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From: "Ian Grigg" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

> e-gold gets mentioned in Forbes!
> http://www.forbes.com/forbes/2002/0304/020.html
> ...
> "... E-gold has credibility problems of its own--it's domiciled in
> a tax haven in the Caribbean--but there is no reason its role could
> not be played by a more substantial institution. UBS would do.

Notice how they say that being domiciled in a "tax haven" is itself a
"credibility problem".  I would think that IF e-gold had any real
credibility problems, it would have nothing to do with domicile, and
everything to do with integrity and business practice, such as the
accountability questions Dagny Taggart and Jim Davidson have been
discussing.  But of course Forbes wants to chime in with the
financial and world government establishment against "tax havens". 
To them, if you use a tax haven, then you've just stepped out of line
buddy and you've got "credibility problems".

Also notice how they would support a gold system if it was managed by
a "substantial institution".  Meaning a big institution in bed with
the U.S. government.  What a trilateral nightmare that would be:  1.
U.S. government, 2. UBS, and 3. Microsoft.  With all three of them
"running" the new gold economy in some kind of fascistic arrangement.

- --- Patrick

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