Patriotdiscussions wrote:What kind of money could they borrow though?
Any kind they want to.
In the interpretation of words a cardinal rule is, to conform to usage. In 1787 every English dictionary defined "money" as metallic coin; and therefore as metallic coin, it must be interpreted in the clause which authorizes the legislature of the United States to borrow money. A second cardinal rule of interpretation is, where a word is used in the same document more than once, it is to be interpreted in every instance as bearing the same meaning, unless there is an obvious and incontrovertible reason to the contrary. The constitution of the United States authorizes their legislature to coin money; and of the meaning of the word in that clause, no doubt can exist.
A third cardinal rule is that we don't follow what someone claims --without proof -- to have been the entry in every English dictionary back in 1787.
A fourth cardinal rule is that the same word in the United States Constitution can have more than one legal meaning. For example, the word "law" itself has more than one meaning when used in the U.S. Constitution -- in one sentence in particular, where the word is used twice.
Your argument appears to be that "money" means only "coin." That is a completely illogical conclusion. It reminds me of the silly tax protester argument about the meaning of "income" as used in a 1909 law that taxed corporate incomes. The tax protesters essentially try to argue that because the only entities taxed under that law were corporations, the word "income" as used in that law must have meant "corporate income" -- and that any reference to the word "income" in a later law must be restricted to mean "corporate income."
Under that twisted kind of logic, if the 1909 law had taxed only individuals, then "income" could mean only "income of individuals" in any subsequent law taxing income.
Duuuhhhhhh....
A better question for "Patriotdiscussions" would be: Why are you having these thoughts? Why are people like you so stuck on the topic of "money." Why is it that you struggle with fundamental concepts with which the average sixth grader has no problem?
Under the U.S. Constitution, Federal Reserve notes -- which are paper money - are constitutional as currency, and as lawful money, and as legal tender. The courts have ruled, and that's the end of it. All your efforts, Patriotdiscussions, will never change that.
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet