Author Topic: Smarter than You: Currency, edition  (Read 2064 times)

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Offline SSG Snuggle Bunny

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Smarter than You: Currency, edition
« on: October 26, 2013, 10:08:15 AM »
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kentuck (69,712 posts)

What is "money"?

It's only paper, right? It is not backed by gold or any other asset - only the good faith of our government - is that correct?

Money is only valuable so long as we can trade it for other goods. A dollar is only good for what it will buy. If it takes $10 to buy an apple, then it is not worth very much. There was a time when the minimum wage could buy a lot more, even though it was less than today.

And why should we worry about inflation when 98% of the people have less and less?

Money is relative to labor. If money is worth less and less, then labor is worth less and less, per its value in the marketplace. It's only good for what it will buy.

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eridani (39,651 posts)

47. All currency is fiat currency
 
If metals had some kind of inherent worth, why do their prices fluctuate?

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johnd83 (519 posts)

59. I agree, commodity backed currencies are no better
 
The gold standard was a disaster in the first half of the 1900s.

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Warpy (72,347 posts)

3. It's debt that someone owes us
 
for our labor or other considerations. Instead of bartering like goods, which is a limited system, we are given debt markers which can then be exchanged for whatever we need--food, clothing, shelter, internet service, SUVs, whatever.

Money has no intrinsic value apart from being a debt marker that can be exchanged for real stuff.

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kentuck (69,712 posts)

12. But if we instead had the $17 billion dollars in debt in the hands of American consumers....
 
It would probably create a serious inflation problem?

As it is, paid to our Treasury note holders, there is little possibility for inflation.

The problem with our economy is the exact opposite. There is not enough money in the hands of consumers.

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quaker bill (7,252 posts)

13. I make it

literally from scratch. I start with metal and natural stone. I melt the metal, alloy it, roll it, hammer it, weld it. I take the natural stone, cut it, grind it, and polish it. I bring the two together into necklaces, pendants, bracelets, earrings, rings....

I take stuff I paid a little for and sell it for a lot more. The difference between what I paid and what I receive is money that literally never existed, because I created the new value of these physical things from thin air, with ideas and a hammer.... The total amount of "real value" in the world increases, ever so slightly.

People value it, and that value is the "money" I receive. We have to stop thinking of "money" as a finite thing. If it was a finite thing, I could not make it.

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quaker bill (7,252 posts)

43. a final point

in my business when I take that $50 in materials and turn it into a $500 item, and then place the item in my inventory, I am taxed on the $450 difference by the IRS, as income, exactly the same whether I sell it or not. The IRS treats it exactly the same as money, so it is money. In that they are part of the entity that issues the stuff, they get to define it, they call it money and tax it, so it is money.

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Nuclear Unicorn (9,283 posts)

64. The IRS taxes on inventory? I thought they taxed income from completed transactions?

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quaker bill (7,252 posts)

65. The change in value of inventory is income.

 :???:


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hunter (17,569 posts)

34. I think a lot about creating a society that no longer uses money.
 
A society that is able to abandon money for something better, probably by technical and social innovations, a society that makes "money" obsolete.

What would a high technology society that doesn't use "money" as a means of accounting look like? Could such a society grow within our existing economy or would the present moneyed class see such innovation as a threat and crush it?

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hunter (17,569 posts)

38. With the powerful computing systems we have these days, and most every family having a cell phone...
 
... maybe we could implement some kind of modern multi-dimensional barter system. I don't know.

First off we need to create a society in which everyone can be secure in their person, a society where everyone has good food to eat, a safe place to live, access to appropriate medical care, and a good education no matter their current economic situation. In that environment people could experiment with new, innovative sorts of trade.

Until then I think we need single payer health care, free public education early childhood through college, good government jobs for the currently unemployed, government support for the unemployable, with inflation controlled by taxing people in the higher strata of the economic food chain.

We need to create a "trickle up" economy with money created for the benefit of lower income people who will spend it for necessities and simple comforts (movies, camping in national parks, eating "out" a few times a month...this list is endless) and then skim that money off the top by taxation before it rots causing inflation, buying politicians, or stagnating in bizarre financial games that do not improve our society.

What we have now is a eutrophic economy. The rotten money at the top is smothering the economic life below it.

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Shankapotomus (2,765 posts)

36. Money is meaningless

I think practically all value on earth traces back to the sun. Plants take the energy from the sun, some animals eat the plants and still others eat the plant eaters but it all traces back to sunlight. Sunlight is the true money. People say they "worked for this" and they "worked for that" but everything we "own" traces back to either the forced appropriation of another living entity's energy or the claiming of inanimate resources that never 'belonged' to us in the first place. It's funny how "It's mine because I worked for it!" is used as the "valid" and sole justification for a person's claim to a resource while they ignore any animal's claim to its resources that exerts the same energy to acquire them. The truth is, nobody truly works for or "earns" anything on this planet. We just take it. Follow the chain of commodities and it will end with someone who is either seizing or gathering them up without payment or reimbursement. And if we are going to take it we might as well recognize there are other beings on this planet that need to live and figure out a more equitable method of distribution.



http://www.democraticunderground.com/10023903736


REMINDER: The politicians these people admire are now in charge of the world's largest economy.
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Offline franksolich

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Re: Smarter than You: Currency, edition
« Reply #1 on: October 26, 2013, 10:18:18 AM »
If money's meaningless, how come most of the primitives look anxiously for the mailman once a month?
apres moi, le deluge

Milo Yiannopoulos "It has been obvious since 2016 that Trump carries an anointing of some kind. My American friends, are you so blind to reason, and deaf to Heaven? Can he do all this, and cannot get a crown? This man is your King. Coronate him, and watch every devil shriek, and every demon howl."

Offline Fourwinds

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Re: Smarter than You: Currency, edition
« Reply #2 on: October 26, 2013, 10:22:09 AM »
If money's meaningless, how come most of the primitives look anxiously for the mailman once a month?

Because in their circles its cool to look psuedo-philisophical or intellectual.

Offline Big Dog

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Re: Smarter than You: Currency, edition
« Reply #3 on: October 26, 2013, 10:32:18 AM »
That was painful to read.

Predictable, but painful.
Government is the negation of liberty.
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CAVE FVROREM PATIENTIS.

Offline Mr Mannn

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Re: Smarter than You: Currency, edition
« Reply #4 on: October 26, 2013, 10:32:26 AM »
If money's meaningless, how come most of the primitives look anxiously for the mailman once a month?
Mentally, the primitives have not made the link between cash money and the "magic" EBT card.

Offline miskie

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Re: Smarter than You: Currency, edition
« Reply #5 on: October 26, 2013, 11:20:51 AM »
In his own stupid way, Kentuck fell face first into a big pile of truth.

Offline Freeper

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Re: Smarter than You: Currency, edition
« Reply #6 on: October 26, 2013, 11:43:19 AM »
Money is supposed to be a representation of labor, you work, you get money, you exchange that for goods and services. Since the DUmmies don't labor their money has no meaning other than it buys pot and Cheetos.
I may not lock my doors while sitting at a red light and a black man is near, but I sure as hell grab on tight to my wallet when any democrats are close by.

Offline Bad Dog

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Re: Smarter than You: Currency, edition
« Reply #7 on: October 26, 2013, 11:54:09 AM »
Amazed they aren't jumping down Qwacker Bill's throat  1000% profit, talk about ripping off the consumer.

Offline Aristotelian

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Re: Smarter than You: Currency, edition
« Reply #8 on: October 26, 2013, 04:09:40 PM »
I do love their talk about a society without money. Whilst early societies didn't have money, once it was created as a concept it stuck completely and utterly. There are widespread records of money emerging very rapidly when artificial societies are created without a currency - the example well-known by any student of even basic economics is cigarette currencies in prisoner-of-war camps.

Offline DumbAss Tanker

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Re: Smarter than You: Currency, edition
« Reply #9 on: October 26, 2013, 04:44:21 PM »
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eridani (39,651 posts)

47. All currency is fiat currency
 
If metals had some kind of inherent worth, why do their prices fluctuate?

Now I'm no gold bug, but that right there is downright stupid on a logic level.  Premise - paper money has no absolute value; conclusion - therefore, since the price of metals measured in fiat currency is variable, it's the metal rather than the currency that has no absolute value.

 :rotf:
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Offline miskie

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Re: Smarter than You: Currency, edition
« Reply #10 on: October 26, 2013, 04:52:20 PM »
Now I'm no gold bug, but that right there is downright stupid on a logic level.  Premise - paper money has no absolute value; conclusion - therefore, since the price of metals measured in fiat currency is variable, it's the metal rather than the currency that has no absolute value.

 :rotf:

 :rofl:

This made me laugh - I was out delivering mail the other day listening to Beck on a small transistor radio I carry with me and a Goldline commercial came on. Then this went through my head..

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Silver, silver and gold

Silver and gold, silver and gold

Glenn Beck wants all of your silver and gold

He doesn't care what its worth-

He's hoarding it all 'til the end of the earth.

Silver and gold, silver and gold

Mean so much more when I see

Silver and gold is on sale

With a Beck 'token' free.


Offline GOBUCKS

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Re: Smarter than You: Currency, edition
« Reply #11 on: October 26, 2013, 08:06:22 PM »
DUmmy Quaker Bill needs an accountant.

Offline 98ZJUSMC

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Re: Smarter than You: Currency, edition
« Reply #12 on: October 26, 2013, 08:25:39 PM »
If money's meaningless, how come most of the primitives look anxiously for the mailman once a month?
:-)

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Money is relative to labor.

What in the hell is that even supposed to mean Mr. Smahtest, bestest, brightestest primitive dope?   :???:
              

Liberal thinking is a two-legged stool and magical thinking is one of the legs, the other is a combination of self-loating and misanthropy.  To understand it, you would have to be able to sit on that stool while juggling two elephants, an anvil and a fragmentation grenade, sans pin.

"Accuse others of what you do." - Karl Marx

Offline 98ZJUSMC

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Re: Smarter than You: Currency, edition
« Reply #13 on: October 26, 2013, 08:29:15 PM »
I do love their talk about a society without money. Whilst early societies didn't have money, once it was created as a concept it stuck completely and utterly. There are widespread records of money emerging very rapidly when artificial societies are created without a currency - the example well-known by any student of even basic economics is cigarette currencies in prisoner-of-war camps.

Well, it was on Star Trek so, like, everything on Star Trek is going to, like, happen.

Already.....

Next week.   :mental:


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A society that is able to abandon money for something better, probably by technical and social innovations, a society that makes "money" obsolete
.

Umm, yeeahhh.....
              

Liberal thinking is a two-legged stool and magical thinking is one of the legs, the other is a combination of self-loating and misanthropy.  To understand it, you would have to be able to sit on that stool while juggling two elephants, an anvil and a fragmentation grenade, sans pin.

"Accuse others of what you do." - Karl Marx

Offline Dori

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Re: Smarter than You: Currency, edition
« Reply #14 on: October 26, 2013, 08:45:38 PM »
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quaker bill (7,252 posts)

43. a final point

in my business when I take that $50 in materials and turn it into a $500 item, and then place the item in my inventory, I am taxed on the $450 difference by the IRS, as income, exactly the same whether I sell it or not. The IRS treats it exactly the same as money, so it is money. In that they are part of the entity that issues the stuff, they get to define it, they call it money and tax it, so it is money.

I hope your preparing your own taxes.... :rotf:
“How fortunate for governments that the people     they administer don't think”  Adolph Hitler

Offline GOBUCKS

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Re: Smarter than You: Currency, edition
« Reply #15 on: October 26, 2013, 08:53:41 PM »
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quaker bill (7,252 posts)

65. The change in value of inventory is income.

So...let me get this straight.

If Doug Bulna's Government Motors dealership starts the year with 120 cars in inventory, and ends the year with 120 cars in inventory, they made no money and owe no taxes.

I always wondered how those filthy rich pukes avoided paying their share.

Now I know.

Offline Carl

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Re: Smarter than You: Currency, edition
« Reply #16 on: October 26, 2013, 09:03:19 PM »
Increase in inventory is taxable but not the way the DUmmy thinks it to be.
A retail outlet can`t bury profit in inventory and write off the expense while still holding a gain in asset.

A tax person would have to explain the particulars involved.

Offline jukin

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Re: Smarter than You: Currency, edition
« Reply #17 on: October 27, 2013, 11:34:39 AM »
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eridani (39,651 posts)

47. All currency is fiat currency
 
If metals had some kind of inherent worth, why do their prices fluctuate?

The stupid it BURNS!

Quote
quaker bill (7,252 posts)

13. I make it

literally from scratch. I start with metal and natural stone. I melt the metal, alloy it, roll it, hammer it, weld it. I take the natural stone, cut it, grind it, and polish it. I bring the two together into necklaces, pendants, bracelets, earrings, rings....

I take stuff I paid a little for and sell it for a lot more. The difference between what I paid and what I receive is money that literally never existed, because I created the new value of these physical things from thin air, with ideas and a hammer.... The total amount of "real value" in the world increases, ever so slightly.

People value it, and that value is the "money" I receive. We have to stop thinking of "money" as a finite thing. If it was a finite thing, I could not make it.

My mouth dropped when I read this coming out from a DUche. Then:

Quote
quaker bill (7,252 posts)

43. a final point

in my business when I take that $50 in materials and turn it into a $500 item, and then place the item in my inventory, I am taxed on the $450 difference by the IRS, as income, exactly the same whether I sell it or not. The IRS treats it exactly the same as money, so it is money. In that they are part of the entity that issues the stuff, they get to define it, they call it money and tax it, so it is money.

My faith was restored and the world was right.

DUche quaker bill could save a lot on taxes if he just went in and destroyed some of his inventory back to base materials. Probably get a bigger EITC refund.
When you are the beneficiary of someone’s kindness and generosity, it produces a sense of gratitude and community.

When you are the beneficiary of a policy that steals from someone and gives it to you in return for your vote, it produces a sense of entitlement and dependency.

Offline JohnnyReb

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Re: Smarter than You: Currency, edition
« Reply #18 on: October 27, 2013, 11:42:13 AM »
DUmmie spends $50 for material and labor, sells product for $500 and makes $450 in profit but any big company that makes 3 to 10 percent profit is evil..... :hammer: :hammer: :hammer: :hammer: :hammer:

A fellow could wear out several Chinese made hammers trying to beat the stupid out of a just one DUmmie.
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