--atOn the other hand, when you hold US dollars, you own debt that you will eventually have to repay. When you give US dollars to someone as payment, they now have debt. Ouch!
http://www.libertydollar.org
Hmmm. This is a guy who has been creating his own currency, and he seems clueless about some of the basic concepts of economics, accounting, and law.
OK, let's go back to college economics. It is true that a Federal Reserve note is sometimes referred to as a debt. In a real economic sense, however, it is not primarily a debt. Money, including Federal Reserve notes, is actually more like a product, as some economists have pointed out. It's a product of government action. (What its value may be is a separate question.) Money has more characteristics of being a product of government than it has as "debt."
And even to the extent that money (such as a Federal Reserve note) can be considered debt, it is a debt owed ONLY by the government, or by the Federal Reserve System, or by whichever Federal Reserve Bank issued the money or note, etc. The HOLDER of the note does not "owe" a "debt." The HOLDER of the Federal Reserve note has an ASSET. Acquiring and holding a Federal Reserve note does make me "indebted" to anyone -- not legally, not economically, not in any way.
Think of it this way: If I borrow money to buy a house and sign a "note" (a promissory note) and give that note to the lender, that lender does not thereby come to "owe" a "debt". The lender is the holder -- the OWNER -- of the note, not the obligor on the note. The note is an ASSET in the lender's hands, not a liability "owed" BY the lender to anyone.
Oh, and Mr. Von NotHaus, please don't try to tell me that the holder of a Federal Reserve note thereby indirectly "owes debt" that he will have to repay under some theory that the note is an obligation of the United States and that every U.S. citizen is somehow indirectly "liable" on the debt. Under that line of "reasoning," every US government debt instrument (T-bills, T-notes, and T-bonds) would be a debt OWED by the person purchasing the instrument, rather than an asset HELD by that person -- from a legal, economic, and accounting standpoint, nonsensical.
This is pretty basic stuff.
Herr von NotHaus might need to take some refresher economics and accounting courses.