I love people holding gold as if one day it will be used. Let me fill you in. The day you are chipping pieces of gold off to buy bread is the day guns and ammo are far more valuable. When the world goes to crap it will be force and intimidation that will rule the day, not some guy with a sack full of gold coins.
I love people holding gold as if one day it will be used. Let me fill you in. The day you are chipping pieces of gold off to buy bread is the day guns and ammo are far more valuable. When the world goes to crap it will be force and intimidation that will rule the day, not some guy with a sack full of gold coins.
I also didn't see any "ownage". Ron Paul is a smart guy and has his well defined position and Bernanke is a smart guy with his well defined position. Always warms my heart to see a politician making an abstract point instead of trying to get something done.
In the meantime, my purchasing power is intact.
In the meantime, my purchasing power is intact.
How about your paper money? :D
How?
Anthony is making a legitimate point: those stockpiling gold are not doing so in the expectation of a transition from paper money to gold in an economy that otherwise remains the same; rather, they're betting on an utter collapse of the economy. When that occurs, a rifle, ammunition, water-purifying tablets, some food, and some control of arable land will be infinitely more useful than some shiny gold bullion. There'll be nothing to purchase with your gold: no-one will give up land and ammunition when the only exchanges taking place will be barter exchanges of tangibly useful commodities. Even gold requires some exchange economy where it functions as money.
My USD does just fine.
Also, yes, the USD is taking some heat thanks to QE whatever number we are on now, but the rest of the world has just as serious issues. Europe is sitting on a powder keg, the Middle East is tumultuous and China keeps raising rates trying to cool off its own inflation.
Yes, we import a ton. But where? China and they peg their currency.
Inflation is pretty modest when you remove food and energy from the equations. Energy use is a factor of proximity to work and living. Food prices are another animal, but I think they can be managed.