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Utah just one of Thirteen States that want Gold Currency

Here at Goldcoin.org we have previously discussed the moves in Utah to introduce its own gold currency, Gold currency is making a comeback! In Utah, they could soon be buying a hamburger with gold! and noted that progress was made by the passing of a bill in Utah Gold Currency a step closer.
However, Utah is not alone.


There are no fewer than 12 other States which are pushing for a return to gold currency by introducing bills before the Legislature in the form of the ”Constitutional Tender Act”.
The 12 States are:
Colorado
Idaho
Indiana
Montana
Missouri
New Hampshire
North Carolina
South Carolina
Tennessee
Vermont
Virginia
Washington

The “Constitutional Tender Act”


The United States Constitution declares, in Article I, Section 10,
“No State shall… make any thing but gold and silver coin a Tender in Payment of Debts”. This means that no State can make something a “tender in payment” (which means they cannot “make something an offer as payment”) for any debts, which would include debts owed by and to the State.
However, EVERY State in the United States of America HAS made some other “Thing” an offer as payment – they have by law declared that they will accept, and pay out, Federal Reserve Notes for any debts owed by or to them.
Therefore, every State is in violation of Article I, Section 10 of the U.S. Constitution.
Thus the need for the “Constitutional Tender Act” — a bill template that can be introduced in every State legislature in the nation, returning each of them to adherence to the United States Constitution’s actual legal tender provisions.

Most importantly the bills are aimed at protecting the people from the continued devaluation of the dollar and almost certain hyperinflation which is due in the future.
It is also seen as a way for States to insulate themselves from the policies and practices of the Federal Reserve which seems to be pursuing the inflationary practice of monetizing the national debt to address the consequences of runaway federal spending.

The Privately Owned Central Bank

Did you know that the Federal Reserve is a private institution with link shareholders? Most folk believe it is a federal agency.

Fed shareholders earn 6% interest “by law” and as for reserves, well they have none. The only thing the Fed does is create paper and charge the government interest for doing so. It also has licence to print “paper money” that is not backed by assets. The more it produces the more the value of the dollar is diluted. The $800 Billion it has printed for QE2 are merely bits of paper with ink on them that eventually some average Joe will be charged interest for using or borrowing. In reality the money doesn’t exist just the debt it creates.

Individual states have not issued legal tender for over a hundred years so why now?


Because the weakening of the dollar by the Fed to essentially reduce the size of the national debt has also eroded the savings of citizens, the price of their houses, the worth of their pay cheques and eroded their purchasing power at a time when inflation is rising but wages are stagnant. Enough is enough.
History is on the side of the people here. In the original drafting of the Constitution the Founders disliked “paper” money so much they provided specific wording against it.
The transcript of the debates in the original Constitutional Convention shows the attitude of the Founders toward paper money was one of disgust. In debate one delegate, Roger Sherman, called for the insertion of an absolute prohibition against states issuing their own paper money.

Mr. Wilson and Mr. Sherman moved to insert after the words ‘coin money’ the words ‘nor emit bills of credit, nor make any thing but gold and silver coin a tender in payment of debts’ making these prohibitions absolute…

Mr. Sherman thought this a “favourable” crisis for crushing paper money.

The Founders voted to adopt Sherman’s “crushing” of state-based paper money.

As for the federal government, the original draft of the Constitution included language permitting the federal government to issue unbacked paper money. The Founders objected strongly to this power. The objections were summed up by delegate Oliver Ellsworth:

Mr. Elsesworth thought this a favourable moment to shut and bar the door against paper money. The mischiefs of the various experiments which had been made, were now fresh in the public mind and had excited the disgust of all the respectable part of America. By witholding the power from the new Governt. more friends of influence would be gained to it than by almost any thing else. Paper money can in no case be necessary. Give the Government credit, and other resources will offer. The power may do harm, never good.

Those who wrote the Constitution decisively stripped the federal government of the power to issue inconvertible paper money. And stripped it stayed… until, temporarily, during the Civil War. Saving the Union was of transcendent importance.
For most of American history dollars were convertible into gold or sometimes silver.
It is a 20th century innovation to have unconvertible money


On April 19 1933 Franklin D Roosevelt took the US off the Gold Standard and Americans had to exchange their gold for paper dollars at $20.67 an ounce (so a dollar was approximately equal to 1/20th of an ounce of gold). This was the start of the Great Confiscation which lasted until 1975.
In 1945 The Bretton Woods Agreement created a “Gold exchange standard” whereby the US promised to fix the price of gold to $35 an ounce (the dollar therefore was worth 1/35th of an ounce). The dollar therefore became the world’s reserve currency and was used for international trading and commerce, notably for the quotations of oil. Therefore all other currencies were effectively pegged to the dollar and therefore gold. At this point “paper” money had a reference value and theoretically could be exchanged as originally intended for a specific weight in gold.

However, in 1971 Richard Nixon suspended the convertibility of the dollar into gold because of the huge US debts following the Vietnam War. This was another nail in the dollars coffin. The gold price was approximately $41 an ounce ( so a dollar was worth 1/41th of an ounce). This also effectively unhinged all the other currencies from a gold standard as they had all been pegged to the dollar. The Demonetization of gold was completed by the Jamaica Agreement. This meant currencies could freely float in value up and down which they did. It marked the first time in history that only Fiat currencies existed (i.e. unbacked currency).
President Nixon announced this as a temporary suspension.

Nixon Lies again and again

President Nixon made certain promises to America when he suspended convertibility of the dollar. August 15, 1971:

“I have directed Secretary Connally to suspend temporarily the convertibility of the dollar into gold ….

Now, what is this action–which is very technical–what does it mean for you?

Let me lay to rest the bugaboo of what is called devaluation.

If you want to buy a foreign car or take a trip abroad, market conditions may cause your dollar to buy slightly less. But if you are among the overwhelming majority of Americans who buy American-made products in America, your dollar will be worth just as much tomorrow as it is today.”
The dollar has actually lost 3848% of its value when measured against Gold since Nixon declared this.
An ounce of gold is today quoted at $1420 (rounded up) which means that a dollar is technically only worth 1/1420th of an ounce compared to 1/41th of an ounce when Nixon made his declaration.
This steady erosion of the worth of a Dollar is exactly why there are calls for a return to gold currency or gold-backed currency in 13 States with others already contemplating the same.
One can understand the concerns and the choice between paper dollars or a piece of gold to preserve your wealth seems self-evident.
Just in case let’s check the value of the Dollar expressed in Gold.

Value of US Dollar expressed in Gold (ounces)

1933


1945

1971

2011

1/20


1/35

1/41

1/1420

0.0500


0.02857

0.02439

0.00070

From Confiscation until Bretton Woods 12 years later the Dollar lost 175% of its value against gold (an average of 14.58% per annum).
From Bretton Woods created the standard until Nixon removed it 26 years later the Dollar lost 117% of its value against gold (an average of 4.5% per annum).
In the last 40 years since Nixon unhinged the Gold Standard, the US Dollar has lost 3484% of its value against gold (an average of 87.1% per annum).
In a total of 78 years since confiscation in 1933 the US Dollar has lost over 7142% of its value against Gold (an average of 91.56% per annum).

So the period of greatest stability for the Dollar was with a Gold Standard and Confiscation still in place.
The most unstable period for the Dollar was when neither of these was in place as is the case today.


If the Dollar continues to falls by at least the average for the last forty years, bearing in mind that current world events could add to its woes, then it would be worth 0.00009 ounces of gold or 1/11111th of an ounce within a year – that gives a gold price of $11,111 an ounce.


It is especially pertinent when one considers the strength of an investment over time – Gold is anti-inflation and anti-crisis. It will always maintain real value, worth and purchasing power which can be traded and wilfully accepted in exchange for the necessities of life. This cannot be said for paper money which as history has proved time and again eventually becomes a worthless piece of paper whose only real value is its calorific heat value for burning!
This illustrates exactly why the peoples of Thirteen States are leading the charge to convert to a gold currency that maintains real value rather than be chained to the US Dollar which will only be of value for fire-lighting very soon.
It is inevitable that currency must be established against a fixed reference for it to have any real value and this road will always lead back to Gold as history has proved.
If you’ve never bought Gold before then maybe now is a good time before your savings literally go up in flames.

LINGOLD SAVING PLAN - GOLD

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