I just returned from the Cambridge House Investment
Conference in Vancouver, BC, and found this to be
one of the best precious metals gatherings ever, not
so much from the perspective of a number of
attendees, but from the quality of the people who
did attend.
Many mainline speakers and workshops were made
available and it did not take very long for me to
“hear through the grapevine” that a well-known
personality in the precious metals space had deemed
that “silver is NOT money, it is an industrial
metal.”
Since this is hearsay to me, I want to be careful in
that perhaps I don’t have the exact statement, but I
did get a barrage of people coming to me and
reporting essentially the same information.
First, let us be clear: silver is an industrial
metal and used in industry it most certainly is.
However, a better label might be high technology
metal, because silver conducts electricity better
than any element; it is crucial to so many
applications, our way of life would cease without
silver.
The industrial use of silver continues to grow,
although admittedly it might slow down during this
year due to recessionary pressures, but we cannot be
sure of that yet. In any event, silver used to
comprise about 35% of the total demand a decade ago,
and now, according to the Silver Institute,
industrial use is 54%. Clearly, silver is an
industrial metal and makes up over half of the total
demand. No argument from this writer, but what about
silver’s role as money?
“The major monetary metal in history is silver, not
gold.”
– Noble Laureate Milton Friedman in an interview
with James U. Blanchard III for the 20th
Anniversary New Orleans Investment Conference,
November 7, 1993.
“To 250 million persons in 51 countries the word for
money is the same as the word for silver and silver
literally means money.”
Silver Profits in the 80’s, by Jerome F.
Smith and Barbara Kelly Smith, copyright © 1982, ERC
Publishing Company, page 43.
“Gold is the money of kings; silver is the money of
gentlemen; barter is the money of peasants; but debt
is the money of slaves.”
Money and Wealth in the New Millennium, by
Norm Franz, copyright © 2001, Whitestonepress, page
154.
The three above quotes might help put the
silver-as-money debate into perspective, yet they do
not really prove that silver is money. For absolute
proof we need to know how the law defines money. As
I was doing research for this missive, I asked
Google if
“Silver is Money” and the first article to pop
up was one written by me in 2001.
From that article…
“I took out my Black's Law Dictionary and
looked up money. Interesting when we look at the
legal aspects of things. I will admit I have an old
version, 1968 to be exact. The reason is bias on my
part. It seems the definition of things keeps
changing as we move forward in time. To quote
Black’s Law Dictionary, ‘In usual and ordinary
acceptation it means gold, silver, or paper money
used as circulating medium of exchange, and does not
embrace notes, bonds, evidence of debt, or other
personal or real estate. Lane v. Railey, 280
Ky. 319, 133 S.W. 2d 74, 79, 81.’”
Reading further we find:
“In its strict technical sense ‘money’ means coined
metal, usually gold or silver, upon which the
government stamp has been impressed to indicate its
value. In its more popular sense, ‘money’ means any
currency, tokens, bank-notes, or other circulation
medium in general use as the representative of
value.” Then under that several more sites are
named.
In my view we are all entitled to our opinions, and,
to my thinking, the Free Market of Ideas is most
valuable to a free society. However, none of us is
entitled to make up our own facts, and saying that
black is white, under the current Orwellian
conditions, does not change reality although a great
number of debt burdened can see it that way.
According to the Law of the Land (United States)
“Article I, Section 10, Clause 1. No State
shall...coin Money; emit Bills of Credit; make any
Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment
of Debt.”
We again see silver clearly defined. In fact let me
digress slightly and ask, Have any citizens
committed fraud by paying a debt with a debt? In
other words, all the circulating currency is loaned
into existence . . . are you breaking the law by
passing this on as money? Alas, I’m being facetious
but could not resist.
Okay, so almost everyone knows about the
Constitution and how little respect it receives by
all those representatives of the people (debt
slaves?), from the President on down, who take an
oath to uphold it against all enemies foreign and
domestic. Yet, we live in a world that is currently
making up the rules as we go along.
And what is the current rule (law) about silver as
money? I think the U.S. Mint might make a case that
we can establish as to the current status, and this
is what is clearly stated on their Web site.
“American Eagle Silver Bullion Coins are affordable
investments, beautiful collectibles, thoughtful
gifts and memorable incentives or rewards. Above
all, as legal tender, they’re the only silver
bullion coins whose weight and purity are guaranteed
by the United States Government. They're also the
only silver coins allowed in an IRA.” [Emphasis
mine.]
So you can pay your heating bill, water, trash,
rent, etc., with silver; by law, it is still money.
Regardless of what anyone states, like it or not,
the law is clear—you can use Silver Eagles to pay
for goods and services within the U.S., and
therefore silver is indeed money. I do not, however,
advise this at all, because you would need to pay in
“legal” terms, meaning “One Dollar” per one-ounce
silver coin. As we all know (most of us anyway), the
face value is far different from the market price.
As this is written, it takes about 15 pieces of
paper labeled ONE DOLLAR to buy a coin that says ONE
DOLLAR. Interesting?
It is an honor to be.
Sincerely,
David Morgan
Mr. Morgan has followed the silver market for more
than thirty years. He wrote the book,
Get the Skinny on Silver Investing. Much of his
Web site,
Silver-Investor.com,
is devoted to education about the precious metals,
it is both a free site and does have a members only
section. To receive full access to
The Morgan Report click the hyperlink.
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