LPC wrote:Sybil wrote:You aren't buying liberty dollars to invest you are buying liberty dollars to protect the value of your currency.
Ignoring for the moment your continuing word games with "current money" and "currency":
It's not word games, "currency" and "current money" have two different meanings. The first represents "something that is used as a medium of exchange", which includes checks, gift cards, tokens casino coins etc. The later represents money the government has declared as legal tender by law.
"Currency" is what I have in my wallet. I rarely carry more than $100, and it is usually spent within a week or two. How does a currency that contains silver with a value of 50% to 75% of the face amount of the currency "protect" me during that one or two week period?
It won't protect you in the next week or two unless of course the FRN drops seriously in value over that period. btw, I'm not sure where you got 50% to 75% of the face value....that never happened that I know of. I think currently its at a .155 loss on exchange per dollar and that's for the new issue not the old.
And even assuming that it does protect me during that one or two week period, what difference does it make? If the dollar were to drop in value by 25% in a week, the value of the coins in my pocket would be the least of my worries.
Well that's your opinion. Every time the dollar drops value the price of goods increase making your FRN's buy less and less. Since the economy runs on money I would say that's your biggest problem.
So you're not really talking about the money in my pocket, but you're talking about stuffing money in a mattress, only using LDs and not FRNs. But in that case, you're talking about an investment, because every dollar I put in that mattress, whether in the form of an LD or FRN, is money I could not invest in stocks, real estate, or rare wines.
No you don't stuff them in your mattress. You use them to trade with. When the dollar falls and precious metals increase you either exchange the liberty for the silver and get more than the face value of liberty dollars in FRN's or you trade in your liberty dollars for double the face value of new liberty dollars.
In short, your rationale du jour is simply another of your weasely, delusional attempts to sound rational while tap-dancing and juggling at the same time.
No, you just want to find fault so bad you miss the forest because all the trees are in the way.
Sybil wrote:If you had $1000 in FRN's and $1000 in liberty dollars you gained with the liberty dollars and the FRN's you held lost 50% of their value.
Over what period of time? Why would I hold $1,000 in FRNs (or LDs) more than a few days?
You wouldn't but I'm sure you would receive other liberty dollars in trade at some point if you were involved with liberty dollars. As FRN's drop in value you at some point will, get to trade in old liberty dollars for double the face value or you can trade them for silver and cash that in for more than the face value of the liberty dollars in FRN's.
The point is you lose nothing with the dollar drops value, your purchasing power in liberty dollars stays the same or close.
You seem to be taking several inconsistent positions simultaneously:
1. LDs are currency;
True
2. Currency is not an investment;
Not generally....not if you intended to use it.
3. LDs will be more worth more than FRNs over long periods of time;
Liberty Dollars do not lose value when FRN's lose value. It's not really an increase, the purchasing powers remains pretty constant. The increase comes from the fact that FRN's buy less because they lose value.
4. Calculations of the value of LDs over long periods of time compared to investments over the same periods of time are irrelevant because LDs are not investments; and
They provide stability in the value of your money.
5. Calculations of the value of FRNs over long periods of time are relevant because they will be worth less than LDs.
Look at it as an insurance policy against a devalued currency. You're simply protecting the purchasing power of your money. This affect happen as a group....the overall issue of the currency is protected.
I personally would not use the liberty dollars the way the program is setup. I see what they are trying to accomplish and I see the benefits to some degree. I personally think they should never revalue the notes, they should have remained constant though I see where some confusion would arise.
In any case I don't see a scam or illegal activity. They're just bartering plain and simple. No one is forced or tricked in to believing the government authorized these notes. No one is forced to use them. People who purchased these things new full well that the face value did not represent the equal market value in silver or gold, in fact it's written right on the notes what you will get. If you don't find it a good deal then by all means don't use them. Apparently a lot of people like them and use them what's wrong with that?
I mean if you had wide spread misuse reported where people were duped all over the place in to taking these things I can see the problem. The best I've seen so far is one person who misused them while the retailer in the end suffered no damage whatsoever.