No. Gold Isn’t Money any Longer https://propertarianism.com/2020/05/09/no-gold-isnt-money-any-longer/
Source date (UTC): 2020-05-09 15:29:47 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1259143534529122312
No. Gold Isn’t Money any Longer https://propertarianism.com/2020/05/09/no-gold-isnt-money-any-longer/
Source date (UTC): 2020-05-09 15:29:47 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1259143534529122312
May 3, 2020, 11:32 AM
—“GOLD IS MONEY!”–
No. You are confusing unperishability, collateral, commodity, and money. If gold was money it would not be priced in currency (which is liquid). It’s illiquid and volatile for the purpose of commerce and trade – particularly in imputation of prices and organizing production cycles – and that is why it’s not money: the transaction costs are ridiculous. And that’s why gold bugs want to sell it: to profit from the transaction costs of selling a commodity that is barely consumable but universally valuable by virtue of it’s demand, scarcity, unperishability, by false promise, fear, and doubt to suckers who feel out of control of their lives and the societies and their polities, and are desperate for psychological sedation by some sense of security – despite the fact that between purchase price and sale costs, they lose at least ten percent of its value, and the vaunted collapse never comes – because it can’t come under fiat currency targeted to maintaining price-inflation stability. Which is why we use fiat currency instead of gold: (a) we can maintain stability, (b) which increases the duration of the hierarchy and network of complex production cycles, (c) which decreases costs, and (d) continuously expands the sustainable networks of production and trade. (e) and gold isn’t insurable on deposit, and can’t be used as credit money in fractional reserve, so the price of credit would skyrocket. Gold is free to circulate. People don’t do it because THERE ISN’T ENOUGH OF IT. It’s possible to use gold as a backing for a physical currency money, but not for credit money. Almost every cent in circulation is credit money not money. So, the way we solve this problem is the way we do today: buy silver and gold as a hedge against volatility in the currency and use currency as a hedge against the volatility of the precious metals.
May 3, 2020, 11:32 AM
—“GOLD IS MONEY!”–
No. You are confusing unperishability, collateral, commodity, and money. If gold was money it would not be priced in currency (which is liquid). It’s illiquid and volatile for the purpose of commerce and trade – particularly in imputation of prices and organizing production cycles – and that is why it’s not money: the transaction costs are ridiculous. And that’s why gold bugs want to sell it: to profit from the transaction costs of selling a commodity that is barely consumable but universally valuable by virtue of it’s demand, scarcity, unperishability, by false promise, fear, and doubt to suckers who feel out of control of their lives and the societies and their polities, and are desperate for psychological sedation by some sense of security – despite the fact that between purchase price and sale costs, they lose at least ten percent of its value, and the vaunted collapse never comes – because it can’t come under fiat currency targeted to maintaining price-inflation stability. Which is why we use fiat currency instead of gold: (a) we can maintain stability, (b) which increases the duration of the hierarchy and network of complex production cycles, (c) which decreases costs, and (d) continuously expands the sustainable networks of production and trade. (e) and gold isn’t insurable on deposit, and can’t be used as credit money in fractional reserve, so the price of credit would skyrocket. Gold is free to circulate. People don’t do it because THERE ISN’T ENOUGH OF IT. It’s possible to use gold as a backing for a physical currency money, but not for credit money. Almost every cent in circulation is credit money not money. So, the way we solve this problem is the way we do today: buy silver and gold as a hedge against volatility in the currency and use currency as a hedge against the volatility of the precious metals.
Sorry but it was.
You are a chipmunk.
And you don’t know who you’re talking to.
If you did you wouldn’t have said something that stupid.
We know the time and place rule of law was invented.
China never invented it. Nor islam. India and russia still can’t manage it.
Source date (UTC): 2020-05-09 01:59:43 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1258939675995181056
Reply addressees: @niceprinter12 @healingbyhenry @sunkiisss
Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1258939088008359938
YOu don’t understand the word law.
He gave dictates.
Westerners have law
Rule of law: Sovereignty, Reciprocity, Jury, And the single natural law of tort we call ‘property’. Where else is there such law today? Anywhere? The primitives are still catching up.
Why? Endemic lying
Source date (UTC): 2020-05-09 01:51:48 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1258937683239370764
Reply addressees: @niceprinter12 @healingbyhenry @sunkiisss
Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1258936982371209217
Again, it’s not liquid like money but like a commodity, it’s insufficient in supply to function as money, and has transaction costs too high for money. It’s not money.
Furthermore, why do money-holders have a right to appreciation of holdings?
Source date (UTC): 2020-05-03 17:22:55 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1256997681710477313
Reply addressees: @twaitiblog @pennington_max @MacleodFinance
Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1256754969488658432
—“GOLD IS MONEY!”–
No. You are confusing unperishability, collateral, commodity, and money. If gold was money it would not be priced in currency (which is liquid). It’s illiquid and volatile for the purpose of commerce and trade – particularly in imputation of prices and organizing production cycles – and that is why it’s not money: the transaction costs are ridiculous. And that’s why gold bugs want to sell it: to profit from the transaction costs of selling a commodity that is barely consumable but universally valuable by virtue of it’s demand, scarcity, unperishability, by false promise, fear, and doubt to suckers who feel out of control of their lives and the societies and their polities, and are desperate for psychological sedation by some sense of security – despite the fact that between purchase price and sale costs, they lose at least ten percent of its value, and the vaunted collapse never comes – because it can’t come under fiat currency targeted to maintaining price-inflation stability. Which is why we use fiat currency instead of gold: (a) we can maintain stability, (b) which increases the duration of the hierarchy and network of complex production cycles, (c) which decreases costs, and (d) continuously expands the sustainable networks of production and trade. (e) and gold isn’t insurable on deposit, and can’t be used as credit money in fractional reserve, so the price of credit would skyrocket.
Gold is free to circulate. People don’t do it because THERE ISN’T ENOUGH OF IT. It’s possible to use gold as a backing for a physical currency money, but not for credit money. Almost every cent in circulation is credit money not money.
So, the way we solve this problem is the way we do today: buy silver and gold as a hedge against volatility in the currency and use currency as a hedge against the volatility of the precious metals.
Source date (UTC): 2020-05-03 11:32:00 UTC
Whatever is in evidence as money. Right now fiat currency, in physical, or record form (shares in the state) is the only extant currency because no people can compete economically in the world without it. It will be different in the future just as today it differs from the past.
Source date (UTC): 2020-05-02 17:51:47 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1256642555707641862
Reply addressees: @SoenenJonas @pennington_max @MacleodFinance
Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1256641304139890691
Any commodity is a store of value. That does not make it money. BTC? What value is BTC without electricity? BTC is not money. It is a divisible share of the BTC network. A share just as fiat money is. But divisible and token money: a money substitute.
Source date (UTC): 2020-05-02 17:28:33 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1256636710382944259
Reply addressees: @pennington_max @MacleodFinance
Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1256630015099310080
That’s false. Gold is a durable commodity. The transaction cost is too high to function as money. The fraud rate is too high to function as money. The scarcity is too high to function as money (there isn’t enough of it). It’s too open to manipulation to function as money.
Source date (UTC): 2020-05-02 14:41:17 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1256594615970529288
Reply addressees: @MacleodFinance
Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1256489744063696896