Topic: A Blast from Gary North - Dialogue #2 | |
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The Private Money Guy (PMG) and the State Money Guy (SMG) are still going at it. This is Dialogue #2
PMG: You still believe in gold. SMG: Yes, I do. I own gold coins. PMG: Is that because you don't trust the Federal Reserve System? SMG: Yes. PMG: Why don't you trust the FED? SMG: Because the country isn't on a government-enforced gold standard. PMG: So, if the country were on a government-enforced gold standard, you would trust the FED. SMG: Yes. PMG: Why did the country go off the government-enforced gold standard? SMG: Because of the Great Depression. PMG: What caused the Great Depression? SMG: Federal Reserve monetary policy in the 1920's. PMG: So, you believe Murray Rothbard. SMG: I believe Paul Johnson in Modern Times. PMG: Johnson explains what happened by summarizing Rothbard's book, America's Great Depression. SMG: Then I guess I believe Murray Rothbard. PMG: FED policy in the mid-1920's expanded the money supply by increasing the monetary base. SMG: Yes. PMG: This led to the Great Depression, when the FED stopped inflating in 1928. SMG: Yes. PMG: Then the government-enforced gold standard did not protect the country from the FED. SMG: Not in the 1920's. PMG: Did it protect the country from the Great Depression, 1929–33? SMG: No. PMG: So, the FED was not trustworthy in the 1920's. SMG: Correct. PMG: When we had a government-enforced gold standard. SMG: Yes. PMG: But you would trust the FED today if we had a government-enforced gold standard. SMG: Yes. PMG: Why now? SMG: Because the FED has learned its lesson. PMG: What lesson? SMG: That the FED made a mistake 1929–33 by not inflating. PMG: The way it inflated from 1924–28. SMG: Yes. PMG: The way it's inflating today. SMG: Yes. PMG: Which is why you are buying gold coins. SMG. Yes. PMG: Where did the FED learn this lesson? SMG: From Milton Friedman. PMG: Who hated every variety of gold standard. SMG: Yes. PMG: Roosevelt took the country off the domestic gold coin standard in 1933. SMG: Yes. PMG: Why did he do this? SMG: He wanted to jump-start the economy by spending more money. PMG: What did that have to do with confiscating the public's gold? SMG: I thought we had come to an agreement. We do not use the word "confiscate" when speaking of U.S. government policy. PMG: What should we call it? SMG: A temporary emergency transfer for safekeeping a non-industrial metal. PMG: Safekeeping by whom? SMG: The United States government. PMG: How much did the government pay Americans for their gold? SMG: $20 per ounce. PMG: So, you are saying that the government did not confiscate the people's gold. SMG: Correct. PMG: Because it paid $20 an ounce. SMG: A fair price. PMG: Set by whom? SMG: The government. PMG: So, the government sets the price of gold in a government-enforced gold standard. SMG: Yes. PMG: What did the government do with the gold? SMG: It sold it to the Federal Reserve System. PMG: What price did the government get for the gold? SMG: $35 per ounce. PMG: So, the government made a profit of $15 per ounce. SMG: Yes. PMG: Let's see. I calculate that 15 is 75% of 20. SMG: So do I. PMG: So, the government made 75% on the deal. SMG: Yes. PMG: The FED paid the government $35. SMG: Yes. PMG: Did the FED did complain about price gouging? SMG: Are you trying to be funny? PMG: I ask the questions here, remember? SMG: Sorry. PMG: Why didn't the FED complain? SMG: It's part of the government. PMG: What did the FED use for money? SMG: Federal Reserve credit. PMG: It created the money. SMG: Yes. PMG: Couldn't the government have sold T-bills to the FED to get the same amount of newly created money? SMG: But then the government would have owed interest payments to the FED. PMG: In 1933, T-bills paid one-third of one percent. SMG: But the government paid no interest at all on the sale of the gold. Paying nothing is always better than paying something. That's free market economics. Plus, it made 75% on the deal. It was a sweet deal. PMG: Whose gold was it after March of 1933? SMG: The nation's gold. PMG: Not the people's gold. SMG: Not after the people sold their gold to the government. PMG: Because it was a felony not to. SMG: Yes. PMG: Because Roosevelt made them an offer they could not refuse. SMG: I get it. "Godfather" language. We've already agreed that the government is not a criminal conspiracy. PMG: I've agreed because I need the interview. SMG: A deal's a deal. PMG: Where is the gold now? SMG: In Fort Knox. PMG: All of it? SMG: Some of it – we don't know how much – is at 33 Liberty Street, New York City. PMG: The Federal Reserve Bank of New York. SMG: Yes. PMG: A private corporation. SMG: Yes. PMG: Which still stores the government's gold for safekeeping. SMG: Yes. PMG: You're sure. SMG: Yes. PMG: How do you know? SMG: The Board of Governors of the FED has said so. PMG: A government organization. SMG: Yes. PMG: Which has hired a private corporation to execute its policy. SMG: Yes. PMG: Therefore, to safeguard the government's gold, the government has turned over the gold to a private corporation. SMG: Yes. PMG: Is this because a private corporation is more efficient than the government? SMG: Yes. PMG: We are agreed. But why should the gold be safer in the vault of a private corporation instead of in the possession of millions of Americans? SMG: Economies of scale. PMG: A safer vault? SMG: Yes. PMG: So, you didn't believe Die Hard 3? SMG: Of course not. No thieves could have broken into the vault at 33 Liberty Street. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York is not like the Post Office. It's private. PMG: Let's review. How did the gold get there? SMG: Because the Federal Reserve System bought it. PMG: With what? SMG: With a check. PMG: Drawn on what bank? SMG: The Federal Reserve Bank of New York. PMG: A private corporation. SMG: Yes. PMG: Which now holds the gold for safekeeping. SMG: Yes. PMG: So that thieves cannot get at it. SMG: Yes. PMG: Where the public also cannot get at it. SMG: Temporarily. PMG: Since 1933. SMG: Yes. PMG: And you're sure it's still in the vault. SMG: Yes. PMG: Even though it has not been audited by an outside agency. SMG: Yes. PMG: Why hasn't it been audited by an outside agency? SMG: It's too risky. PMG: What risk? SMG: Didn't you see Die Hard 3? PMG: You mean the auditors might be part of a criminal conspiracy? SMG: Yes. PMG: And we wouldn't want a criminal conspiracy to get its corporate hands on the nation's gold. SMG: Correct. PMG: What would a criminal conspiracy do with all that gold? SMG: It would sell it. PMG: To the public. SMG: Yes. PMG: To individuals who want to own gold, you mean. SMG: Yes. PMG: To individuals in the free market. SMG: Yes. PMG: Where it would not be safe. SMG: Exactly. PMG: Where it was no longer safe in early 1933. SMG: Yes. PMG: When will it be safe to return the gold to the public? SMG: When the economic turmoil stops. PMG: When will that be? SMG: When the country goes back on the gold standard. PMG: The way it was in early 1933. SMG: Yes. PMG: When the country was in economic turmoil. SMG: Yes. PMG: Forcing Roosevelt to call in the gold for safekeeping. SMG: Yes. PMG: Was the extra 75% that the government got for the gold a safekeeping fee? SMG: No. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York stores the gold. PMG: What does it charge the government for this service? SMG: I don't know. There are no public receipts. PMG: Why are there no public receipts? SMG: You don't need public receipts when you are not subject to an independent audit. PMG: But Congress is audited. SMG: By auditors hired by Congress. PMG: These auditors don't ask Congress for receipts from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. SMG: Correct. PMG: Why not? SMG: It's not necessary. PMG: Why not? SMG: Because the Federal Reserve System pays about $20 billion a year to the Treasury. PMG: Where does it get all that money? SMG: From the Treasury. PMG: Which pays interest to the FED. SMG: Yes. PMG: Part of which the FED returns to the Treasury. SMG: Yes. PMG: After deducting expenses. SMG: Yes. PMG: Does the FED provide receipts for these expenses? SMG: No. PMG: The Treasury takes the FED's word for this. SMG: Yes. PMG: The government does not audit the FED. SMG: No. PMG: Why not? SMG: It's not necessary. PMG: Why not? SMG: Because the FED conducts its own audit. PMG: Can Congress see this audit and verify it? SMG: No. PMG: Why not? SMG: Because the Federal Reserve System executes its policy through the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, which is not a government agency. PMG: Why can't the Internal Revenue Service audit the Federal Reserve Bank of New York? SMG: It lacks the legal authority. PMG: From Congress. SMG: Correct. PMG: Can the public get access to the receipts? SMG: Bloomberg News tried that in 2008. PMG: How? SMG: Using the Freedom of Information Act. PMG: What was the result? SMG: The Federal Reserve Bank of New York refused to comply. PMG: On what basis? SMG: The FOIA protects trade secrets. PMG: What trade secrets are involved? SMG: We don't know. It's a secret. |
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![]() Oops, sorry. Have I accidentally posted in "Coffee Houses, Bars & Chit Chat" ? |
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