Irresponsible not to post?: gold, silver wise.

KGC4Dixie

Jr. Member
Sep 13, 2009
94
3
The Dollar Meltdown: Surviving the Impending Currency Crisis http://www.lewrockwell.com/goyette/goyette13.1.html

Excerpt: During the Civil War, America FIRST forsook gold and silver. However, by 1879, the country went back to the gold standard. Then in 1934, private ownership of gold was abolished. And in 1971, Nixon chose to go off the gold standard. At that point, inflation took over. [Caps added for emphasis.]
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The Dollar Meltdown: Surviving the Impending Currency Crisis with Gold, Oil, and Other Unconventional Investments

The Dollar Meltdown is definitely a gloom and doom book. Fortunately, the author’s style of writing and enthusiasm for his subject – how to avoid the doom – keep the book from being depressing. Charles Goyette – the author – simply tells it like it is. And what it is, is a sad state of affairs. Goyette’s presentation is composed of four parts: where we are; how we got here; what happens next; and what to do.

Under the heading of “where we are,” Goyette points out that “the future of the dollar has already been determined.” For all intents and purposes, the dollar is dead. It has lost “96 percent of its purchasing power under the Federal Reserve System’s mismanagement.” Along with a valueless dollar, Goyette makes it abundantly clear where we are:

From January 2007 to 2009, 5.1 million jobs were lost; 13.7 million people were out of work and 32.2 million people were on welfare (food stamps). Retirement plans are all but worthless. $9.7 trillion was spent on bailouts. An astonishing number of homes – 19 million – stand vacant. U.S. debt is approximately $12 trillion.

Goyette then proceeds to discuss the great bailout, which he equates to robbing Peter to “subsidize a few hundred banking Pauls.” The result is massive debt. He quotes David Walker, the former comptroller general of the United States, who said, “The system is broken.” In a nutshell, Walker’s statement pretty much sums up where we are.

The second section of the book talks about “how we got here.” Goyettes begins by showing how gold came to “serve as money.” Nations whose economies are based on precious metals are healthy. Those that aren’t, fail. During the Civil War, America first forsook gold and silver. However, by 1879, the country went back to the gold standard. Then in 1934, private ownership of gold was abolished. And in 1971, Nixon chose to go off the gold standard. At that point, inflation took over.

Goyette provides historical examples of what happens when governments choose paper money over the gold standard. He cites China, the Roman Empire, the French Revolution, Germany, and Zimbabwe, where the annual inflation rate “hit 231 million percent in the summer of 2008.”

According to Goyette, the Federal Reserve System is leading America down the same path as Zimbabwe. “Inflation in the U.S. is a result of the Federal Reserve turning government money into debt.” The result is bad investments. “People and businesses make decisions n ways they otherwise would not.” In other words, legitimate investments are replaced by speculation, which is the same thing as gambling. Roll the dice and hope you get lucky. Which means that long-term planning – savings – is cast aside.

In “what happens next,” Goyette predicts that repudiation of debt is looming on the horizon. The forerunner of repudiation is deflation, which, according to Goyette, is what is taking place in real estate values. And the only way governments can fight deflation is by printing money. This leads to “stagflation,” which is “a period of economic stagnation accompanied by inflation.” Somewhere in this scenario, “cash is trash.” Which is when “the crack-up boom” occurs. If and when the crack-up does happen, runaway inflation is the result. And runaway inflation cannot be contained.

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"We believed we were right and have not changed our minds." http://groups.yahoo.com/group/KnightsoftheGoldenCircleCD/
 

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KGC4Dixie

KGC4Dixie

Jr. Member
Sep 13, 2009
94
3
Gold Bulls Claim Price Could Double to $3,000 in Five Years
by Martin Masse
http://www.lewrockwell.com/spl2/gold-3000.html

Now some fund managers claim the price could more than double to $3,000 (ÂŁ2,080) per ounce within five years.

Heavily indebted governments throughout the developed world are struggling to fill deficits of black-hole dimensions in public finances by imposing spending cuts and tax rises. Both are expected in Britain's emergency Budget on June 22 and neither will be popular.

But keeping interest rates lower than inflation and letting the currency take the strain is another way to reduce the real value of debt. You can see why politicians may feel that is the ''least worst'' option.

Stealthily robbing savers by eroding the purchasing power of money is less likely to cause riots in the streets than spending cuts, because inflation tends to hit older people hardest while unemployment hits the young.

Governments can devalue their own currencies, but it is harder for them to make more gold. That fact helped prompt record inflows of $484m (ÂŁ336m) into gold exchange-traded commodities this week, while gold trading volumes peaked at $2.1bn (ÂŁ1.45bn).

However, the precious metal is not a one-way bet and it slipped back below $1,200 (ÂŁ830) on Thursday as some investors took profits amid anxiety about an unsustainable bubble in the gold price.

Graham French, manager of the M & G Global Basics Fund, was undeterred. He said: "In a scenario of rising sovereign risk, where government finances are hugely overstretched and central banks have been systematically devaluing paper money, gold's value as a safe haven and a stable physical currency can only increase over the medium term.

"Against this backdrop, the gold price could go much higher than these already elevated levels. It wouldn't be too far fetched to see it rising above $2,000, or even up to $3,000."

Mr French's strategy is based on the belief that things that emerging markets sell will fall in price over the next five years, while things that emerging markets buy will rise in price.

The explanation is that demand from the heavily indebted developed world may remain subdued, while demand from largely debt-free consumers in emerging markets will rise.

Rupert Robinson, chief executive of Schroders Private Bank, said: "Gold is setting record highs in almost every currency, despite headwinds including a strong dollar and monetary tightening in India and China, the main end markets for gold. Today's economic environment makes gold a must in any client portfolio.

"Interest rates are at historically low levels; central banks are bailing out the system; we have seen a huge amount of quantitative easing; currencies being debased and governments around the world are short of money.
 

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KGC4Dixie

KGC4Dixie

Jr. Member
Sep 13, 2009
94
3
SWR said:
What is it with you guys copy/pasting entire websites on the TreasureNet server? :icon_scratch: spam4:

SWR,

Is that a strain for text posting or to show the article and page with graphics?

With text posting there's no concern about broken links with article vanishing like Confederate gold.

Gary
 

Shortstack

Silver Member
Jan 22, 2007
4,305
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Detector(s) used
Tesoro Bandido II and DeLeon. also a Detector Pro Headhunter Diver, and a Garrett BFO called The Hunter & a Garrett Ace 250.
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
SWR said:
KGC4Dixie said:
SWR said:
What is it with you guys copy/pasting entire websites on the TreasureNet server? :icon_scratch: spam4:

SWR,

Is that a strain for text posting or to show the article and page with graphics?

With text posting there's no concern about broken links with article vanishing like Confederate gold.

Gary

Gary...these posts are political in nature....and have absolutely NOTHING to do with the Knights of the Golden Circle.

Spam...at best

Spam ain't bad if it's chopped up and fried with homefries and scrambled eggs.
 

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KGC4Dixie

KGC4Dixie

Jr. Member
Sep 13, 2009
94
3
SWR said:
KGC4Dixie said:
SWR said:
What is it with you guys copy/pasting entire websites on the TreasureNet server? :icon_scratch: spam4:

SWR,

Is that a strain for text posting or to show the article and page with graphics?

With text posting there's no concern about broken links with article vanishing like Confederate gold.

Gary

Gary...these posts are political in nature....and have absolutely NOTHING to do with the Knights of the Golden Circle.

Spam...at best

And I suppose if your bread, milk and eggs go up by 300% that's political also?

Hummm...strange politics. This is about holding onto your gold!

Gary
 

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