Here, here to the IRS on the moon and I hope all of them, all around the
world enter the black hole you mention. Save us all a lot of trouble. I
don't think any of them (Tax Departments that is) give a rats ass about mass

either

Vic

 -----Original Message-----
From:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]  On Behalf Of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent:   Friday, 22 December 2000 09:22 p.m.
To:     e-gold Discussion
Subject:        [e-gold-list] Re: E-gold scam survey

> My point, taken to extremes, is to use the mass (not weight) of gold, so
> that even a budding moon colony or space craft will not feel
> disenfranchised. Mass is not relative to anything I know of and can't be
> messed with by governments.
>

Time for the nit harvesting. A gram is a measure of mass, not weight. 1
gram of gold has the same mass on earth, the moon, a small asteroid, a
black hole, etc... Mass is the most basic explanation of how much (gold)
is that? While it may weigh 22lbs on Earth, and only 1/100th of an ounce
on a orbiting spaceship, it always masses 10kg.

Viking Coder

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