Gold & Economic Freedom | Zero Hedge
Most of you have probably read Alan Greenspan's defense of the gold standard (long before Greenspan was a central banker, when he was still friends with Ayn Rand). It is well worth the read, or reread. As Deacon Bainbridge said in The Golden Pinnacle: "Historically, you've been able to tell everything you need to know about a government by the quality of its money."
The full text can be found here"
http://founders.archives.gov/documents/J...
The paper money we are forced to use is near to worthless.
It is literally true that the world was on a gold standard "before World War One." However, it is more correct to note that silver was the international standard, with gold a convenience. Only as the UK admitted total failure (after 200 years) to manage its silver coinage, that the Tower Mint and Bank of England went on a gold standard, which necessitated the expensive burden of recoining all the worn gold coins at full value of new coins. (They did that in the 1690s for silver. Twenty years later, England was on a de facto gold standard because all the silver had flowed out of the country. See "Newton at the Mint" by Sir John Craig.) Finally, in 1821, the UK went officially on a gold standard.
FIFTY YEARS LATER, in 1871, the German Empire went on the gold standard; and other nations followed, including the United States. It is known as "The Crime of '73" here. It was not a case of the free market competitively choosing the most convenient commodity. It was a matter of the central bankers of the nation-states deciding what would be lawful for everyone else.
Government laws always restricted banks. You must know the scene from the movie _Mary Poppins_ where the bank narrowly avoids catastrophe because of a run caused when the boy wanted his tuppence back. The laws there and here required a bank to clear its books on demand by the close of the business day. Such a law did not apply to barbers or carpenters.
Banks in the United States in the early 1800s often promised to pay 25 cents or 50 cents, but showed pictures of SPANISH or MEXICAN silver coins. (See "Spanish Coins on American Notes" here: http://scoan.oldnote.org) Gold-backed notes were rare until central banker Salmon P. Chase created the National Bank system to finance the Civil War. It required a bank to deposit at least $25,000 in gold with the Treasury. The bank got interest bearing Treasury bonds in return. Against 90% of the value of those bonds, the bank could issue its own National Bank notes. Again, the gold standard was not the result of millions of decisions by independent market agents, but was enforced from the government on the people.
A tangible asset desired more universally than any other... "Worth its weight in Gold!" Paper with ink on it .. a promissory note worth no more than the promises of the government that prints it... not so much.
Respectfully,
O.A.
877-412-7446
http://www.wealthviagold.net