Can you imagine the RV crowd going into the local Wells Fargo and asking for their big dinar boodle payout in dollar coins? How much would $400 million dollar coins weigh? (At least it'd make it harder to steal...)Oh and I also believe that spending COINS exempts those amounts from being considered as INCOME, as you're not using credit from Federal Reserve to buy anything; you're using LAWFUL MONEY which doesn't come with tax liability attached, since it's issued by US Treasury and not through Federal Reserve (Central bank).
Oh, but it gets better:
Buy a car with dollar coins and you won't need a driver's license or license plates! Wheee!In other words, when you use LAWFUL MONEY, such as US coins, then you're NOT DISCHARGING debts with promisory notes such as an FRNs, [Federal Reserve Note],but you're actually PAYING OFF the debt, because you give the seller something with REAL value. So in order to pay for things with REAL money, we can order the bank to CASH OUR CHECKS IN DOLLAR COINS. Then we should be able to OPT OUT of US Public Policy and all the statutes that come with it, such as the Vehicle Code., and assert protection of Public Law, under which we have a RIGHT to use public roads. And that means use them WITHOUT any licenses and registrations.
So we can put the word 'COIN' on the check we use to pay for a car for example. And that gives you the right to demand common law jurisdiction, to which we are entitled by LAW
And better:
So, I guess, not only are they going to get their payout in coins, they're supposed to get it in NICKELS and then buy their houses, cars, planes and whatever with those NICKLES. Millions of dollars of nickles.Also, since nickels have the highest intrinsic value (about 99 cents per 1 dollar face value), It'd be good to make bills of sale and other contracts payable in nickel coins, which would leave the State very little, if any, security interest in the goods being purchased.
WHAT. THE. FRICK.
EDIT: Fortunately, one nickel weighs exactly 5 grams, so it's easy to figure out how much weight any given quantity of nickles works out to; 4 million would be 44,000 pounds. Better bring a forklift to the bank!