I disagree. I've seen many pennies smushed by trains. I've seen money damaged in other ways to the point it's unusable and therefore destroyed - such as forgetting that $5 bill in your pants pocket when you did the laundry. As a result, bad analogy.Tednewsom wrote:Money's like energy: it can't be "destroyed" only transmitted or transformed.
While it's true that some money is "converted" into goods, other is "converted" into services. The oil change on your vehicle immediately comes to mind as an example of both.Tednewsom wrote:I swindle you out of $30,000-- the money is transmitted. I buy a new Corvette with the dough, the money has been transformed.
And while some goods retain value of some form or other (some a loss in value, some an increase, some can first loose value then gain) some goods retain no value. That sandwich you bought for lunch and ate certainly no longer has value to others if you upchuck it.
It's been my experience the average persons expenditure habits revolve around living paycheck to paycheck. They earn more, they just increase their spending in one form or another. Granted, I don't know anyone beyond the middle class range so perhaps those earning $1 mill or more per year have better expenditure habits.Tednewsom wrote:But these crooks would be dumber than a bag of hammers if they didn't siphon off a healthy chunk of change all along the way -- and "transform" it into something other than cash.
The guys in question: what were their expenditure habits?
If it was, it'd be easier for the receiver to recover.Tednewsom wrote:Point being, the money trail was not a dead-end path from the sucker to the bank.
But let's face a bit of reality: the Receiver isn't going to go after the restaurant to recover the $130 paid for lunch even if the guilty parties did keep the receipt.