Hi, everybody,
>> The assests the central banks hold are called I.O.U.'s. I don't
>> know about Australia, but in the United States the dollar is
>> backed by debt.
Since the end of Civil war, when 'greenbacks' were introduced, which at
that moment apparently were treasury bonds, signed by tre
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> David Hillary wrote:
>
> >Central banks hold reserves of assets sufficient to pay all their
> >currency liabilities and all their deposit liabilities. This can
> >be seen from their balance sheets.
> >
> Is this a joke?
>
> The assests the central
Mr. Cormier,
thank you for pointing this out to the list, I have
been wondering myself why there is no public
announcement as to what is happening to our gold .
This started very quietly some months ago, I am
concerned about the policy of quietly changing things
regarding some important aspects o
On 3 Oct 2001, at 18:01, Bob wrote:
> Spend US$ 60 on Cra$hmaker and you've got a huge chunk of it.
> And it doesn't take 4 years to read.
Bob,
I am only a few chapters into Crashmaker and can hardly stop
reading. I am hooked!!!
Claude
http://www.goldcurrencies.ca
http://www.ormetal.com
James Turk wrote:
> SnowDog wrote
> >Q: How would you go about abolishing the Federal Reserve?
> It is exactly this question that is addressed in a wonderful new book just published
>called "Crashmaker". I've written a review on "Crashmaker" for my newsletter, and
>I've posted this review to
Update on the NESARA link. Enclosed find their most recent update on bill
status:
Try this... a status report from them (And corrected site access)
Noel
http://www.nesara.com/";>NESARA-National
NESARA
The National Economic Stabilization and Recovery Act
Executive Summary
Monetary Policy Refor
SnowDog wrote:
> Q: How would you go about abolishing the Federal Reserve? Almost all USD in
> circulation are debts to the Federal Reserve. How would you replace this
> debt-backed currency with an other type?
>
> SnowDog
SnowDog wrote:
> Q: How would you go about abolishing the Federal Reser
SnowDog wrote
>Q: How would you go about abolishing the Federal Reserve? Almost all USD in
>circulation are debts to the Federal Reserve. How would you replace this
>debt-backed currency with an other type?
It is exactly this question that is addressed in a wonderful new book just published
call
> Dollars are only worth what people are willing to exchange them for.
> The dollar is accepted worldwide because of the stability of the US
> Government, not because it is actually worth anything. When the US
> falls into a deep recession the value of the dollar will not be much.
> That is why
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i'll take that one - basically there are two sections
involved in the mobile phone to e-gold web site communication
path, both of which are encrypted to protect the data in transit.
the RF encrypted section will vary in methodology according to
your provider an
David Hillary wrote:
>Central banks hold reserves of assets sufficient to pay all their
>currency liabilities and all their deposit liabilities. This can be
>seen from their balance sheets.
>
Is this a joke?
The assests the central banks hold are called I.O.U.'s. I don't know
about Australia,
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Central banks hold reserves of assets sufficient to pay all their
currency liabilities and all their deposit liabilities. This can be
seen from their balance sheets.
Central banks could retire all their debts and be wound up, and the
economy could us
Earlier this year e-gold moved its gold from Scotia-Mocatta in
Toronto to other vaults in London, Dubai and Zurich. I thought it
was no big deal even if I could not find a logical explanation, since
Scotia is among the best in the world.
But now I see that Central Escrow Agency which use to be
>What I was originally assuming is that (a) a rise or fall in the price of
>gold generally reflects a rise or fall in demand for gold and (b) a rise or
>fall in the circulation of e-gold generally reflects a rise or fall in
>demand for e-gold and (c) comparing the price of gold to the circulation
>Do the mobile phone support secure socket layer (SSL)? Otherwise, how
does
>e-gold make it safe to make payments from a mobile phone?
>
All GSM having "browser" version 1.2 or later. My wife's Nokia 6210 can
even have a X.509 certificate installed.
Yours, Sincerely Alexander V. Fe
Jim,
Do the mobile phone support secure socket layer (SSL)? Otherwise, how does
e-gold make it safe to make payments from a mobile phone?
Thanks,
Ken
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Did you know that e
> So, hopefully we've just been misunderstanding each other here. Either
that,
> or I am deeply in need of a clue.
Julian, I agree with you. I would have thought that an increase in the gold
price would be indicative of an increase in gold hoarding which would
correspond to an increase in demand
> RE the reference to this URL: http://www.NASARA.com/
I've received a correction to this URL:
http://www.NESARA.com/
The National Economic Stabilization and Recovery Act
I recommend it to all of you. Whether it makes its way to the floor for
a vote in it's present form is questionable, but
Noel;
RE the reference to this URL: http://www.NASARA.com/
It is no longer pointed at an active website. Do you
have another reference to the document you mention?
Thanks
Dave Brooks
Editor / Bricks of Gold Website & eZine
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On 3 Oct 2001, at 10:51, Julian Dibbell wrote:
Hello Julian,
> What I was originally assuming is that (a) a rise or fall in the price
> of gold generally reflects a rise or fall in demand for gold
This is a logical assumption but is not necessarily always true.
There is another side to the eq
Jim, JP:
Thanks for the replies, which I learned a lot from. I'm not sure they
answered my fundamental question, though, which I think is really my fault,
since I didn't state it clearly. Let me try again:
What I was originally assuming is that (a) a rise or fall in the price of
gold generally r
Subject: Re: The US Fed Dances
From: "David Brooks" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Tue, 2 Oct 2001 17:01:16 -0400
X-Message-Number: 17
The most probable and well thought out bill being pushed is the one at
www.NASARA.com. Check out there site and read their ideas on this and how
they are going about
Guys,
PAY YOUR BILLS BY GOLD!
Coming very soon! As a new service for customers, we are developing a
program whereby you can pay all your accounts by gold! This will operate
in the US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and the UK. Stay tuned...
Cheers!
Graham Kelly CEO
GoldNow Corporation http:
SnowDog wrote:
>..without any additional Federal Reserve Notes coming into circulation,
>then their currency would deflate as people continued to pay-off their
>debts. In this scenario, almost all of the US debt would be unserviceable.
>An economic calamity of mammoth proportions would ensue beca
> Not a problem - SOMEBODY will issue currency, and provided there are no
> strongarm tactics used there will be many somebodies. As with everything
> else, the market will sort it out after a brief reshuffle.
>
> Marc de Piolenc
>
> SnowDog wrote:
>
> > Q: How would you go about abolishing the F
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