Good video. Martin Armstrong had something on the same lines recently. But it is funny to hear different people's interpretation. I agree more with you. He seems to think precious metals are not a great bet. But I tend to think 'at least it will always be worth something'. My wife's family have some stock in the Guantanamo Bay Sugar Company. I don't think they are getting their money back any time soon. If it would have been in gold or silver they would still have something to show for it.
Ferfal didn't show it but Roman coins during the Empire stage show a clear progress of debasement.
There is nothing like looking at the coins from various time periods to show the decline.
In the Middle Ages, a late Empire coin of iron would have been worthless --whereas gold was still of great value.
Mel Tappan used to talk of how a $20 gold piece from 130 years ago could still buy a good firearm or a nice suit of clothes --same as originally. That it's value in real terms remained constant.
Many years ago my young son and I used to watch a TV show called "Forever Knight" -- about a coven of vampires who had lived for many centuries. Who in the course of their lives had watched several civilizations of Man rise and fall.
I remember that when I watch the emotional arguments on US Internet political blogs. So many of the politicans betray their followers -- and will soon be dust anyway.
Imagine someone who ignored Richard Nixon versus George McGovern in 1972 and instead focused on acquiring 1 oz gold coins at $35 per oz.
By the way, olive oil and wheat flour at Costco are the real values, in Roman Terms.
Of course, that may change. The American Founders designed the US Constitution based on the mixed government theory of Aristotle (circa 350 BC) --as passed down by Polybius circa 130 BC.
But the Roman Republic --on which America was based -- collapsed into civil war and chaos roughly 70 years after Polybius wrote about its inherent strength.
Today , America is following a similar course -- its elites grow ever richer from a global empire while her middle class are being destroyed by the burdens of Empire and the import of cheap foreign goods and labor.
The US court case "216 Jamaica Avenue, LLC vs S&R Playhouse Realty Co." illustrates how the long view works not just for vampires.
In 1912, a lease for urban land in Cleveland, Ohio had a clause that rent would be $10,000/year rising to Maximum of $35,000 per year by 1923. For a 99 year lease --renewable for a second 99 year to 2110 AD.
$35,000 was a fortune at a time when the USA had not yet fought WWI, WWII, the Korean War and the Cold War to become a global power.
Obviously $35,000 today is not what it was in 1912. But the lease also had an interesting anti-inflation clause -- that the rent would be payable in gold. That term became invalid in the 1930s when the US Congress banned private ownership of gold --but the US Courts ruled that it became valid again when Congress restored the right to trade in gold around 1975. A decision that the landlord used to escape the ruinous $35,000 per year cap on the rent.
See http://www.ca6.uscourts.gov/opinions.pdf/08a0322p-06.pdf .
Guys, unless specifically told not to, I'll post the reply here in the blog so everyone can read it. I'll just leave the first name, and remove the last name, email or any other specific information for privacy reasons. Thanks
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I love this light. Runs on a single AAA and is capable of big boy lumen output (80 lumens) in a keychain package. Also has low and mid mode for longer runtime.
Fenix PD20
Single CR123 cell. 6 modes including 180 lumen turbo mode.
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Thanks for the Positive Reviews!
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Asus Eee 1005HA
Basic Door/Window Alarm
Emergency gadget
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Gorilla Tape
By all accounts and reviews I’ve read so far, it truly is “The toughest Tape on the Planet”
Transportation
I talked about these some time ago in an article, remember someone asked where to get one.
"Alternative Transportation"
Just found one reasonably priced and with excellent reviews in Amazon.
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Katadyn water filter
for the kits
and food ...
Got to have water: Klean Kanteen Stainless Steel
Moleskine, the ultimate little black cover notebook :)
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My wife keeps one in her purse too.
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You guys have the coolest stuff up there.:)
Jack Bauer’s bag.:) I’d like to get one of these and try it out.
Fox OC Spray
Don’t have this one but it’s the hottest OC spray out there.
Someone once called it “bottled lava”
Pick your poison people, but do carry OC
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Classic, and one of the few things I’d call a “must have” I own two of these.
My EDC bag: M1936 Musette Bag
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Make that "potable" water
And a more pricey alternative by Tikka
Just added one of these to my EDC bag, mostly for smoke, dust and debris
6 comments:
Good video. Martin Armstrong had something on the same lines recently. But it is funny to hear different people's interpretation. I agree more with you. He seems to think precious metals are not a great bet. But I tend to think 'at least it will always be worth something'. My wife's family have some stock in the Guantanamo Bay Sugar Company. I don't think they are getting their money back any time soon. If it would have been in gold or silver they would still have something to show for it.
Ferfal didn't show it but Roman coins during the Empire stage show a clear progress of debasement.
There is nothing like looking at the coins from various time periods to show the decline.
In the Middle Ages, a late Empire coin of iron would have been worthless --whereas gold was still of great value.
Mel Tappan used to talk of how a $20 gold piece from 130 years ago could still buy a good firearm or a nice suit of clothes --same as originally. That it's value in real terms remained constant.
Many years ago my young son and I used to watch a TV show called "Forever Knight" -- about a coven of vampires who had lived for many centuries. Who in the course of their lives had watched several civilizations of Man rise and fall.
I remember that when I watch the emotional arguments on US Internet political blogs. So many of the politicans betray their followers -- and will soon be dust anyway.
Imagine someone who ignored Richard Nixon versus George McGovern in 1972 and instead focused on acquiring 1 oz gold coins at $35 per oz.
By the way, olive oil and wheat flour at Costco are the real values, in Roman Terms.
Of course, that may change. The American Founders designed the US Constitution based on the mixed government theory of Aristotle (circa 350 BC) --as passed down by Polybius circa 130 BC.
But the Roman Republic --on which America was based -- collapsed into civil war and chaos roughly 70 years after Polybius wrote about its inherent strength.
Today , America is following a similar course -- its elites grow ever richer from a global empire while her middle class are being destroyed by the burdens of Empire and the import of cheap foreign goods and labor.
The US court case "216 Jamaica Avenue, LLC vs S&R Playhouse Realty Co." illustrates
how the long view works not just for vampires.
In 1912, a lease for urban land in
Cleveland, Ohio had a clause that rent would be $10,000/year rising to Maximum of $35,000 per year by
1923. For a 99 year lease --renewable for a second 99 year to 2110 AD.
$35,000 was a fortune at a time when the USA had not yet fought WWI, WWII, the Korean War
and the Cold War to become a global power.
Obviously $35,000 today is not what it was in 1912. But the lease also had an interesting
anti-inflation clause -- that the rent would be payable in gold. That term became invalid in
the 1930s when the US Congress banned private ownership of gold --but the US Courts ruled
that it became valid again when Congress restored the right to trade in gold around 1975.
A decision that the landlord used to escape the ruinous $35,000 per year cap on the rent.
See http://www.ca6.uscourts.gov/opinions.pdf/08a0322p-06.pdf .
There's really no 'magic' ratio between gold and silver.
Compared to the time of the Roman Empire, silver has depreciated in value vs. gold because:
1. massive "New World" discoveries of silver (e.g. Comstock lode)
2. silver's use in industry
a. short term it means more price volatility, depending on whether we're in a boom or recession
b. long-term industry tries to find substitutes for silver, or technological changes occur to reduce industrial demand
e.g. how much silver is used today in film processing vs. back in 1980?
This idea could be correct, but what about this: maybe gold is too expensive today, not silver too cheap.
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