let's say there's a world bank run on the federal reserve and surprise, we don't have any gold we single handedly ended the world as we know it. what are the odds someone nukes us at least once?i'm thinking like 100%. right?
1/18/2013 3:56:29 AM
1/18/2013 7:38:11 AM
I'm thinking somebody was drinking.
1/18/2013 7:44:30 AM
I remember when Dr. Evil single handedly end the world. He had no gold, run on federal reserve and surprise!
1/18/2013 7:54:50 AM
"And when I come back, and bust your ass, we're locking David Ershon in the federal reserve!"
1/18/2013 8:14:22 AM
Nukes wouldn't be needed. It would ruin U.S. credit, which would ruin the currency, and you can guess the rest.
1/18/2013 10:01:01 AM
I agree with that. Not having the gold would be the nuke.
1/18/2013 10:20:23 AM
yeah that's my point, except the dollar collapsing will kill a lot of other currencies. like all of them, i think. we'd blow up the entire world, metaphorically, in this scenario. maybe russia is pissed and just starts launching.and to clear up the english, it goes like this:"surprise, we don't have any gold; we single handedly ended the world as we know it," said the federal reserve to world banks asking for their bullion.]
1/18/2013 11:43:22 AM
1/18/2013 12:08:24 PM
1/18/2013 12:37:29 PM
1/18/2013 1:01:05 PM
and also a gold bubble
1/18/2013 1:02:32 PM
^^ true. I should have said since year so-and-so.
1/18/2013 1:05:33 PM
Serious question, and nowhere else really to ask it...There is gold on the moon. potentially a lot of it. (same with platinum and other metals)The problem is the high cost of retreiving it and returning it to Earth. What if it was extracted, processed into bullion, and then left in the most secure bank in the world (err), the moon? would people/countries buy in to having gold stored in the moon bank?
1/18/2013 1:13:03 PM
1/18/2013 1:14:20 PM
^^ I for one, am ready to invest
1/18/2013 1:17:21 PM
1/18/2013 3:05:17 PM
^
1/18/2013 3:26:20 PM
Yeah I don't think nuking the keystone nation of the world economy is the best way to respond to that.
1/18/2013 3:50:09 PM
1/18/2013 3:58:50 PM
1/18/2013 4:30:06 PM
1/18/2013 4:45:46 PM
^I'm gonna take this opportunity to beat the "GDP targeting" drum (or some related metric targeting)[Edited on January 18, 2013 at 5:31 PM. Reason : Gives the FED political cover to operate as it should]
1/18/2013 5:30:17 PM
Is that anything like the "dual mandate" of keeping low unemployment and low inflation?
1/18/2013 7:28:18 PM
1/18/2013 7:47:09 PM
This is one of those threads I wish I'd seen earlier so as to kill it in infancy.Now, despite itself, it has a modicum of legitimate discussion, so for now, it lives.
1/18/2013 8:44:01 PM
why would you kill this thread?
1/18/2013 8:59:48 PM
1/18/2013 11:16:13 PM
If there's one thing conspiracy theorists are not capable of it's parsimony.
1/19/2013 8:03:52 AM
1/19/2013 9:34:02 AM
^I agree with trying the automatic targeting measures, I just worry that they could be manipulated.
1/19/2013 3:46:36 PM
lets hope they dont nuke our gold.makes a hell of a salted bomb.
1/19/2013 7:08:31 PM
^ I think there are more efficient elements to use for that.Actually, come to think of it, no way of destroying the world is any better or worse than another.
1/19/2013 8:06:45 PM
I know at the least that on 23 September 1974, the world was able to see that Fort Knox still had its gold: http://www.numismaticnews.net/article/Gold_all_there_when_Ft_Knox_opened_doorsAlso the United States has large gold reserves elsewhere, and at the New York Fed (with even more gold than Fort Knox) it holds gold for other countries: http://data.newyorkfed.org/aboutthefed/goldvault.htmlAmerica still has plenty of gold, even though its currency hasn't been based on it for many decades.BTW the reason gold was historically so significant was that it doesn't react well with other materials (unlike silver, copper, or iron, which rust or tarnish), is easily divisible into smaller units, and has a high value-to-weight ratio because it is so rare (and it helped that until the rise of electronic devices, gold had little industrial use); the utility of counter-cyclical monetary policy following the Great Depression led to the loosening and eventual abandonment of the gold standard.
1/19/2013 10:00:34 PM
1/20/2013 12:11:30 AM
1/20/2013 6:22:54 PM
I suppose you don't know much about isotopes of Gold.
1/20/2013 6:40:58 PM
The number of primary and secondary neutrons from the blast will be an insignificant fraction of the total gold atoms. I said it rains gold. If you don't know what you're talking about you should leave the conceit at the door.
1/20/2013 7:13:20 PM
I suppose you don't know much about Gold 198 specifically.Maybe you should take your own advice.
1/20/2013 8:28:58 PM
Oh, so one neutron can transmute more than one Gold 198?Please, go on.[Edited on January 20, 2013 at 10:56 PM. Reason : ]
1/20/2013 10:55:23 PM
Please go on about how you know the size/configuration of the hypothetical weapon used in this retarded scenario?
1/21/2013 12:16:29 AM
Tell me more...[Edited on January 21, 2013 at 8:53 AM. Reason : ]
1/21/2013 8:52:05 AM
What the fuck kind of thread is this?
1/21/2013 8:54:52 AM
1/21/2013 9:16:22 AM
1/21/2013 10:01:29 AM
We had booms and busts before the Federal Reserve, they've just been much worse after. If there is a credit boom, there will be a contraction. You're overly concerned with treating the economic contraction and preventing any kind of market correction. I'd rather see policies that don't fuel the boom.You can call it insane, but what I'm saying is perfectly reasonable. This isn't a conspiracy. The Federal Reserve does have periods where interest rates are extremely low, which means that money is flowing into some area of the economy and pushing up prices. Eventually, the people that bought products that had "too high" prices are going to get hurt when prices fall back to market clearing level.
1/21/2013 10:18:25 AM