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Topic: Is minting a $1 trillion platinum coin the answer to the debt limit crisis? (Read 121 times)

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https://www.nytimes.com/2021/10/07/us/politics/debt-ceiling-senate.html

No need to worry about minting a coin anymore. I saw this coming, Republicans don't care about lowering the deficit much so they play the same game democrats do. They only needed 10 senators and they got it. Expenses are covered through December, so Republicans will pretend to care about the debt once again in a couple months and then make more concessions on the debt ceiling.
Yes, our politicians play the debt ceiling game too often, and even once is too often. This and government shutdowns are at the top of mind when I say politicians are f'n feckless.



I can't recall now where I made the suggestion, however, I proposed a $1T coin or block/bar only it would be made of Plutonium - (thieves are less likely to want to attempt to steal it that way  Grin )

...and for the record - Platinum is a "better" base metal than Gold by value, but I'm keen to hear why you think gold is better?


My old engagement and wedding rings were platinum so platinum is my personal preference. Gold bugs might be a price driver for gold.
I have a ticker on my phone for about a dozen things---precious metals included.
legendary
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I can't recall now where I made the suggestion, however, I proposed a $1T coin or block/bar only it would be made of Plutonium - (thieves are less likely to want to attempt to steal it that way  Grin )

...and for the record - Platinum is a "better" base metal than Gold by value, but I'm keen to hear why you think gold is better?
legendary
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https://www.nytimes.com/2021/10/07/us/politics/debt-ceiling-senate.html

No need to worry about minting a coin anymore. I saw this coming, Republicans don't care about lowering the deficit much so they play the same game democrats do. They only needed 10 senators and they got it. Expenses are covered through December, so Republicans will pretend to care about the debt once again in a couple months and then make more concessions on the debt ceiling.
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I wish I would have bought one of those if you were selling them for 900 bucks even. Platinum was really really cheap about a year or two ago.

Yes and OgNasty's coins were tied to something that had real value, bitcoin. <--- just a last little bit of shade for the usd
I could only afford the silver collectable mint coin.
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The funny thing to me is how they make a point to say it’s a platinum coin. As if that somehow makes it’s trillion dollar valuation more reasonable. They might as well make it out of aluminum. It makes no difference.

My response to the US government… FIRST.
https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/4oz-9999-platinum-nastyfans-minted-seats-4892746

Right? On top of the irony that gold is worth more? I feel like platinum is undervalued but since its been that way for so long---I'm just wrong on that  Grin


You would be correct that Platinum is undervalued at one point it was worth more than gold. I think it gained that status from all the hip-hop rappers sporting platinum chains which caused a surge in buying.


The funny thing to me is how they make a point to say it’s a platinum coin. As if that somehow makes it’s trillion dollar valuation more reasonable. They might as well make it out of aluminum. It makes no difference.

My response to the US government… FIRST.
https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/4oz-9999-platinum-nastyfans-minted-seats-4892746

I wish I would have bought one of those if you were selling them for 900 bucks even. Platinum was really really cheap about a year or two ago.
hero member
Activity: 912
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Do due diligence
The funny thing to me is how they make a point to say it’s a platinum coin. As if that somehow makes it’s trillion dollar valuation more reasonable. They might as well make it out of aluminum. It makes no difference.

My response to the US government… FIRST.
https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/4oz-9999-platinum-nastyfans-minted-seats-4892746

Right? On top of the irony that gold is worth more? I feel like platinum is undervalued but since its been that way for so long---I'm just wrong on that  Grin
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The funny thing to me is how they make a point to say it’s a platinum coin. As if that somehow makes it’s trillion dollar valuation more reasonable. They might as well make it out of aluminum. It makes no difference.

My response to the US government… FIRST.
https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/4oz-9999-platinum-nastyfans-minted-seats-4892746
hero member
Activity: 912
Merit: 661
Do due diligence
I'm glad someone got the joke ;-) even though it's almost too true to be funny.

Can't agree with you on the "shill" part I'm a fan of Jon Stewart including his new show "The Problem with Jon Stewart". Trevor Noah on the Daily show is certainly different, his book Born a Crime is interesting as a personal story of someone who is biracial (a crime during Apartheid) growing up in Africa. I require comedy to help digest "the news".

The following article has a good argument, it touches on what many people who own bitcoin already know:
money is a collectively agreed upon fiction, fiat money has no intrinsic value
        
 *which is why when someone says that about a bitcoin I can respond "you're going to be really disappointed when you find out about the money in your wallet" and rarely get a response.

Platinum hit 1k per ounce today, even with Rhodium at over 11k per ounce  minting a coin to value is not feasible.
I'm trying to picture what size house could be built with gold bricks to equal a trillion usd.




https://www.nytimes.com/2021/10/06/opinion/trillion-dollar-coin.html
The article:
By Peter Coy

Opinion Writer

"Now that the U.S. government is once again at risk of defaulting on its debts because of an impasse over raising the debt ceiling, we’re back to arguing over whether minting a trillion-dollar platinum coin could save the day.

For readers unfamiliar with this odd gambit: The idea is for the Treasury Department to direct the United States Mint to stamp a special coin made of platinum with a face value of $1 trillion. The Treasury Department would then deposit that coin in its account at the Federal Reserve, giving itself $1 trillion to spend. That would allow it to keep paying the bills and interest on the national debt — thus escaping default — without busting through the congressionally imposed debt ceiling.

Some people think this is an ingenious idea. Others think it’s disastrous.

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said on Tuesday that she wouldn’t consider the idea, calling it a “gimmick.” She’s right that the trillion-dollar coinage would require using the U.S. Mint to perform a function for which it was never intended, but that doesn’t dissuade its backers. This month my Opinion colleague Paul Krugman, a Nobel laureate in economics, wrote, “Gimmickry in the defense of sanity — and, in an important sense, democracy — is no vice.”

Here’s what I find interesting about the debate, which has been raging since at least 2011, when the idea was broached by a lawyer in Atlanta named Carlos Mucha:

You might think that the people backing this merry bit of gimmickry would be the ones casting doubt on the reality of concepts like “money” and “debt,” while opponents would be soberly testifying to the granite-like substance of those entities.

In fact, it’s frequently pretty much the opposite. The would-be coin minters seem to have more faith in the reality of money than their opponents do.

The two sides of the debate are ably laid out in a Kentucky Law Journal article, published last year, by Rohan Grey, now an assistant professor at Willamette University College of Law, who is an adherent of a deficit-friendly school of thought known as modern monetary theory.

Grey cites Neil Buchanan, an opponent of minting the coin who is an economist and law professor at the University of Florida’s Levin College of Law. Buchanan wrote in a blog post in 2013 that issuing a trillion-dollar coin would be tantamount to “pulling back the curtain on the entirely ephemeral nature of money and finance itself.”

He continued: “A monetary system simply cannot work if people do not collectively take a leap of faith. We accept currency or precious metals — which have no inherent use-value for everyday purposes — because we think that other people will accept them in turn. This group delusion allows us to say that money is money. If the delusion starts to fall apart, then there are very real, very negative effects.”

After citing a joke about the trillion-dollar coin made by the comedian Jon Stewart in 2013, Buchanan wrote, “It is no laughing matter to expose the fundamentally unreal nature of money to public ridicule.”


Grey, in contrast, argues that money is not just a confidence game whose value depends on an “infinite regress” of people trusting other people to trust it. Money has value, he says, because the government promises to accept it as payment of taxes and other obligations. (This is an argument of modern monetary theory.) Because taxes will always be with us, Grey writes, “there is little cause to worry that U.S. currency will cease to enjoy wide acceptability” if a trillion-dollar coin is minted.

To the extent that minting the coin would shake the popular belief that government spending must be funded with taxes or borrowing, rather than issuance of new money, that would be a good thing, Grey argues in his article. He writes that minting a trillion-dollar coin could be “a public teaching moment.”

You can agree with Grey or not, but it’s undeniably interesting that the opponents of minting the coin, not the backers, are the ones who call money a “group delusion.”

When I interviewed Grey on Tuesday he said: “If the only people who are qualified to have an opinion on monetary issues are people who are on the inside, or in the know, then that’s extremely dangerous for electorally accountable politics. We don’t have to be afraid of pulling back the ‘Wizard of Oz’ curtain and it all collapsing.”

I asked Buchanan about that today. He said he is worried that minting the coin could undermine public faith in money. The government’s acceptance of money to pay taxes isn’t enough to sustain its value if no one else accepts it, he said: “You don’t want to make the crisis worse by creating a stunt that makes everybody say, ‘Wait a minute, what’s going on here?’” (Buchanan says the debt ceiling statute is unconstitutional and the Treasury Department should “continue to issue normal debt in normal ways.”)

I also interviewed Michael Dorf, a professor at Cornell Law School who has collaborated with Buchanan. Said Dorf: “There are a great many noble lies on which our society rests. Not that we need to hide the truth from the public but it’s not productive to constantly remind people of the truth.” He added: “I’m sympathetic with the notion that governments oughtn’t depend on noble lies. But I also think that especially in times of economic crisis, mass psychology is unpredictable and potentially very dangerous.”

Heavy stuff, right? Minting the coin may be a gimmick, but it’s one with profound implications."

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So if some of the fine folks that work at the US treasury were to happen to "misplace" the coin into their pocket, they could become a trillionaire, right?  Roll Eyes

Let's review some of the ways you can cut the debt.

1.) Raise taxes.
2.) Lower spending.
3.) Grow the economy.

We are now at #4 - Ignore the debt, continue to borrow from yourself till the end of time, kicking the debt can down the road to the next generation.

Perhaps it's true that this would be one of the few mechanisms that exist to save USD. It seems all other attempts at reducing the debt has failed, and the US economy surely is not going to grow at the rate it needs to in order to chip away at the debt, or its rising interest rate, rather.

So what's left to do?

They should make the coin, in fact, make two. It won't matter much in the end.

I completely agree with you with what you just said. I will add that the coin is certainly not worth 1 Trillion dollars and I bet its barely worth 1 million dollars based upon the proposed metal they want to use. Platinum was at one time worth more than gold but now it has flipped due to current electronics and automobile requirements. I think if they were to use pure Rhodium to make the coin the argument would be slightly more validated as it is one of the most rare earth metals. I think I read somewhere if they used the same requirements that Canada used it would be worth 100 million dollars (still not close to being 1 Trillion dollars in melt). By comparison, the Million Canadian Dollar coin is worth $7.1 Million dollars Canadian (or $5.6 Million US Dollars) and I'm sure it has numismatic value as well to boot.  

Regardless of the coin being printed or not, the US is screwed on its debt. Will it just keep going up? Does it even matter? Certainly seems to when good start to inflate then hyperinflate. What will happen if the US defaults on said debt? Will there be a great reset (to quote Klaus Schwab and the elite) to the current monetary system? Will it be a CBDC that will be a logo of an animal and you have to have it to buy or sell?

Yes! If they mint a bunch of them we can trade them for Zimbabwe dollars.

https://www.cc.com/video/t24pv8/the-daily-show-with-jon-stewart-the-trillion-dollar-coin

LOL yeah hyperinflation here we come. Everything seems more expensive because now everyone has "cheap" fiat money. Wow so they wanted to try this in 2013? The same people were in charge at the time (the Democrats) and I'm sure they wanted to try to appease the Tea Party Republicans with sound money even though it would not make a difference. I thought Jon Stewart was pretty funny on the Daily Show. He was a better host than Trevor Noah. I mean Jon's a shill but sometimes he would "appear" to appease the common people but Trevor Noah is absolute shill for the establishment like so many in the media are today. I just think Jon was funnier than Trevor.

Wow its the exact same concept:

https://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2013/01/everything-you-need-to-know-about-the-crazy-plan-to-save-the-economy-with-a-trillion-dollar-coin/266839/
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Do due diligence
legendary
Activity: 2828
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So if some of the fine folks that work at the US treasury were to happen to "misplace" the coin into their pocket, they could become a trillionaire, right?  Roll Eyes

Let's review some of the ways you can cut the debt.

1.) Raise taxes.
2.) Lower spending.
3.) Grow the economy.

We are now at #4 - Ignore the debt, continue to borrow from yourself till the end of time, kicking the debt can down the road to the next generation.

Perhaps it's true that this would be one of the few mechanisms that exist to save USD. It seems all other attempts at reducing the debt has failed, and the US economy surely is not going to grow at the rate it needs to in order to chip away at the debt, or its rising interest rate, rather.

So what's left to do?

They should make the coin, in fact, make two. It won't matter much in the end.
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Activity: 478
Merit: 66
Is minting a $1 trillion platinum coin the answer to the debt limit crisis?

https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/minting-trillion-platinum-coin-answer-debt-limit-crisis/story?id=80434078

What are your thoughts on this BitcoinTalk Community? Should they add a hidden USB stick with Crypto on it?


Technically, its been done (well sort of) already by Canada and they used a better metal than Platinum for the coin: Gold

https://www.mint.ca/store/mint/about-the-mint/million-dollar-coin-1600006

The funny part is that thieves tried to steal one with a wheelbarrow and a skateboard:

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/berlin-court-sends-3-suspects-prison-theft-giant-gold-coin-180974261/

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