You know what I noticed about your list? You didn't quote me calling a single line of the code, a court case, or the constitution irrelevant, even though that's what you initially said I had done. But nonetheless:
If it's irrelevant then why does it fuck over people that save cash? A penny saved is a penny lost.
A huge portion of the population doesn't save and has no assets. They live paycheck to paycheck. The only inflation they experience is in wages; my statement was that inflation was irrelevant to wage earners.
The second part explicitly says that if you're dumb enough to save cash you're going to lose value to inflation. I didn't ignore your unfortunate savers or call their problem irrelevant, I called them morons.
"real" is talking about the definition of Note I just quoted you.
My statement says that it's irrelevant that the better result is the result of manipulation--the manipulation is worth the better result.
ignoring the fact I already agreed with you.....employees were literally paid in silver, that is, they had the option when they cashed their checks. Literally. Which is different from effectivly. Regardless of spot then. I never said the spot of "back when" mattered at all only this is proof inflation and wages have not kept pace at all...........back to finding irrelevant......
My statement is that silver content was irrelevant in 1913 because it was well below the face value of the coin. Absolutely true. They didn't give a fuck.
ignoring current spot price and the difference in Currency and Money.
My statement says that you can easily practice your Austrian beliefs by converting your assets into metals. I'm not ignoring anything.
from post 593 we were talking about the def of Note, the Constitution and current Statutes.
My statement doesn't call any text irrelevant, it just says that substance is more important than formalism (formalism is irrelevant compared to substance).
you are redefining note here...also ignoring court cased had to redeem accoring to current law.
My statement's didn't redefine the obligation, the government did. I didn't ignore the court case at all--I acknowledged that it gave formal effect to a substantively meaningless provision.
You calling a statute that I presented to you irrelevant. Also my claim was a FRN was removed from circulation when Redeemed.
The fact that the treasury has the legal authority to issue United States Notes is irrelevant to making your case that something is removed from circulation when a Federal Reserve Note is redeemed for a Federal Reserve Note. The treasury has had the legal authority since congress gave it to them--they just never took it away. You can't find any statute or court that verifies your redemption nonsense about removing something from circulation. You got this idea from another statute that enables the treasury to trade Federal Reserve Notes for old forms of currency, which the treasury then destroys. Technically nothing is removed from circulation, because the traded obligation was part of the public debt.
Here you ignore legal structure and dismiss it as functionally irrelevant because you assume it functions to your benefit....and cite gov supremecy in a Constitutional Republic no less.
My statement is absolutely true. When you monetize debt, you aren't really borrowing anything--you're printing fresh cash and paying real obligations off with it, resulting in inflation. The fact that the treasury is "borrowing" the money from the central bank is irrelevant because the central bank is legally obligated to pay its profits to the treasury. Thus it is not borrowing, it's pure printing.
Ignoring the Banking Emergency President's notes and personal opinions on this current fiat system. While not a definition certainly relevant.
I didn't ignore it, I said it wasn't the law, because it's not. The president can only make law with the cooperation of congress.
Keep saying it all you want it still doesn't make it true. Me,the banks and economy and government and the world disagree with you.
Right. The definition of "note" in Black's is certainly more meaningful to banks, governments, and people than the definition of "note" in the UCC, which is the law in all fifty states.
Right.
Here is you insisting the definition of credit is irrelevant. If printed money is not borrowed why jump all the legal hoops? Economic Stimulus?
You're complaining about the government's printing of money creating inflation, and in the same breath you deny that the government has such a power. Make up your mind. Which is it?
Why have an independent central bank? So the treasury can't print money at the president's discretion? That's why we have it.
pffft all you argue with is opinions you need to be in a philsophy forum. Do you buy weed? Are you mad the Fed hasn't lowered your price for you?
You did nothing but vindicate me. You told me that I called the text of the original sources irrelevant, and yet all your quotes did no such thing.