2/17/2007 10:35:05 PM
words
2/18/2007 12:10:48 AM
i know what he says is important, i just wish i understood more of it. i mean i just found out about the private nature of the federal reserve like a year ago. maybe if fewer celebrities died, the average person would be more interested in our country's monetary policy...
2/18/2007 10:41:01 AM
2/18/2007 10:55:03 AM
2/18/2007 11:04:03 AM
2/18/2007 11:45:59 AM
All things equal, most of that loss occured in the 60s and 70s, which is unlikely to be repeated in the future.
2/18/2007 12:47:41 PM
Who the fuck is Ron Paul and why should I care?
2/18/2007 12:49:56 PM
congressman from texas
2/18/2007 1:21:22 PM
^^ He's Sean Paul's brother.
2/18/2007 9:54:30 PM
Ron Paul is a small (L) from Texas who is in the US House as an R. He pretty much is one of the only people in congress with enough of a spine to question "his party"
2/18/2007 10:22:11 PM
2/18/2007 10:45:48 PM
2/18/2007 10:46:06 PM
2/19/2007 12:35:03 AM
^Even your cross holder there William Jennings Bryan wanted money tied to a commodity (gold and silver) and not just fiat.After the Cross of Gold speech, he did go on to lose the prez. election. But he bounced back by prosecuting Scopes for teaching evolution in Tenn.
2/19/2007 2:41:52 AM
2/19/2007 8:48:13 AM
BTW: a sizable chunk of the growth of M3 is being shuffled overseas to be used by other nations in international transactions, therefore it is not impacting U.S. domestic inflation. World Trade is exploding, after all, the various actors need reserve currency to participate, so they are using dollars and Euros. If the Federal Reserve was not allowing M3 to rise then the demand for U.S. Dollars from overseas would drain the Domestic supply, producing deflation. Of course, not all of it is going overseas because while a large amount of growth is needed they have exceeded that amount; so domestic inflation is high (only because I think 3% is high) and the trade deficit is larger than it otherwise would be. Overall, to the best of my understanding of all possible monetary systems, the current Federal Reserve (fiat) System is the most stable. We are able to create money out of thin air when it is useful to do so. The only drawback is a matter of degree: in times of prosperity they should target annual inflation between 0% and 1%, not 2% and 3% like they do now. So, all in all, the current system is great; it allows flexible exchange rates, hinders banking collapses, and provides a relatively stable store of value. I just wish we could reset it once in awhile so a penny becomes worth as much as today's nickel. But that is impossible, so no point thinking about it. If people were determined to go back to a commodity backed currency, I would demand any commodity not used by others. If the rest of the world was on gold, I'd pick silver.
2/19/2007 9:13:12 AM
to me that makes even less sense... the commodity would dictate the value of your currency then. whatever it was that you picked would then be at the whim of how much of it you have found. potentially leading to another debeers situation.... or am i wrong on this? we would also lose the ability to weather and lessen the bumps caused by the bus. cycle.... i know in the past 20 years or so... the fed has done an outstanding job in this respect.
2/19/2007 9:38:05 AM
2/19/2007 10:25:10 AM
2/19/2007 10:32:08 AM
2/19/2007 12:47:28 PM
2/19/2007 3:36:12 PM
2/19/2007 11:19:18 PM
As Gorbachev famously said, "Imagine a country that flies into space, launches Sputniks, creates such a defense system, and it can't resolve the problem of women's pantyhose."
2/20/2007 7:34:23 AM