to believe in the Language Fairy.
Besides, WTF kind of word is "wintermute." :P
And the grammar Nazi's are out goose stepping once again.
ZH just got blitzkrieged by the Wintermute Panzer division.
GOLD! It's what's for DINNER!!!
*or it will certainly buy you dinners*
Bitchez be trippin. They be all like "I'm the jump off but you ain't".
So i ax him "you be tryin to be all booky, knock shit before I knock dome"
Proper english is appreciated by this zerohedge reader.
Ideas and information are portrayed more clearly that way, ain't they?
I have a hard time believing Doug French uses ain't frequently.
The alternative is that he purposefully used the slang/colloquial term for effect.
"ZH is capable of a properly formulated headline, so please do it".
Ain't got time to be checkin' my typo BE-ATCH.
Boris is quick go in hiding.
Deflation deflation deflation. Gold's gonna crash. Bitches.
Gold can NOT crash. It is just Gold. If you hold it in your hand it is YOUR Gold. Notional values are asociated to every item we need or want. Gold is rare. So many trillions in FIAT floating around how could Gold be without value as a currency. Anyone who has ever held real Gold in thier hand knows there is nothing else like it and that makes it desireable. Fiat and other virtual currencies will be worthless long before Gold. Bet on it
P-d
ain't is being used here as a literary technique. I too doubt Doug speaks that way...unless he is trying to make a point using a technique of speech. I'm not sure what it is called but it is common for many well read and literate people to use such expression for emphasis and to accent.
Have I beaten this mofo to deth yet?
P-d
ain't is being used here as a literary technique. I too doubt Doug speaks that way...unless he is trying to make a point using a technique of speech. I'm not sure what it is called but it is common for many well read and literate people to use such expression for emphasis and to accent.
Have I beaten this mofo to deth yet?
I'm black, and that made absolutely no sense in what you tried to pass as "slang"...
Using a colloquial expression is a literary tool.
Using a colloquial expression is a literary tool.
Exactly right, so fuck off.
"Using a colloquial expression is a literary tool." ...but then so is Dan Brown
Precisely, I think, ain't is correct English when used to replace 'is not, am not, has not'
Nothing dumb about it.
They be hatin' ain't cause it southern colloquialism. Blue belly Yankees always be lookin' down dem noses at Confederates and white southern tradition.
https://mises.org/daily/author/627
Douglas French is president of the Mises Institute and author of Early Speculative Bubbles & Increases in the Money Supply and Walk Away: The Rise and Fall of the Home-Ownership Myth. He received his master's degree in economics from the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, under Murray Rothbard with Professor Hans-Hermann Hoppe serving on his thesis committee. French teaches in the Mises Academy. See his tribute to Murray Rothbard.
He ain't got no right to be using the word ain't.
"Ain't" is a perfectly cromulent werd! :>D
Let commencement of the spalling-bee... BEGINULATE!!
Silver, gold, land and mining stocks. I feel prophetic today. I'm also selling lumber this month.
My son is buying "Bitcoins" - maybe LiteCoin or Dropcoin or something like that. He can't afford BiteCoins.
I listened to him, discussed it with him and it's his money. Go for it, make enough to not live in my basement. I like stuff I can hold and a place to practice my aim.
I am sorry but the must have investment of 2014 is Quarkdongbits.
You can all keep you paper, I am holding digital bitchez!
What's the exchange rate with Quatloos?
Yeah, to bad Gerald didn't learn this lesson.
Well, he was actually standing for delivery in an effort to beat them at their own game, and since the Crimex has yet to default, they had to Corzine him.
rehypothecation is theft
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=svAs-6MiqxE
Knowledge from the old school.
Weza sure nuf could use some of that there fancy fire kindling. Yup!
Its flame retardent. Just try burning it.
Paper Gold is like a promise of pussy instead of the real thing in hand.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BsDFxmbjZ7I
"When I hold you, in my arms,
And I feel my finger on your trigger,
I know, nobody can do me no harm.
Because, happiness...is a warm gun.
(bang-bang, shoot-shoot)."
Paper Gold - that use to be called a college diploma...now its toilet paper.
extremely expensive toilet paper.
I'm not sure your comment was appreciated, nor understood.
+1
Do you hear that Mr. Anderson? That is the sound of inevitability....of a paper Gold bust.
"That's as good as money sir"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7GSXbgfKFWg
C'mon, you know they'll break something else as a distraction first. Then they'll go all "force majure" while shrugging their shoulders.
Whocouldaknowed that leveraging Gold 100 to 1 might one day go bust?
<I'll pay you 10 cents on the dollar to settle your Gold claim just as soon as the Fed revs up the fiat printer.>
are you trying tell me physical gold and silver isn't levered? REALLY?
that thing is a PRICE...meaning "it's been re-hypothecated a billion times over."
I've said it before and i'll say it again...we have a LIQUIDITY shortage here not a shortage of "physical."
As a consequence that PRICE can drop and drop SUBSTANTIALLY.
Gold and silver are classic short candidates because they provide no liquidity whatsoever.
The "flip side of that gold coin" is CLEARLY PROPANE...which has DOUBLED in price...at the retail level...in ONE WEEK.
You're telling me to buy gold?
I can see that price dropping forty percent from here.
"And that's called putting risk into the system."
Look at the folks lending into this thing!
in order to be an asset it has to produce an income (and no, i'm not talking a rental property here)...throw off yield, if only one or two percent. everything else is PURE speculation.
When I look around to see "what assets we got here" (in a time when M2 hasn't had a pulse going on 4 years now) I can namely very, very, very few actually.
Incredibly one might be "Tesla Motors"...not that i'm recommending anyone buy it here...but still, at least they have business model i understand.
Discussing the value of gold in terms of Federal Reserve Notes is foolish. When the dollar (or any fiat currency) crashes, the value of one FRN can become infinitesimally small. When that occurs the 'price' of gold in FRN terms will approach infinity. However the gold will not have appreciated in value. It will merely have maintained its purchasing power.
In Roman times an ounce of gold would buy a good toga, a leather belt and a pair of quality sandals. Today an ounce of gold will exchange for enough FRNs to buy a good suit, a leather belt and a pair of quality shoes.
Anyone owning gold in anticipation of becoming rich is fooling themselves. They will maintain their purchasing power, but that is all.
maintaining purchasing power in the face of hyperinflation is quite a feat...I'll take that and be grateful.
[quote]
They will maintain their purchasing power, but that is all.
[/quote]
Good enough for me!
Vet: I am assuming that we are approximately the same age, I am 65 and a Vietnam veteran. As a high school sophomore in 1964, I was buying a gallon of gasoline with 2 silver dimes, and today, at a local gas station, I can still buy a gallon for 2 silver dimes. I buy gold and silver as an insurance policy against the destruction of fiat currency. Nothing more, and nothing less. I do not trade my physical, really, for anything, period. You may wish to do that, and more power to you. I just choose not to do that activity. You are correct that the "price" of gold/silver may go down sharply, but IMHO, I don't believe it will. Have I liquidated all my stocks to buy gold, fuck NO. Will I regret that choice, fuck no. I have ridden the stock market up and down so many times it ain't funny. The point is: the price of gold/silver is irrelevant in "the big picture", as its price may go up/down, but it will always have value. That value has been "time-tested", since the beginning of humanity.
P.S. I wouldn't touch Telsa Motors with a fucking 10 foot pole, IMHO.
I don't think that word means what you think it means.
My physical silver & gold are atoms in my hand. I can use them directly or trade them for atoms & molecules of other things.
Show me the leverage.
Precious metals and BTC are great and all, but invest in yourselves. Learn new skills that will help you survive if you haven't already such as gardening, general outdoorsman skills, and keeping yourself in shape. They can take your silver and homes (and lead if you catch my drift), but they can't take whatever skills you might have.
Unless they introduce you to the FEMA re-education camps.
And, the only hands on learning you get is on how to dig your own grave.
Nana nana nana nana leader.
Nana nana nana nana leader.
Leader! Leader! Leader!
Though jokes aside I think they'll be more interested in killing us than re-education, but that's just me.
but they can't take whatever skills you might have
Yes, they can take your skills. It's called Slavery.
Even slaves rebel.
But, not in the United Slave States of America.
USSA! USSA! USSA!
Gooooooooooooooooooooo Full Retards!
Land of the fee, home of the slaves. sssh... they don't know the rest of the world unloaded them here.
Go away; baitin'.
Better to fight when they come to take you than to get into a situation where you're a rebeling slave. Your oppressors are willing to use force in both circumstances, while a free man's resources are much better than a slave's are.
seek
as a tactic it is better to take the fight to them. Waiting for them to come for you puts you in a nasty defensive position.
Join a patrol when the time comes. Do not wait for the knock on the door....or so I've been told by those who have experience in such matters.
When the enemy is at ease, be able to weary him; when well fed, to starve him; when at rest, to make him move. Appear at places to which he must hasten; move swiftly where he does not expect you.
Can but usually don't.
Obviously you are unfamiliar with Obama's executive order that allows the goo to commandeer your ass and put you to work at what they decide for you.
There's one form of paper gold, though, you should take a closer look at right now: junior mining stocks.
Question: What happens when the Government in which those Junior Mining Stocks reside are Nationalized?
Answer: You are left with worthless paper.
You mean digits on a computer screen.
Doesn't the DBCC hold all of the real stocks?
Storing wealth in art and antique cars.
That ought to work out great in an existential crisis.
The camera pans in slowly through falling snow towards three ragged men, warming their hands above a rusted 55 gallon oil drum; as the fire gutters and dies, one man reaches into a stack of thin, irregular rectangles of wood.
He takes the top most piece and holds it up to the firelight so all can admire the surreal, screaming face lit demonically in the flickering light.
"Looks like another Munch." The man exclaims, breaking the painting in half, and half again, feeding the drum's gaping maw piece by piece.
The men huddle closer as the snow continues to fall and the flames hungrily lick the canvass...
So the gold belonging to the German people has been rehypothicated away to never-never land by the New York Federal Reserve, and what should be of great concern to central bankers everywhere is that Jim Willie suggested rather strongly in a recent newsletter that he thinks the Saudi's gold has been stolen too. I never would have thought the Saudis would let that happen, but it's a damn interesting thought. Sorry, no link.
Rumor in Bahrain is that they asked for it back around the same time as
zee Germans, which could be why the Germans are SOL.
good point...and i recommend a study of Bankers Trust...which DB bought and "rehypothecated." when you "rehypothecate a lump" (gold, silver...especially copper) your risk is pretty insubstantial actually. when you rehypothecate a trillion dollar balance sheet...well, let's just say "entire Nations are dependent upon your skills as a day trading bazillionaire."
I'm sure "they're all good for it."
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hn2UDUI3CIU
There is no proof that this "german Gold" ever existed. The Bundesbank just received a list with numbers of bars but there was never a physical control from a representative of thge Bundesbank if these gold bars existed. The gold was always in the USA and the Germans were not allowed to check on it. Just like today. I believe that these bars never existed, everything else would be a big surprise. To produce a list of bars, that is enough work invested to satisfy the powerless Germans. Why do more? It was simply not necessary then and it works till today.
if i understand it correctly, actual physical was shipped from west germany to america/france/england after WW2 to prevent the ruski's getting it
OT: http://motherboard.vice.com/blog/utopia-silk-roads-latest-replacement-on...
Very strong evidence that TOR is completely compromised at this point.
We're getting to the point where almost everything is compromised. Last problem left for NSA and .gov is the "firehose effect" (so much information to sift through for info nuggets).
And when they solve that one, maybe my next email will be from Peru. I'll try to send what I can down there first, then try carrying the rest.
Government and Wall Street; Self regulation at its best
Kinda looking suspicious to say the least.
From FOSDEM (Free & Open Source Devs European Meeting) recently: NSA Operation ORCHESTRA
TL;DR - Further NSA strategies used but not disclosed by Snowden. OpenSSL? Good luck with that.
At least regulation of bitcoin works so to see.
Glad to end that discussion for good.
unsurprised. It was a nice thought but without separate wires AND disposable microservers... it couldn't work.
Something like mobile, ubiquitous yet disposable wi-fi stations covering a giant grid would have done it. Not cheap.
Paper gold is worse than paper dollars.
After that title, you really could've summed up the whole article in one sentence.
Paper Gold = Bitcoin.
After that title, you really could've summed up the whole article in one sentence.
Paper Gold = Bitcoin.
I will bet you GOLD that in very bad times a man with food and no GOLD will outlast a man with GOLD and no food.
If food becomes more scare than GOLD which do you think will be more valuable pound for pound? I guess too many people havn't read the stories of the Jews in concentration camps trading valuables (gold, jewels) for any bits of food.
I know someone will say 'lead' carries all the value. Frankly my reaction to that is if we start slinging lead around all bets are off and everything else of value, or producing comes under significant risk. Also even with or without lead anyone is easily removed from the game board.
Why do you and so many of the gold naysayers (not necessarily saying that you are one of them) assume the false dichotomy of either an indefinite continuation of the status-quo or else a Mad Max total collapse of civilization? Don't you realize that you are completely playing into the banksters' hands by propagating the fallacious meme that "financial and/or monetary collapse = End Of The World"?
Plenty of nations have been through financial and monetary collapses throughout history, most especially within the last century, and some are arguably in the process even as we speak (Argentina, Turkey, Venezuela), yet as bad and hard as life can be during such times, I fail to note a single example of Mad Max or cannibalistic zombies appearing on the scene, where a gold coin would be cast aside for a crust of bread (or human brains, as the case may be).
Really, get some historical perspective already.
Unfortunately Gold revaluation will be the salvation for those who least deserve it.
And, you are absolutely correct, Sir.
While I can appreciate that some cannot afford both food and gold, but please don't make the assumption that those that can afford gold, don't have the good sense to also have food (and the skills to grow, breed, and store it). It does not have to be an either or choice.
Absolutely correct, Sir.
P.S. Those Jews that died in the concentration camps believed the fairy tales they were being told. They could have died "with their boots on", rather than going down without a whimper. Security without freedom is a fairy tale.
Your bet would be wrong. History shows it. A man who's fed enough to find his next meal will find it & many more.
Let me know if you find out any stories of people lost, died of starvation, with gold still in their pockets.
Any time in history.
I know there's been gold found with BURIALS but those people didn't die poor or starving.
Same with gold stored in containers in fields, they died of old age or other causes before spending it all but they certainly spent some of it along the way.
"I guess too many people havn't read the stories of the Jews in concentration camps trading valuables (gold, jewels) for any bits of food."
Because they didn't. Those who ended up in camps were robbed to start.
Those who had gold & jewels escaped WITH them.
You really think stripping down prisoners to give them numbered tattoos also meant IGNORING any gold or silver or jewels IN their clothing?
Hell, their clothing was likely BURNED before being issued work uniforms and those jewels would be left in the ashes for the taking.
You are a poor student of history.
That "53% of Americans think the government threatens their personal rights and freedoms" reminded me of another recent public opinion poll tipping point:
http://www.gallup.com/poll/165539/first-time-americans-favor-legalizing-marijuana.aspx
For First Time, Americans Favor Legalizing Marijuana
In 2013, "for the first time, a clear majority of Americans say the drug should be legalized. This is in sharp contrast to the time Gallup first asked the question in 1969, when only 12% favored legalization."
Hemp Truth is the single simplest symbol and most extreme particular example of the FACT that the government of the USA has become about 99% based on legalized lies, backed by legalized violence, in which context the monetary system, and treating corporations as if they were human beings with rights, are the TWO MOST IMPORTANT MANIFESTATIONS OF THAT FACT!
The majority of Americans are only just barely beginning to "wake up" to the real ways that their government has become their worst enemy, because control over their government has been captured by the international banksters. In that context, I liked the quote in this article: "There is (as yet) no Bitcoin futures exchange, no Bitcoin derivatives, no Bitcoin hypothecation or rehypothecation." This article hit the nail on the head when pointing out that having no paper Bitcoins means that there are no possible pyramid schemes of Bitcoin LEVERAGE ... as least so far ... However, meanwhile, the combination of paper gold, and electronically tagged gold, has become about 100 times bigger than all the real physical gold, because the gold market's manipulated rigging, and rerigging, and rererigging, etc., has become the norm for a long, long time.
Anyone who spends the time and effort to talk to a large number of a wide variety of ordinary people, from all walks of life, about their monetary system, will discover that the vast majority of them are so clueless that they barely have any clue how clueless they are! Generally, they presume they already "know," BUT WHAT THEY "KNOW" TENDS TO BE BASED ON THEIR "COMMON SENSE," WHICH IS TOTALLY FALSE!
The majority of people implicitly believe in a principle which could be called the "Conservation of Money." The idea that private banks create the public money supply out of nothing, as debts, is too flabbergasting! Even less is the ordinary person able to comprehend the LEVERAGE of making more and more money out of nothing, on the basis of the previous money that was made out of nothing.
We apparently are only just barely beginning to reach diffuse tipping points in public opinions, where about half the people are starting to no longer believe in some of the Huge Lies, which they used to believe without critically examining. However, we are still nowhere remotely close to those people comprehending more deeply what the radical truths are ... only that many more of them are no longer believing in the Huge Lies, which they had been previously taking for granted as being the truth.
"The physical gold that remains in London as unallocated bars is the foundation for leveraged paper-gold trades. This chain of events is perfectly ordinary and in keeping with time-honored custom," explains Hathaway
And Romans used to cut off edges of gold coins. That doesn't make it OK
This could have been conveyed in other words: "We are busy scamming here, can't you see we are busy scamming here? Don't be dis'n our scamming here, our time-honored custom of scamming is perfectly ordinary."
Having paper gold is like having a blow-up girlfriend.
Without even the happy ending.
correction: having paper gold is like BEING the blow-up girlfriend.
Only 53% most afraid of the US government? Were the other 47% polled out sick or something when this poll was taken?
47%, eh? I've heard that number before, and the reason they don't fear Uncle Scam is because he's their Uncle Sugar.
Only 53% most afraid of the US government? Were the other 47% polled out sick or something when this poll was taken?
You know what GC said about average intelligence? Add to that 15% of those the tyrants count aren't Americans, another 20% work for the tyrants and another 8-12% are guests. So even our guests agree with us.
sheepfluenza pandemic, EBT strain.
I have stopped buying gold and instead have started buying revolvers. I can't be certain, but I don't see people getting all caught up in 'paper revolvers' anytime soon. But, with idiots abound, never say never.