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  • Posted by 10 years, 5 months ago
    Gold Is more than a commodity. From my book "The New Gold Standard":

    "Wealth is production, and gold is the equivalent of wealth
    produced. Because neither wealth nor gold can be created out of
    nothing, neither wealth nor gold are possible without individuals
    of intelligence, individuals of ability, and individuals of productivity.
    Fiat is force and it is the equivalent of wealth confiscated.

    Both fiat and force are the tools of those that seek the unearned.
    Where a gold standard is welcomed by productive and honest
    individuals, the fiat standard is welcomed by those that prefer
    government control and regulation. Where the gold standard
    demands the earned, the fiat standard grants the unearned. Where
    a gold standard evolves from individual choice, a fiat standard
    evolves from government edict. Where a gold standard necessitates
    only that individuals be left free to act, to choose, and to
    trade, a fiat standard invites government to control, to regulate,
    and to dictate individuals’ choices, actions, and the terms of trade.

    Gold limits the government’s power to spend more money
    than it receives in taxes and, in doing so, gold limits the government’s
    arbitrary power over the economy; gold checks artificial
    money and credit expansion; it prevents artificial booms, which
    lead to very real busts; gold protects individuals from economically
    unsound government programs; and it protects citizens from the
    inflationary confiscation of private property."

    Paul Nathan
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  • Posted by Winston777 10 years, 5 months ago
    I've been holding physical gold and silver for some time now so I'm not under water with the recent drops in price. That said, I'm still holding some small stocks in two gold "miners" which one has tanked (BRZG) and the other (GDXJ) is heading there it seems. I'll never buy another MINER stock - period. Even with holding physical precious metals, it does haunt me that the Bible speaks of a coming time where "people will throw their gold into the streets because it will be worthless". What will cause that, I don't know, but I trust in God's Word.
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  • Posted by Robbie53024 10 years, 5 months ago
    Don't overlook silver. It has greater industrial usage and so will continue to have demand regardless of use in jewelry and as an investment.
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  • Posted by RonC 10 years, 5 months ago
    gold is a commodity. If you buy low and sell high it can be a good investment. However, it pays no dividend. It's pretty, it feels good in your hand. Between the time you buy and sell it does nothing for the investor. My advice: buy low, sell high.
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  • Posted by $ Commander 10 years, 5 months ago in reply to this comment.
    freedomforall answered for me!
    Gold is now a predominant commodity for the manufacturing industry. It takes "X" resources to locate, mine, refine and distribute. This determines fair market value....not the "fiat" speculations of the stock market.
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  • Posted by freedomforall 10 years, 5 months ago
    Gold and silver in hand, yes.
    Gold and silver indices, no. They are used by banksters to manipulate prices of the genuine asset, just as the banksters use financial instruments (including fiat) and market rules to manipulate share prices. Be aware that such manipulations will detrimentally affect the value of your holdings. Don't buy on credit or margin.
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  • Posted by fivedollargold 10 years, 5 months ago
    It is prudent to own gold in one's portfolio given our uncertain times. $5Au maintains roughly 10% of his holdings in marketable gold assets.
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  • Posted by Robbie53024 10 years, 5 months ago in reply to this comment.
    There are certainly instances where some try to cause a market imbalance. But given the recent manipulations in the market, and major manipulation using purchases, one must give independent credence to tangible assets.
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  • Posted by $ Commander 10 years, 5 months ago
    When the market hits bottom...I'll consider.
    My uncle purchased one troy ounce per week from the early fifties into the early eighties. When the Hunt brothers made their run on the precious metal market, my uncle sold everything at near $850 per ounce. When the market came back to reasonable "value", he traded all the "fiat" back to gold. My cousin is sittin pretty!
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