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Leonard
on the Nevada Economy
Nevada
is in a crisis. Gasoline is now over $4.00 a gallon, food prices skyrocketing
higher and the highest home foreclosure rate ever. We're in trouble. Once
again the Nevada Legislature is already talking about raising taxes. But
are gasoline and food going up in cost or is there something else to blame?
Are these items more expensive or could it be the value of the money we
use is going down?
The
crisis Nevada, and the rest of the country, faces today is the crisis we
have with our money. The money we have been forced to use is becoming more
"worth-less" everyday. This is caused by "inflation". Inflation is caused
when the Federal Government has the Federal Reserve (which is not federal
and has no reserves) print more money to fund the government programs.
The US Treasury has no money so every time Congress needs more it simply
has the Federal Reserve print more out of thin air. Every time this happens,
each Federal Reserve Note in your pocket is worth less. The store owner
knows this and thus has to increase the price to make up for the worth-less
money.
Because
the Federal Reserve Note is worth-less, the State of Nevada needs more
of them each year just to maintain the services it provides so they increase
your taxes. Now you are paying more taxes with money that is worth less
than last year. Is it any wonder you are falling further behind each year?
Since
1986, the US Treasury has been minting American Eagle Gold and Silver Coins.
Last year, I exchanged 13 Federal Reserve Notes (FRN's) to get one American
Eagle Silver Dollar. Today that same American Eagle can be exchanged for
20 FRN's. Due to the FRN losing value, the value of the American Eagle
Silver Dollar has increased. My purchasing power has increased.
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This
makes the price of gasoline 0.21 cents per gallon, using American Eagles.
This clearly illustrates that it is not the price of gasoline that has
gone up but the value of the money we are forced to use has gone down!
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Let
me put it another way, if the State of Nevada had collected $13 Million
in American Eagles as taxes last year and this year it collected the same
$13 Million, the value of each coin would be worth more this year so there
would be no need to raise taxes!
Article
I, Section 10, Clause 1 of the US Constitution provides that “No State
shall * * * make any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment
of Debts”. This has never been amended or repealed. To conform to the
US Constitution, Nevada MUST use Silver and Gold Coin.
I plan
to introduce a voluntary, parallel Gold/Silver money bill for the Silver
State. This Sound Money Bill would allow the state of Nevada to include
the use of Gold/Silver U.S. minted coins (or their digital equivalent)
to be used in daily transactions for payables/receivables between it (the
state) and the inhabitants and businesses in Nevada. It would be totally
voluntary. Federal Reserve Notes could still be used or a combination of
Gold/Silver U.S. minted coins or a total transaction in Gold/Silver U.S.
minted coins (or their digital equivalent)!
There
are NO restrictions or laws by the Federal Government that prevent ANY
state from using Gold/Silver U.S. minted coins ! This bill is NOT radical...it
simply shows that the state of Nevada conforms to the U.S. Constitution
and wants to set an example of Constitutional conformity as well as offering
a "Sound Money" alternative to its inhabitants and businesses!
GOLD
AND SILVER COIN AND ELECTRONIC CURRENCY FAQ
1. Americans have
been using Federal Reserve Notes for some ninety years —so why stop now?
a.
The Federal Reserve Notes Americans use today are not the same, economically
or legally, as the Federal Reserve Notes used in previous decades.
Federal
Reserve Notes have gone through a process of deterioration. From 1913 to
1933, they were directly redeemable in United States gold coin; and the
banks were required to maintain a reserve of gold equal to forty percent
of their outstanding notes. Redeemability of Federal Reserve Notes in gold
for American citizens was terminated in 1933; but the notes remained indirectly
redeemable in silver from 1933 until 1968. Redeemability of Federal Reserve
Notes for foreigners was terminated in 1971. So, today, Federal Reserve
Notes are irredeemable in gold or silver. See Title 31, United States Code,
Section 5118(b, c). Thus, the present situation is radically different
from what it was prior to 1968 or 1971.
Furthermore,
the supply of Federal Reserve Notes (and of bank deposits payable in those
notes) has greatly expanded since the 1950s, seriously eroding the purchasing
power of all United States paper currency and base-metallic (“clad”) coinage.
Indeed, from 1985 to 2000, while the production of material goods in the
United States increased by 50%, the money supply increased by 300%.
In
sum, today the purchasing power of Federal Reserve Notes has no anchor
in a valuable monetary commodity (silver or gold); and the policy of the
Federal Reserve System is to increase the supply of those notes (and related
bank deposits), thereby further sinking the notes’ real value.
b.
The proposed legislation does not stop—or in any way inhibit—the use of
Federal Reserve Notes or base-metallic coin. It simply enables citizens
of Nevada to use United States silver and gold coin in preference to other
media of exchange in their monetary transactions with the State, if they
choose to do so.
Both
before and after the Federal Reserve System was created in 1913, the United
States minted silver and gold coins. Entirely base-metallic “clad” coinage
began to be minted only in 1970. So, today, Congress has authorized a multiform
monetary system, consisting of Federal Reserve Notes irredeemable in silver
or gold [see 12 U.S.C. § 411 and 31 U.S.C. § 5118(b)], base-metallic
coin [see 31 U.S.C. § 5112(a)(1-6)], silver coins [see 31 U.S.C. 5112(e)],
and gold coins [31 U.S.C. § 5112(a)(7-10)], all of which are equally
“legal tender” [see 31 U.S.C. §§ 5103 and 5112(h)], and any of
which any individual may use to the exclusion of the others [see 31 U.S.C.
§ 5118(d)(2)].
Under
the proposed legislation, those citizens of Nevada who prefer to use irredeemable
Federal Reserve Notes and base-metallic coinage may continue to do so.
But they will make this choice intelligently, knowing of their option to
use silver and gold coin instead.
2. Why should
Nevada question what the national government is doing with regard to monetary
policy?
Nevada
is not questioning, but is actually implementing, Congressional monetary
policy. As explained in No. 1, above, Congress has authorized several types
of money as official media of exchange, but has not given a special position
or preference to any. Through the proposed legislation, Nevada will enable
its citizens to choose among these various media of exchange, and will
facilitate their choices.
To
fulfill its duty to protect its citizens’ economic welfare, Nevada needs
to concern itself with the instability of the present monetary and banking
regimes. See No. 4, below. Obviously, Congress, too, is concerned with
this problem—or it would not have authorized the present multiform monetary
system. See No. 1, above.
3. Is it really
constitutional and otherwise legal for Nevada to offer its citizens monetary
freedom of choice?
Absolutely.
a.
Article I, Section 8, Clause 5 of the United States Constitution grants
Congress the power “To coin Money”; and Article I, Section 10, Clause 1
provides that “No State shall * * * make any Thing but gold and silver
Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts”. Congress has authorized the coinage
of silver and gold. See 31 U.S.C. §§ 5112(a)(1-7) (gold) and
5112(e) (silver). Congress has declared this coinage to be “legal tender”.
See 31 U.S.C. §§ 5103 and 5112(h).
The
proposed legislation simply allows and assists Nevada’s citizens to use
this coinage for that purpose, according to their own free choices. Thus,
the State obeys the constitutional requirement that it not “make any Thing
but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts”, by leaving that
choice to its citizens. Congress has also licensed the Federal Reserve
System to emit Federal Reserve Notes irredeemable in silver or gold. See
12 U.S.C. § 411 and 31 U.S.C. § 5118(b, c). Congress has authorized
the minting of base-metallic coin. See 31 U.S.C. § 5112(a)(1-6). And
Congress has declared Federal Reserve Notes and base-metallic coin to be
“legal tender”. See 31 U.S.C. §§ 5103 and 5112(h). The proposed
legislation allows and assists Necada’s citizens to use Federal Reserve
Notes and base-metallic coinage for that purpose, according to their own
free choices.
Although
the proposed legislation does adopt the various media of exchange that
Congress has declared “legal tender”, as a matter of constitutional law
it need not do so. For the Supreme Court has squarely held that Congress
lacks any constitutional power to specify what the States shall use as
“legal tender” or media of exchange in the exercise of their reserved sovereign
functions. See Lane County v. Oregon, 74 U.S. (7 Wall.) 71 (1869); Hagar
v. Reclamation District No. 108, 111 U.S. 701 (1884). As the proposed legislation
deals with Nevada’s reserved sovereign functions, it comes within these
decisions.
b.
Today, all United States coins and currencies, whenever minted or issued,
are equally “legal tender”. See 31 U.S.C. §§ 5103 and 5112(h).
The law makes no preferences among them. See Thompson v. Butler, 95 U.S.
695 (1878). Anyone may choose one form of “legal tender” as his medium
of exchange, to the exclusion of any or all other forms. See 31 U.S.C.
§ 5118(d)(2). And the courts must honor and enforce such choices.
See, e.g., Bronson v. Rodes, 74 U.S. (7 Wall.) 229 (1869); Butler v. Horwitz,
74 U.S. (7 Wall.) 258 (1869). So the proposed legislation simply aids Nevada’s
citizens in doing what Congress and the courts recognize as people’s statutory
rights.
4. Why should
Nevada provide its citizens with monetary freedom of choice?
Monetary
freedom of choice is necessary to stimulate and aid the circulation of
United States silver and gold coin as media of exchange in normal transactions
between Nevada and its citizens. This will provide the State and its citizens
with some level of insurance against monetary and banking crises that can
seriously undermine the value of irredeemable United States paper currency
and base-metallic coin. Such insurance is necessary because, under the
present Federal Reserve System, monetary and banking crises are likely,
if not almost assured.
The
Federal Reserve System is a central bank that operates on the principle
of “fractional reserves”: that is, the System has insufficient “reserves”,
or stocks of “lawful money”, to redeem all of its notes and deposits on
demand. For that reason, the System is always prone to a catastrophic “bank
run”, should the public lose confidence in its policies. Furthermore, the
Federal Reserve Note is a near-fiat currency, redeemable only in United
States base-metallic coins with little intrinsic value in the free market.
In addition, the Federal Reserve System is a political central bank and
the Federal Reserve Note a political currency, because the System’s policies,
including changes in the supply of its currency and extensions of credit,
are determined to a large degree according to political, rather than strictly
economic, criteria.
A banking
and monetary regime of this type is unstable and prone to crises arising
out of both economic and political causes, domestic and foreign. Many of
these causes find their genesis in the System itself:
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The exchange
value of the Federal Reserve System’s currency (its purchasing power) is
artificially inflated by its designation as “legal tender” and by the national
government’s duty to redeem it in “lawful money” if the banks fail to do
so.
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By means
of so-called “monetization of public debt” the Federal Reserve System enables
public officials to spend more than they otherwise could, without economic
resistance from the free market and political resistance from the electorate.
Thus, the System, in league with public officials, is a mechanism for the
political redistribution of wealth from society at large to politically
favored special-interest groups.
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Through
monetization of private debt, the Federal Reserve System is a mechanism
for the economic redistribution of wealth from society at large to the
banks and their favored clients in the private sector.
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The Federal
Reserve System’s monetization of both public and private debt inflates
the supply of America’s (and the world’s) media of exchange, without control
by the free market. This falsifies prices and thereby misallocates scarce
resources, in the short term resulting in a lower standard of living for
the vast majority of people and in the long run causing chronic “booms
and busts”, characterized by excessive speculation, depreciation in the
purchasing power of paper currency, economic stagnation, recessions, and
even depressions.
The hope
that the Federal Reserve System, the United States Treasury, Congress,
or some other branch of the national government will prevent the inherent
instability of the present banking and currency regimes from breaking out
in crises is historically unfounded. Not only does the nationwide banking
collapse of 1932 and subsequent Great Depression—which occurred under the
auspices of the Federal Reserve System—prove otherwise, but also Congress
has mandated that during such [financial] emergency period as the President
* * * by proclamation may prescribe, no member bank of the Federal Reserve
System shall transact any banking business except to such extent and subject
to such regulations, limitations and restrictions as may be prescribed
by the Secretary of theTreasury, with the approval of the President. 12
U.S.C. § 95(a). Obviously, as this statute proves, Congress believes
even now in the possibility of banking and currency crises so horrendous
that a financial dictatorship may be necessary to deal with them. That
it would be better to prevent—or at the least to provide some insurance
for Americans against—such crises and the political upheavals that will
follow them, by reintroducing silver and gold coin into ordinary monetary
transactions, cannot seriously be questioned.
5. Are arguments
about the instability of the Federal Reserve System not simply sophisticated
“scare tactics” and “fringe” thinking?
If
so, then all insurance is based on “scare tactics”. No prudent individual,
however, dismisses as mere “scare tactics” reasonable concerns about dangers
that could arise in the future and recommendations that people attempt
adequately to protect themselves against the financial consequences of
such dangers. To be sure, certain kinds of insurance address the “fringes”
of human experience, because the dangers against which they protect are
remote or uncertain. Nevertheless, that does not mean that no insurance
at all is warranted or prudent even in those situations. Critics of the
proposed legislation fail to take into account that doing nothing may actually
increase the likelihood of monetary and banking crises. That is, the best
way to reduce the possibility of such crises, or to mitigate their severity,
is precisely for Americans to reintegrate silver and gold coin into their
financial transactions to a degree that stabilizes money and banking with
a direct tie to the free market through silver and gold.
In
any event, just as people who discount the possibility of fires, floods,
or other catastrophes need not take out insurance for those contingencies,
people who imagine that the dangers from monetary and banking instability
are remote or uncertain need not participate in the program the proposed
legislation will set up.
6. Will enough
people in Nevada take advantage of monetary freedom of choice to make it
worthwhile?
No
absolute answer to this question is possible. However, as more and more
people realize that the present Federal Reserve System is economically
unstable, prone to manipulation and misuse for political purposes, and
subject to unpredictable and almost inevitable crises from both domestic
and foreign causes, they will recognize the advantages to themselves, their
families, the State, and America as a whole from monetary diversification:
the ability to move some or all of their monetary transactions from paper
currency and base-metallic coin to silver and gold coin.
7. Is not monetary
freedom of choice too complicated for the average person to understand?
In
an era in which average Americans increasingly use personal computers or
other data-processing equipment at home as well as at work, the notion
that exercising choice in media of exchange is “too complicated” lacks
plausibility. Many sites on the Internet already apprise people of the
exchange rates between United States paper currency and base-metallic coin,
on the one hand, and United States silver and gold coin, on the other.
And the proposed legislation requires the State Treasurer, as well, to
post that information on the Internet.
8. Is the present
supply of United States silver and gold coin sufficient for the purpose
of bringing monetary freedom of choice to Nevada; or will the United States
Treasury have to mint more?
The
present supply of United States silver and gold coin is certainly sufficient
for the program the proposed statute sets up in Nevada, and most likely
sufficient even if all the States implemented similar programs. Critics
forget that, in a free market, prices of all goods and services will automatically
and correctly adjust to the amount of silver and gold coin in circulation,
whatever that may be. Moreover, it is far better to allow the free market
to adjust prices to the amount of money in circulation, than to empower
monopolistic banks or ponderous government bureaucracies to dictate the
supply of money in inevitably futile attempts to control prices.
The
first method is economically rational, because it integrates the supplies
of all nonmonetary goods and services with the supply of money. The second
method is economically arbitrary, because there are no rational criteria
or standards for how high (or low) prices of goods or services ought to
be, and no accurate means to fix prices. Indeed, setting prices in order
to serve political purposes is the best and fastest way to throw the free
market into chaos, and to lower the standard of living for the vast majority
of people.
In
any event, the supply of United States silver and gold coin is not unalterably
fixed. Congress has mandated that the United States Treasury should
mint sufficient silver and gold “American Eagle” or “Liberty” coins to
meet public demand. See 31 U.S.C. §§ 5112(e) (silver coins)
and 5112(i)(1) (gold coins). Therefore, the supply of silver and gold coin
can increase step by step with the successful implementation of the proposed
legislation.
9. If this program
is put into widespread practice in Nevada, will there not be a “run” on
silver and gold coins?
To
the extent the proposed legislation succeeds in encouraging citizens to
choose to use United States silver and gold coin in their monetary transactions,
the demand for such coins in Nevada will increase. But the free market,
responding to that new demand, will then automatically increase the supply
of silver and gold coins in this State.
Most
likely, all other things being equal, the purchasing power of silver
and gold coins will increase (i.e., they will become more valuable
than they are now). That, however, will result in decreases in the prices
of goods and services measured in silver and gold. So, people whose
monetary incomes or reserves are composed of silver and gold coin will
see their standards of living rise. This process, though, will be gradual,
and in any event will depend on how many citizens exercise their freedom
of monetary choice in favor of silver and gold coin, and to what degree
and how quickly they do it.
10. Are not silver
and gold coins out of date as money?
If
they were, Congress would not have mandated that they be coined in amounts
sufficient to meet public demand, and that they be “legal tender”. See
31 U.S.C. §§ 5112(e) (silver coins) and 5112(i)(1) (gold coins);
5103 and 5112(h). Besides, the question of which forms of money are best
suited to people’s needs should be decided through open and fair competition
in the free market.
11. Will not the
use of silver and gold coin as media of exchange be cumbersome?
Not
necessarily. The proposed legislation anticipates that new private silver
and gold depositaries will provide Nevada’s citizens (and perhaps the State
as well) with facilities for storing and exchanging silver and gold coin
for Federal Reserve Notes and base-metallic coin, and that exchanges will
largely take place through such familiar and convenient means as checks.
As utilization of the program becomes more widespread, methods of electronic
transfers will doubtlessly become available.
The
important point is not whether the use of silver and gold coin may be marginally
inconvenient, but whether it will stabilize the monetary and banking systems,
and protect the average person’s financial situation, by providing media
of exchange with definite commodity values in the free market.
12. What forms
of silver and gold will the State allow people to use?
All
types of United States silver and gold coin, whenever minted, may be used—with
the exception of coins that have special numismatic value (such as commemorative
or rare pieces).
Private
silver or gold coinage or privately generated “electronic money” that pays
in silver or gold may not be used, because these are not “legal tender”.
13. From what
sources will people obtain silver and gold coin to exchange with the State?
Initially,
people will obtain silver and gold coin from private coin dealers, or (if
they are creditors of the State) from the State Treasury. As the program
expands, people can expect increasingly to find silver and gold coin being
used in day-to-day transactions in the free market, too.
At
the present time, individuals cannot obtain United States silver and gold
coin from Federal Reserve banks or directly from the United States Treasury.
If the program the proposed legislation sets up succeeds, however, that
likely may change.
14. Will the State
impose a limit on the premiums or commissions that may be charged by private
dealers who trade silver and gold coin?
No.
The heights of premiums or commissions for trading silver and gold are
best left to the free market. If the program the proposed legislation sets
up succeeds, however, competition will drive these costs to the lowest
possible levels.
15. What State
taxes, fees, and other charges will be payable in United States silver
and gold coin?
The
intent of the proposed legislation is to make every State tax, fee, or
other charge payable in silver and gold coin for those who choose to use
those media of exchange.
16. Will not a
program of monetary freedom of choice be expensive to put into practice?
The
initial cost of setting up the State depositories authorized in the proposed
legislation is anticipated to be reasonable. The legislation presumes,
moreover, that the functions of the State depositaries will soon be augmented,
if not superseded, by private silver and gold deposit banks that the free
market will bring into existence.
In
any event, Nevada has a duty to protect its citizens’ financial well being,
as well as their health and safety. That performing this duty may entail
costs does not justify shirking that responsibility.
17. Will complications
arise if an individual wants to use both gold or silver coins, and Federal
Reserve Notes, in a single transaction?
Perhaps,
but they will not be particularly serious. Typically, the size of a transaction
will determine what medium or media of exchange may be usefully employed.
Small transactions will likely be paid in silver, large transactions in
gold. Instances may arise, however, in which, for example, a sizable portion
of a large transaction will be paid in gold coins, but the remainder in
silver coins (or Federal Reserve Notes or United States base-metallic coins)
simply because there are no gold coins of sufficiently low value available.
In an era in which electronic calculators are almost universally in use,
though, determining how much should be paid in what medium of exchange
for what amount should pose no problem, once people become accustomed to
thinking in terms of multiple currencies.
18. If the Constitution
and laws of the United States already allow States and individuals to use
United States silver and gold coins as their media of exchange, why does
Nevada need a new statute on the subject?
To
authorize and direct the State Treasurer and other officials as to how
and in what circumstances to use United States silver and gold coins as
media of exchange for public purposes. The proposed legislation provides
freedom of choice in media of exchange to those people who deal with the
State in the exercise of its sovereign functions. But facilitating their
choices requires that public officials be given clear guidelines on how
to proceed, so that everyone who avails himself of the new system will
be treated fairly, uniformly, and expeditiously.
19. Will the requirement
in the Patriot Act that some purchases of silver or gold from dealers be
reported to government agencies have an adverse effect on what Nevada is
proposing to do?
No.
Reporting requirements are designed to expose tax cheats, money launderers,
and clandestine flows of funds for illegal purposes. The proposed legislation
addresses legitimate transactions in the public domain. No one dealing
with the State or with legitimate dealers in precious metals for
lawful
purposes should worry. This is not to say that the Patriot Act and similar
legislation raise no concerns about privacy. Those concerns, however, apply
equally to reporting requirements already in place that affect banks and
similar financial institutions. Reporting requirements should have no
disproportionate
effect on the legal use of silver and gold coins, especially where the
ultimate transactions involve the State.
20. How will the
State detect manipulated or counterfeit coins?
Quite
easily. Manipulated coins—ones, for example, that have been clipped, shaved,
or filed to remove some of their precious-metal contents—as well as out-and-out
counterfeits can be readily detected with inexpensive devices already commercially
available, and commonly in use by dealers in precious metals. Moreover,
most bad coins will probably be discovered by simple visual inspection
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