Which part is complete bullshit? The colonial money being despised by England or the battles against the Central Banks by Andrew Jackson, Abraham Lincoln, A. Garfield and McKinley? Or the constituion? Or the founding fathers warning against the problem of handing over money printing to a private central bank? Or the Jekyll Island meeting? Or the Fed shrinking money supply post 1929, while a few select grabbed assets for pennies on the dollar? I wish that stuff was bullsh*t & entertainment during my high school years, but I actually had to learn a significant portion of it in A.P. History as we were tested on it. So what part of history did they get wrong? Do tell.
Yeah, cause he believes the US gov actually makes profits. I don't think you can even get Bush to say smth stupid like that.
if your really believe that, you are a piker on internet because someone who is smart enough to be successful trader would realize just how true it all is tell you what, why don't you point out WHICH PART EXACTLY is false PS: I am not gnome, though I wish I was, man is fat where it counts
as for you makloda I said it before, you ain't bright, you are probably a teenager too prove me wrong by finding which part of it is wrong
Just look around you to see that for as much money that is being collected, how much do you actually see being spent? We have debt that can never, ever be paid off. Even private land ownership will be taken away some day, shortly after they take away our guns.
You mean the money is made by whoever controls the U.S. Treasury? The president gets to "pick" the "federal reserve chairman" alright. Did you know that he picks the chairman from a list of names given to him? it goes like this. Cabbage, tomato, carrot, Ben Bernanke, lettuce, potato. The choice is between a vegetable and a moron. Your pick.
ZG is consistent with my opinion that central bankers will never let gold become a "currency" .... too much competition that cant be controlled... well... easily
Another disillusion. The gold standard has been manipulated by the central bankers before. Most of the physical gold supply is held by a few. It's a market that is easily cornered, similiar to diamonds. Silver is what the central bankers really fear.