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DoomYoshi wrote:It's funny because the worst foreign policy decision that the US made last century was at request of the Brits. Should the world vote in the British elections? If the Shah of Iran was not instated, the Middle East would probably be relatively peaceful right now.
mrswdk wrote:DoomYoshi wrote:It's funny because the worst foreign policy decision that the US made last century was at request of the Brits. Should the world vote in the British elections? If the Shah of Iran was not instated, the Middle East would probably be relatively peaceful right now.
The current situation on the Korean peninsula > Iran.
Dukasaur wrote:mrswdk wrote:DoomYoshi wrote:It's funny because the worst foreign policy decision that the US made last century was at request of the Brits. Should the world vote in the British elections? If the Shah of Iran was not instated, the Middle East would probably be relatively peaceful right now.
The current situation on the Korean peninsula > Iran.
You're suggesting that it's somehow the Americans' fault that the Russians installed a puppet government in the north and partitioned the country like Germany instead of letting all Koreans vote in fair elections?
mrswdk wrote:Dukasaur wrote:mrswdk wrote:DoomYoshi wrote:It's funny because the worst foreign policy decision that the US made last century was at request of the Brits. Should the world vote in the British elections? If the Shah of Iran was not instated, the Middle East would probably be relatively peaceful right now.
The current situation on the Korean peninsula > Iran.
You're suggesting that it's somehow the Americans' fault that the Russians installed a puppet government in the north and partitioned the country like Germany instead of letting all Koreans vote in fair elections?
Great stuff. So the Americans rush in and demand they get to rule half of Korea after its liberation, pulls out and leave behind a south in which the security forces repeatedly and brutally suppresses the population and the armed forces repeatedly instigate violence with the north, the north moves in to re-unify the peninsula, and somehow when the Americans rush in to prop up their friendly dictators in the south the ensuing trouble is all the Soviet's fault?
warmonger1981 wrote:The difference between now and previous currencies is the the dollar has tangled a web so diverse and thick nobody can navigate it with ease. The world is much more dependant upon other economic systems. These systems are much more complex. Countries rely more on each other now than they ever have in the past.
patches70 wrote:warmonger1981 wrote:The difference between now and previous currencies is the the dollar has tangled a web so diverse and thick nobody can navigate it with ease. The world is much more dependant upon other economic systems. These systems are much more complex. Countries rely more on each other now than they ever have in the past.
The "but it's different now" argument. Ok. <shurgs> The American dollar collapsed already once. In 1971. This current system is only 45 years old. The dollar that was before 1971 is gone.
Do you know the average lifespan of a fiat currency? Between 27 and 39 years. That's it.
There have been 3,800 fiat currencies during the history of civilization. The exact same thing happened to every single one of them (excluding the current fiat currencies which as of right now there are 167 official fiat currencies. NOTE: there are 196 nations, 19 of them don't have their own currency, they use other nations).
The oldest fiat currency is the Pound Sterling, but it wasn't really a fiat currency until Bretton Woods went down.
Of all the fiat currencies ever used in the history of the world, there is no case in which it has been successful. Ever. Every fiat currency so far has been destroyed by hyperinflation, war, independence or were monetarily reformed. Like the dollar back in 1971.
The Pound Sterling, the most successful currency in the history of the world, was founded in 1694. The original Pound Sterling was a full troy ounce of pure silver (hence the name) but today there isn't a gram of actual silver in a Pound Sterling. The Pound Sterling has lost 98.4% of it's value. The most successful currency in the history of the world has lost over 98% of it's value.
Remember, when you price anything, any commodity when priced in anything other than a fiat currency, every single thing is cheaper now than it ever has been in the history of the world. Nothing has gotten more expensive, not a thing. Food is plentiful, resources are plentiful, yet it appears that everything gets more and more expensive. It's not that the commodities are getting more expensive, it's that the currency we use to exchange goods is getting worth less and less and less.
That is the problem with fiat currencies. Fiat currencies have some good qualities about them, it allows for the easy expansion of debt. But that's stupid when you think about isn't it? Debt? To use today what you are going to produce in the future. It's all good until the future becomes the present and you've already used up everything you produced.
Don't forget what money is, it's just a tool. Currency itself is not wealth. Things are wealth. Currency is just the medium upon which we exchange the goods. We don't have to use currency.
The interconnected world you talk about doesn't go away just because the medium of exchange becomes worthless. People are still going to need food, resources. People are still going to produce those resources, for themselves if nothing else because we need them just to live. Those who produce and those who wish to purchase those goods will always come to some agreement as to how to distribute said goods. If the dollar becomes worthless then the parties will agree on something else.
For instance, warmonger, you wake up tomorrow and the dollar is gone, just worthless. It doesn't even make good toilet paper because it rips your asshole. You're hungry, you go to your fridge and there's nothing in it. You can't go to the grocery store because all you have is worthless dollars that the store isn't going to accept.
Then you remember your neighbor has some chickens.
Now, you could go over to your neighbor's house, kill him and take the chickens. But there is no sense in that because you know you'll face retaliation from your neighbor's friends and family. Your breakfast would surely end up with you being dead if you go that route. However, you do happen to have a whole shitload of chopped wood. You go to your neighbor and offer to trade some wood for some eggs. He doesn't need any wood, but he does have some gold. He offers to buy your wood with some gold, and then offers to sell you some eggs for gold. You see, your neighbor knows another guy who would love to have some of that wood. The transaction is valuable to you both so you go ahead and do it.
In no time at all you'll find that people come up with alternatives to currency when the currency becomes worthless or otherwise unusable.
The most recent example of this is in Greece where the EU came in and pretty much looted the country of all it's euros. Facing a severe shortage of euros lo and behold private currencies started rising up. Those currencies tied to commodities or other currencies that someone had an abundance of. In your case, your neighbor might start making his own currency that can be exchanged for eggs on demand by the holder. People will want that currency, because if they have a few of them in their pocket they are guaranteed to be at least able to exchange them for eggs. That is an example of a private currency and it's not a fiat currency because it's tied directly to some commodity.
Fiat currencies are so bad and are known to be unstable, there is zero dispute on that. They always fail. Commodity money, on the other hand, is much more stable. However, the expansion of credit gets to be a problem with commodity money. You see, if your neighbor starts creating more currency than he has eggs to cover if everyone showed up one day to exchange them for eggs, he'd be fucked. So he can only safely create enough currency that he has eggs to cover.
When the dollar fails, fortunes will be lost, some people might freak out, but it would be replaced quickly, extremely quickly because people still need to trade things to live. No person can produce all the things they need to survive, it's not equitable nor practical to try and do everything yourself that needs to be done. You can't grow your own food, build your own shelter, cut your own hair, operate on yourself, make architectural plans, provide security for yourself, secure energy and all the other things one needs. There aren't enough hours in the day even if you had all the required skills. Division of labor is the best way to accomplish these things and the medium from which that labor is exchanged can literally be anything, anything at all.
The Mongols used Yak dung.
The British built the entire British Empire with the Tally Stick.
Indonesian peoples used sea shells.
Pharaoh used a commodity money based on grain when Joseph told him of the seven lean cows and the seven fat cows. That currency ended up making Egypt one of the most fabulously wealthy nations on the planet at the time. You might not believe in the story of Joseph but the ancient Egyptians used a grain based money and in times of famine every nation and tribe in the known world traveled to Egypt to get grain and it made them so rich the Pharaohs were able to bury themselves with tons of gold and jewels.
These fundamental don't change. The only thing that has ever changed is the medium with which we use to divide up the labor of the peoples of the world. Locally, nationwide and world wide. When the dollar dies (and it will die) one thing will always be there to take it's place quickly and easily until something else can be worked out, Gold.
Gold is money. It's always valuable. If there are no dollars or fiat currencies are worthless, I guarantee producers will take gold instead. You don't have any gold? Well you better have some skill, some commodity, something of value you can trade for gold or your fucked in the short run.
But isn't that already how it is? If you are a POS that doesn't know how to do anything, has zero skills, ambition or knowledge, you ain't gonna be living the rich life are you?
The "It's different this time" is bullshit, it's the same argument people made when every other fiat currency went kaput. People and countries relied on each other before there ever was a "dollar". People had complex economic systems in the past. The Roman economic system so mirrors our own it's scary. There ain't nothing new. If you brought an ancient Roman from the past in a time machine to the present and you tossed him a quarter, he'd know exactly what it was. He'd think George Washington was some type of Caesar but he'd know instantly it was money. He'd also know he'd have to perform some service, give some labor to acquire some more of those coins. He'd figure out real quick what a dollar was too and he'd just do what he could to work and earn whatever medium people use to exchange goods and services. Hey, maybe he'll try and stab you with his Gladius and take your money but he'd have the smarts to know that probably won't work out well for him in the immediate future after doing such a thing.
The only thing we got now, which destroyed other currencies in the past, mind you, is a whole lot of fucking debt. Debt always ends up destroying currencies and in the end someone takes a haircut. The old system will be replaced with a new system that works exactly the same and we'll just start the whole fucking cycle back over.
patches70 wrote:Don't be such chicken shit, remember the immortal words of FDR, there is nothing to fear but fear itself. Being afraid makes people do stupid shit. Don't be a stupid shit. Being afraid gives cover for politicians to do even more stupid shit.
warmonger1981 wrote:You may have misunderstood me. I'm not saying that the Dollar will never fail or everyone MUST gave it. I'm familiar with that currency and the use of everyday objects as currency such as sea shells. Unfortunately gold is not money. It's looked at more of a commodity. The little person sees it as money but major corporations and countries don't. Can you buy a car with gold or real estate? Most likely not. Fiat =debt.
The dollar didn't collapse in 1971. it was a surplus of U.S. dollars caused by foreign aid, military spending, and foreign investment that threatened this system The United States did not have enough gold to cover the volume of dollars in worldwide circulation. Basically we printed more dollars than we had to cover the exchange rate.
When this current system goes down the only other system is SDRs or pure credit. I think SDRs short term then credit. I'm interested in those alternative currencies in Greece. If you have more info on that I would be interested. Everyone knows Fiat currencies are crap yet everyone still puts FAITH in these systems.
The Roman empire is not like our current system. They didn't have futures,derivatives,short sales,bundle mortgages, option terms, OPEC. At least I'm not aware if any such systems.
warmonger wrote:Unfortunately gold is not money. It's looked at more of a commodity. The little person sees it as money but major corporations and countries don't.
warmonger1981 wrote: Can you buy a car with gold or real estate?
warmonger wrote: Fiat =debt.
warmonger wrote:The dollar didn't collapse in 1971.
warmonger wrote: it was a surplus of U.S. dollars caused by foreign aid, military spending, and foreign investment that threatened this system The United States did not have enough gold to cover the volume of dollars in worldwide circulation. Basically we printed more dollars than we had to cover the exchange rate.
warmonger wrote: I'm interested in those alternative currencies in Greece. If you have more info on that I would be interested.
warmonger wrote: Everyone knows Fiat currencies are crap yet everyone still puts FAITH in these systems.
warmonger wrote:The Roman empire is not like our current system. They didn't have futures,derivatives,short sales,bundle mortgages, option terms, OPEC. At least I'm not aware if any such systems.
patches70 wrote:warmonger wrote:Unfortunately gold is not money. It's looked at more of a commodity. The little person sees it as money but major corporations and countries don't.
Sure it's a commodity. Do you understand the difference between currency and money? Any commodity can be used as money because all commodities have value. Why do you think Central Banks all over the world are hoarding gold? It's a hedge against fiat currencies. It's the replacement for when the world reserve currency goes kaput. It is the little person who doesn't see gold as money because most people don't know the difference between money and currency. The big companies, the rich and nations definitely know gold is money and that is why nations, rich people and companies like to hoard gold. It's a hedge against negative aspects of currency.warmonger1981 wrote: Can you buy a car with gold or real estate?
Sure you can! Are you telling me that if someone came to you and said "Hey, I like your car. I'll sign over the deed to my house and property to you if you sign over your car title to me." You wouldn't take that deal? Hahahaha!warmonger wrote: Fiat =debt.
Yes! Correct! What are some things you can do with debt? If someone owes you $100 you can keep bugging them for the money, you could accept something else of value as repayment of the debt, could you not? Or, if you are willing you can say "Oh don't worry about it man, you don't have to pay me back", which is repudiation. That can be done with nations as well ya know.warmonger wrote:The dollar didn't collapse in 1971.
Yeah it did. What Nixon did was default on the US' debt.warmonger wrote: it was a surplus of U.S. dollars caused by foreign aid, military spending, and foreign investment that threatened this system The United States did not have enough gold to cover the volume of dollars in worldwide circulation. Basically we printed more dollars than we had to cover the exchange rate.
The pre1971 dollar wasn't a fiat currency. Any foreign government could exchange their dollars for a set amount of gold from the US gold reserve. US citizens couldn't do that mind you, but to make the dollar valuable to the world it was tied directly to gold. As a reserve the dollar was commodity money. You are right, we printed more dollars than we could but it was because we printed more dollars than we had gold to cover and starting with France the nations of Europe started turning in their dollar reserves for US gold. It was turned into what amounts to as a bank run and Nixon slammed the gold window.
That is a default. I know no one ever calls it that, but we all know what a default is.warmonger wrote: I'm interested in those alternative currencies in Greece. If you have more info on that I would be interested.
The WSJ on the Greek TEM. You can also look up TEM (currency) on wiki if you like or google TEM (currency). This type of thing always happens when the currency is taken away for some reason.
https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q ... 7741,d.eWEwarmonger wrote: Everyone knows Fiat currencies are crap yet everyone still puts FAITH in these systems.
Most people don't even understand how a dollar is created. Most people don't know that the dollar in their wallet stands for a unit of debt.
The dollar is valuable because it is backed by the "full faith and credit of the United States", so the saying goes. You've heard that saying, politicians saying those exact words especially whenever there is a new debt ceiling debate.
How much faith do you have in politicians?
The dollar is backed by the bayonets of the United States. As soon as people begin to not fear those bayonets so goes the dollar.
In a more literal sense, as soon as the petrodollar collapses, so goes the dollar. When Saudi Arabia begins accepting something other than dollars in exchange for their oil then that's it for the dollar as a reserve currency and that's it for the US' economic dominance over the world. All the dollars from around the world will end up back in the US which leads to the predictable consequences.warmonger wrote:The Roman empire is not like our current system. They didn't have futures,derivatives,short sales,bundle mortgages, option terms, OPEC. At least I'm not aware if any such systems.
The Romans didn't understand about risk? Sure they did. Everything you name there all involve risk. Especially derivatives. All those investments have the element of risk and one of those risks is the currency they are priced in collapses. That's generally a low risk scenario but these things don't keep a currency from collapsing. That's just a circular argument. If (when) the dollar collapses there are going to be some losers, wanna guess who some of those losers are going to be? Everybody who has those instruments priced in that currency of course! It's a risk they are willing to take and that's fine.
jgordon1111 wrote:
Now your thinking and speaking, yes its true history repeats, how have you prepared for what you know is coming?
patches70 wrote:jgordon1111 wrote:
Now your thinking and speaking, yes its true history repeats, how have you prepared for what you know is coming?
People should do the smart things. Have a fair amount cash around on hand (not just in the bank), PM's, real estate, stocks, bonds, jewelry, art is good to have, some in demand skills, guns and ammo is always nice to have (and hope to never need), and plenty of trade goods. A few weeks (minimum) of food and supplies.
No one need do this because they think the currency is going to collapse, but because disasters of all kinds come without warning. Supplies in case some natural disaster hits, the poor bastards in New Orleans sitting in the stadium probably wished they had some more food for instance. Trade goods that can be bartered if need be. Just be well diversified. Hell, a bad blizzard can be big trouble to people who aren't prepared for goodness sake.
It's not rocket science. Oh, and get out of debt and stay out of debt. That one is a tough one for a lot of people, but Jesus Christ that's one of the most important things individuals should do. Get out of debt, stay out of debt. These are just wise things people should do no matter if they believe the currency won't collapse. All kinds of bad stuff happens, a modicum of preparedness goes a long way.
And I don't know if it's so much that history repeats itself, it's just that people keep doing the same stupid shit over and over.
Dukasaur wrote:Falkomagno wrote:Dukasaur wrote:The U.S. is not unique in electing scumbags. I see all kinds of garbage winning elections all over the world.
I'm not even American and I'm offended by the insulting implication of the OP that the rest of the world is somehow smarter. People around the world are susceptible to the same problems of groupthink, kneejerk reactions to stimuli, and susceptibility to marketing ploys and buzzwords. If the rest of the world was invited to vote in U.S. elections, the results might be different, but they'd be unlikely to be any better.
The point is that in general terms, if Italy elect a Berlusconi, it has a way smaller effect that if US elect, well, its Berlusconi version.
Your point is that the rest of the world is not inherently smarter to know better, which is a very interesting point, then the problem is that democracy is flawed if uneducated people are able to vote. But that is a much broader discussion.
In this particular case, the prevalence of trump is being seeing as a scary thing for the rest of the world.
Trump doesn't scare me nearly as much as the Bushes did, and we survived 16 years of them. We'll survive Trump, too.
Falkomagno wrote: is too much responsibility to let the US population alone make the decision
Dukasaur wrote:saxitoxin wrote:taking medical advice from this creature; a morbidly obese man who is 100% convinced he willed himself into becoming a woman.
Your obsession with mrswdk is really sad.
ConfederateSS wrote:Just because people are idiots... Doesn't make them wrong.
DirtyDishSoap wrote:I'm more worried that some ass hat will get in office and start ruining diplomatic trade agreements. *CoughTrumpCough*
Trading agreements keeps the peace folks. We want your shit, you want our shit, we hate you, you hate us, but if we go to war, you probably won't get our shit and we won't get your shit. Lose/Lose situation.
Think there was a video I saw earlier where Putin said "Mutual destruction" kept the peace. Kinda disagree with that, but then again, no one wants to be part of the history where we nuked each other into oblivion.
Dukasaur wrote:saxitoxin wrote:taking medical advice from this creature; a morbidly obese man who is 100% convinced he willed himself into becoming a woman.
Your obsession with mrswdk is really sad.
ConfederateSS wrote:Just because people are idiots... Doesn't make them wrong.
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