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Monthlies wrote:I've got no worries.
I just thought that it was ingenious wordplay, and perhaps not a complete coincidence, either. Just think about it... Our paper money can be referred to as bills, and bills are also a record of debt, as well as a way of prompting repayment due to said debt. Right now, an unhealthy amount of US citizens are in debt, and so is the government. And America, in general, is a big, fat consumer these days. Which means that there're more debtors than debtees right now. And right on our money, it uses "debt" instead of something else. Of course, I guess it's hard to "trade" with this system, because its focus in on profit. And when you make profit, monetarily, it can't be a win-win transaction. So, debt is prevalent. :O
And I'm rambling. Woo! But I did manage to take the bite and the bark out of what I really wanted to say. XD;;
Then they switched us to debt money, and forced us to accept it. Now we trade money that is just a note that we borrowed money to make the money. Which is the height of stupidity.
Saya wrote:Yeah. Fiat money is sort of a complicated issue. I don't think one can dismiss it as being "stupid" without a legitimate argument. Personally, I feel it it has its ups and downs. The downs being its inflationary nature and the increased control over the economy it gives the government, and the ups being its short-term stability and the way its pretty much killed deflation. And in fact, I think it can be argued that America could not have sustaiend its incredible economic growth over the 20th century if it had been on the gold standard. Or whatever retarded standard we would've switched to. I'm looking at you, free silver.
Saya wrote:Then they switched us to debt money, and forced us to accept it. Now we trade money that is just a note that we borrowed money to make the money. Which is the height of stupidity.
Yeah. Fiat money is sort of a complicated issue. I don't think one can dismiss it as being "stupid" without a legitimate argument.
Personally, I feel it it has its ups and downs. The downs being its inflationary nature
and the increased control over the economy it gives the government, and the ups being its short-term stability and the way its pretty much killed deflation. And in fact, I think it can be argued that America could not have sustaiend its incredible economic growth over the 20th century if it had been on the gold standard. Or whatever retarded standard we would've switched to. I'm looking at you, free silver.
And the whole "demand precious metals for your money" thing isn't that great really. People tried that en masse a few years back. Did not end well. What was that called? Oh yeah, the Great Depression.
Yet gold will buy you what it bought thousands of years ago, now it costs 10 times the price for things, and that's just from the 30s and 50s.
The amount of inflation we've seen since our switch to fiat money is so off the scale that, and the sad thing for me is that I've seen the "but the inflation" argument so often that I can't even laugh at it anymore, because so many people take that crap seriously.
The facts do not agree at all.
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