How about Texas?Virginia moves closer to creating state’s own currency
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Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
How about Texas?Virginia moves closer to creating state’s own currency
You are so right...how could I forget guns displayed on our Texas Money!ghostrider wrote:shouldn't one of the Texas bills have an STI 2011 and a Larue AR-15?
:-)
No one wants to make change using a funnel.BigGuy wrote:My family was stationed in Germany in the mid 60s. The old gentlemen we rented from had seen the national currency completely devalued 3 times in his life. He owned a small orchard where he raised swichens. (not sure of spelling) These are a kind of plumb if I remember correctly.
He used them to make schnapps. He had a pretty good supply of schnapps stored in at least two underground cellars. He told us that when things got really bad, schnapps was more valuable than gold. It could be used for barter as well as having it's own intrinsic value as an antiseptic, source of calories, and drink.
I suppose you could bottle it in various sizes for differing denominations. Not sure how well it'd fit in your wallet or a vending machine though. And I guess there'd always be the problem of counterfeiting.
But with the federal reserve act, the delegated that authority. Now we, the taxpayer pays taxes. The IRS deposits the tax monies in the Federal Reserve. The congress comes to the federal reserve and says we nee "X" amount of money. The federal reserve secures a bond from the government to pay for printing and interest, prints the money and we see it in circulation worth less than was paid for it.Dave2 wrote:Wasn't there something in the constitution about congress having authority in the area of currency?
psijac wrote:No one wants to make change using a funnel.BigGuy wrote:My family was stationed in Germany in the mid 60s. The old gentlemen we rented from had seen the national currency completely devalued 3 times in his life. He owned a small orchard where he raised swichens. (not sure of spelling) These are a kind of plumb if I remember correctly.
He used them to make schnapps. He had a pretty good supply of schnapps stored in at least two underground cellars. He told us that when things got really bad, schnapps was more valuable than gold. It could be used for barter as well as having it's own intrinsic value as an antiseptic, source of calories, and drink.
I suppose you could bottle it in various sizes for differing denominations. Not sure how well it'd fit in your wallet or a vending machine though. And I guess there'd always be the problem of counterfeiting.