Originally Posted by
unknownk
What I meant was silver and gold take up less space and is worth more then copper. You can always sell the copper and buy silver I guess. I have a big bag of wheet cents in a drawer just because I used to collect coins, but its not worth bothering to sell.
The day a dollar bill is worthless (and I don't mean by inflation, just that nobody would take it for anything) you can kiss your hoard of copper goodbye because the only thing that would matter would be food, water, fuel, and ammunition. I don't see that day coming in my lifetime, and if it did 95% of the people would be dead in a year (because 95% of the population does nothing of actual use for the new stone age).
There is a sad truth to what you say : Can I add something as i was speaking to a milk farmer the other day and he was going negative about the future economy & I told him : The real truth of the economy is You ( the farmer ) with out you getting us milk meat crops what do we have . the government can print all the money they want - they can convinced us of what metals have value . BUT with out food & water there is no economy - for politicians and bean counters to create the world as we know it, with out food & water what can you do with your gold .
With out getting political , there was a Nazi Party in Germany ,There were people forced with deadly oppression to live in ghettos it's a fact & they were highly intelligent people .A quote from one of the oppressed victims of the Warsaw ghetto said
in so many words " I am rich I have food and rent paid , That other man in the street I knew and he was like me , The man who was poor had no food no home with ended life fast. Does Not matter how much money I have , what do I have - A week - A month - A day ? In the end we all end up on the street .
As believed, this is carved on a gravestone in Latin " fui quod es, eris quod sum "
" What you are I once was, what I am you will surely become?
fui quod es, eris quod sum = I once was what you are, you will be what I am
An Epitaph, made to remind the reader of the inevitability of death, saying "Once I was alive like you are, and you will be dead as I am now." As believed, it was carved on a gravestone of some Roman military officer.
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