Gold giddy. Yet another ridiculous idea.

So much of what Donald Trump does is thoughtless, cruel, unnecessary, nutty, senseless, or based on a lie one can feel is unnecessary to critique. It stares us in the face.

But, so long as there are gullible MAGAs who still believe the idiocy, we’ll keep writing about it..

His instigation of massive import duties and simultaneously claiming to combat inflation is senseless. Announcing that Ukraine started the war with Russia is nutty and based on a blatant lie. So is the claim that Jan 6 was a typical tourist day, not a riot and that the election was stolen.

Hiring Elon Musk to mass fire thousands of government workers without considering their contribution to our economy falls into the thoughtless, cruel, and senseless territory.

There are too many in that vein to list here, but I feel compelled to address one because it’s so stupid as to be humorous.

Musk Signals Looking Into Gold at Fort Knox—Here’s What to Know. 

Auditing Fort Knox gold reserves is “several decades overdue,” says a sound money advocacy group executive.
Tech billionaire Elon Musk indicated that Fort Knox, the Kentucky-based facility famous for storing U.S. gold reserves, could be investigated.
“Looking for the gold at Fort Knox,” Musk wrote on social media platform X on Feb. 18. “This gold is the property of the American people. I sure hope it’s still there!”
“Who is confirming that gold wasn’t stolen from Fort Knox? Maybe it’s there, maybe it’s not,” Musk wrote. Last week, Musk was encouraged by Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) to review Fort Knox’s gold reserves. .

During a Feb. 17 interview with “FOX & Friends,” Paul revealed that he has been trying to obtain greater transparency for the last decade “to make sure it’s all there.”

The Kentucky senator also believes an audit can confirm that the precious metal “still has value” and can implicitly provide “value to the dollar.”
That’s why we don’t get rid of it. We’ve got it. .

The IMF has it, the World Bank has it. Most central banks worldwide have gold, and it’s an implicit trust that the dollar still has some backing,” Paul told host Lawrence Jones.

Let’s begin with Musk and his entourage marching into Fort Knox “to make sure it’s all there.” Really?
Will they go around counting bars? Will they weigh every bar? Will they check each bar to see whether any are gold-painted bricks? Will they do anything of value on their tour? Can they be trusted not to scratch some gold off a few bars?
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Fort Knox Gold: Everything You Need to Know | TCBG
Is there any need for “Efficiency Elon Musk” to fly his gang down Fort Knox’s warehouses?
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This trek is even more useless because only half of U.S. government gold is at Fort Knox. The rest is stored at West Point Mint, New York, Denver Mint, Colorado, and Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and some are held as working stock across various Treasury facilities for minting coins.
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So even the most thorough, intensive, expensive examination of Fort Knox won’t answer the questions, “How much gold do we have,” and “Has any been stolen or lost?”
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$20 Liberty Gold Coin (XF) | U.S. Gold Bureau
$20 gold coin. Weight: approximately 1.075 troy ounces, Gold Content: 30.093 grams (approximately 0.9675 troy ounces, Purity: 90% gold, with the remaining 10% typically of copper
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Then there’s the question, what is a gold bar? There are many different purity levels in the government’s bars, ranging from 99.99% all the way down to 90% pure..

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Now let’s get to basics; Gold is not money. And gold does not back the U.S. dollar. Gold is nothing more than a metal. It is desired because it is pretty, fairly rare, a good conductor of electricity, and easily malleable. Iron, silver, and numerous other substances are far more helpful. .

> Gold doesn’t back the dollar, simply because the price varies wildly, and the federal government can, and often has, adjusted the exchange value of gold for dollars. .

If gold backed the dollar, a $20 gold coin would be worth $20. But it isn’t. A $20 gold coin is worth close to $3,000 at current gold prices, and a different amount to coin collectors. .

So, how can one reasonably claim that the U.S. dollar is “backed” by gold? It isn’t and never has been. There could be an argument that the U.S. dollar once was backed by silver, in that the government offered to buy and sell silver at $35 per ounce. .

However, that silver “backing” no longer exists, and no such buy/sell agreement exists for gold. .

The government also stores silver at various locations, including the West Point Mint in New York and the Denver Mint in Colorado. Will the Musk gang also measure our silver holdings? .

So, what backs the U.S. dollar if not silver or gold? Answer: The full faith and credit of the U.S. government. Click the link to read more about “full faith and credit. .

Finally, the Musk jaunt is asinine for yet another reason. Gold represents only a minuscule fraction of federal government assets. .

As of Feb 28, 2021, Fort Knox had about $6 Billion of the $11 Billion in gold owned by the federal government. .

Compare that to M1 Abrams Tanks: We have about 4,650 of those tanks, with a unit value of $14.5 million. In total, our tanks are worth about  $67 Billion. Think about that. All the gold owned by the federal government is worth just one-sixth of our M1 Abrams Tanks. .

Just one aircraft carrier, the USS Gerald R. Ford, is worth $16 Billion.  Our B2 Stealth bombers are worth $15 Billion. Is Musk going to forget about tanks, carriers, bombers, and all other military hardware that totals Trillions of dollars, but focus on inventorying gold? .

And then, there are all the other federal assets: The federal government owns approximately 640 million acres of land, about 28% of the total land area in the United States. Will Musk inspect those to see how they are being used? The U.S. federal government owns and operates approximately 5,399 dams. Should Musk look into them, too? .

The U.S. government stores various strategic and precious metals, including copper, nickel, palladium, uranium, and platinum; I don’t know how much of each, but each one is more useful than gold and perhaps monetarily more valuable. Do they deserve a Musk visit? .

THE BOTTOM LINE .

Gold is a minimally functional, lovely-to-look-at metal that comprises a miniscule amount of federal assets. It is not money, nor does it back the U.S. dollar. Those Abram tanks are worth more and do more to back the dollar than gold bars. .

Musk is visiting Fort Knox to get his face on TV, not for any practical purpose. It is just one more extremely nonsensical idea from the current administration.

The irony is that Musk is the head of the mythical Department of Government Efficiency, and he is wasting thousands of federal dollars to go on a useless, nonsensical jaunt. That’s “efficiency”?

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell Monetary Sovereignty Twitter: @rodgermitchell Search #monetarysovereignty Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell; MUCK RACK: https://muckrack.com/rodger-malcolm-mitchell; https://www.academia.edu/

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A Government’s Sole Purpose is to Improve and Protect The People’s Lives.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

A Challege: Show me where I’m wrong.

Do you love learning? Even though I passed right through 88, and am roaring toward 89, I still do, which means I love being shown where I’m wrong. How else can anyone learn but to be given new beliefs that replace former beliefs?
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Never be too old or too sure to learn.
So here is a challenge to you, my readers, plus the MMT gang (Stephanie, Warren, Randy et al.), CRFB, Fox viewers, mainstream economists, journalists, politicians of all stripes, and all others who may believe some or all of what I believe is wrong. You may agree with me on many things but disagree on certain details (Hello MMTers). I’d love to hear from you. Some of you may disagree with everything I write. I’d love to hear from you (except from those whose main argument consists of comparing me to excrement. No learning there; I’ve heard it all). Some of you merely may have questions, not necessarily disagreements, about what I believe. Send me your questions and I will try to answer those I feel may be educational. Some of you agree with everything I write. Gotta love you. Here’s the challenge: I will list certain things I believe. You tell me where I’m wrong, and this is the important part: Show me your data. I’ll print worthwhile comments along with whether I feel you’ve made a valid point(s). Where appropriate, I’ll provide data or other evidence to substantiate my point. Or, I’ll simply agree with  you. This way, we all can learn, and it will be fun. I believe:

I. Our Monetarily Sovereign government never can run short of its sovereign currency, the U.S. dollar. It can pay for anything costing dollars, instantly, simply by pressing computer keys. This compares to city, county, and state governments, which are monetarily non-sovereign, and do not have a sovereign currency, so can and often do run short of dollars.

In the same vein, euro nations like Germany, France, Italy, Greece et al, do not have sovereign currencies, so they can and do run short of euros. The European Union is Monetarily Sovereign so it  cannot run short of euros.

II. Federal taxes do not fund federal spending. The primary purpose of federal taxes is to control the economy by taxing what the government wishes to limit and by giving tax breaks to what the government wishes to encourage.

Even if the federal government collected $0 taxes, it could continue spending, forever. In fact, the Treasury destroys all the tax ollars it receives, and orders new dollars to pay for goods and services.

A secondary (though not necessary) purpose of federal taxes is support demand for the U.S. dollar by requiring dollars to be used for tax payments.

III. The Federal government does not borrow dollars, nor does it use the dollars that are deposited into T-security accounts. After being deposited, those dollars remain the property of the T-security account holders and are not touched (including the interest dollars deposited by the government.)

The federal government easily could operate without accepting any T-security dollars. The purposes of T-securities are to provide a safe storage place for unused dollars (which stabilizes the dollar), and to aid the Federal Reserve in controlling interest rates.

IV. The federal deficits and debt are not, nor will they ever be, “unsustainable.” That word, “unsustainable,” is used by Libertarians and other debt hawks, yet never have I seen what it supposedly means. Does “unsustainable” mean the government will be unable to pay its bills? If not, what exactly does it mean?

The “debt ceiling” is an artifact of economic ignorance and should be eliminated. It’s sole purpose is to provide an excuse for outrage by the political party not in power. As such, it is a danger to America if used by traitors in Congress.

V. Federal deficit spending never causes inflation. Every inflation in history has been caused by shortages of key goods and services — most often oil and food — not federal deficits.

 Today’s inflation was caused by OPEC and Russia related shortages of oil, and by COVID-related of a litany of products and services.

The old saw, “Inflation is too much money chasing too few goods” is half wrong and half right. It should read, “Inflation is too few goods and services.” Period.

VI. Federal spending does not cause the above-mentioned shortages. Inflations tend to come suddenly. Federal spending does not cause a sudden increase in oil shortages (producers like OPEC, Russia and even America can and do suddenly contract production.)

Similarly, federal spending does not cause people suddenly to eat more food, thereby causeing a food shortage.

Thus, federal deficit spending does not cause inflation.

VII. All hyperinflations — pre-WW2 Germany, Zimbabwe, Argentina, et al. have been caused by shortages, not by government spending. The illusion of “excessive” spending (the infamous currency in a wheelbarrow) is created by an unknowledgable government’s poor response to inflation — printing higher denominations of currency rather than acquiring and distributing the scarce products and services.

VIII. Recessions are caused by reduced federal deficit spending and are cured by increased deficit spending to acquire and distribute the scarce products and services.

IX. Depressions are caused by federal surpluses and “balanced budgets,” and are cured by deficit spending.

X. The federal government can and should fund no-deductible, comprehensive Medicare coverage to every man, woman and child in America.

IX. The federal government can and should fund Social Security benefits for every man, woman, and child in America.

X. The federal government should fund all education from pre-K through post-college-grad, while paying people to attend school. The pre-K through 12 financial burden should be taken from the monetarily non-sovereign cities, counties, and states and paid by the infinitely solvent federal government.

XI. Benefits from the federal government do not dissuade people from working. The vast majority of Americans wish to increase their incomes and/or move up the income/wealth/power scale, so they will work to augment whatever they receive from the federal government.

XII. All benefits should go equally, to everyone, rich or poor. This eliminates the onerous task of monitoring.  incomes.

XIII. Gap Psychology (The desire of those near the top of any social scale to distance themselves from those below, and the desire of those below to approach those above) is the prime driver of bigotry, poverty and street crime in America. Curing those social problems will require dealing with Gap Psychology.

XIV. Gold, silver, or any other physical substance never were money, nor have they ever “backed” money nor provided safety for money. They merely are products the federal government periodically decides to purchase or sell at prices stipulated by the whim of the federal government.

If I were writing a book, every paragraph, I – XIV, would warrent a separate chapter and supporting data. Instead, I’ll address your comments and questions, and most importantly, I’ll provide supporting data, as I hope you will. Hoping to receive many objections, so we all can learn. Sincerely, Rodger Malcolm Mitchell Monetary Sovereignty Twitter: @rodgermitchell Search #monetarysovereignty Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

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The Sole Purpose of Government Is to Improve and Protect the Lives of the People.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY