First
Lifer
- Jun 3, 2002
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Originally posted by: Modelworks
Originally posted by: First
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Like I said, in some very remote locations in some parts of the 3rd world, you may not be able to use the dollar. The fact that you might be able to use Krugerrand in some places means nothing, since the same facts apply to Krugerrand; you can't use it everywhere, including the U.S., where you'd be turned away and laughed at if you paid businesses with it. Hell, the stuff was banned in half the civilized world until the 90's because South Africa makes it. Get over it, you're wrong and badly wrong at that.
No the same facts don't apply. Gold remains the universal currency, it doesn't rely on banks, corporations or governments. I can exchange it for services in cities or 100 miles out in the jungle. You can't do that with any other form of currency.
Again, if you tried to pass off a Krugerrand to most businesses in the U.S. or most Western countries, you'd be laughed out the door. This is in contrast dollars, which are accepted everywhere in the Western industrialized world and virtually all of the 3rd world. And sorry, there are no markets in jungles. You're clinging to a reality that doesn't exist. The fact that gold doesn't need a gov't means nothing unless you bargain shop for goods in lower Tanzania where, sadly, they probably don't know any better.