Cocaine just won't do, Ray.  It's got to be gold.  Pot maybe -- does far less 
harm than either gold of cocaine.
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Ray Harrell 
  To: 'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION,EDUCATION' 
  Sent: Saturday, July 17, 2010 12:16 PM
  Subject: Re: [Futurework] Poachers turned gamekeepers


  Ed,  it all depends upon that which you were "entrained" upon as a child.    
Gold has none of that meaning or value to me.    It's just stuff.   Makes a 
nice wedding ring if you are not allergic to it.   I threw two of them in the 
river.     Today  the bankers would be swimming like fish to catch them.   
"Dumb Indian".        I call it the "Whooping Crane" Syndrome.    We don't mate 
without gold.    But it is all arbitrary as is disease.    I would say that 
America should make Cocaine it's national standard since as it's banned and is 
more expensive than Gold or Paper.    Gold was valuable when they banned 
private ownership of it except for jewelry.    Canadians love gold.     They 
wanted to put a huge Gold Mine with a polluting arsenic pool just above 
Yellowstone National Park.    Play around with that super volcano caldera for 
gold.   At least the Americans said no.     Did any of you see the movie I made 
with Disney, Pocahontas?      We thought that the description of the English 
was a bit over the top but conversations like these are proving me wrong.    
Gold fever.

   

  REH

   

  From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ed Weick
  Sent: Saturday, July 17, 2010 12:00 PM
  To: [email protected]
  Subject: [Futurework] Poachers turned gamekeepers

   

  Because China, Russia and the Middle East -- at a crunch (albeit extremely 
stressful even for them) -- could survive the demise of the West (there are 
plenty more potential consumer markets in the world), the latter couldn't 
survive without the former. Unless we have universal warfare, this is why gold 
will resume its role as a world currency before too long -- as future 
historians will relate (with some amazement no doubt that America was so 
resistant). And it will probably occur when the likes of Goldman Sachs and 
JPMorgan Chase decide to turn from poachers to gamekeepers for a bigger -- but 
more law-abiding -- future, not because of any particular G20 summit.

  Keith      




  Keith Hudson, Saltford, England 

  You keep trying, Keith, and I do wish you luck but I do not see a possibility 
of a return to the inflexibility of the gold standard.  As I pointed out in a 
previous posting, currencies are strategic devices that governments can use to 
their advantage, and to their disadvantage as well.  Currencies can be inflated 
and deflated for domestic economic purposes and they can be pegged to other 
currencies to achieve advantages in international trade.  How China has used 
the renminbi is an example of the latter.

  Would countries really want to lose such strategic flexibility just to pile 
up huge hoards of gold or run out of gold?  I hardly think so.

  Ed

   



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