Invest Wisely! Buy… Copper?
by
Tom Chartier
by Tom Chartier
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"The
best way to destroy the capitalist system is to debauch the currency."
~
John Maynard Keynes, Economic
Consequences of the Peace (1919)
Investing in
copper is ludicrous you say? Ok… how about nickel or zinc? Lord
knows I sure as heck can’t afford silver, gold or platinum. It’s
all “unobtanium” to me. Next weekend I’m ripping the zinc roof off
the house and melting it down into ingots!
See, this is
what got me started thinking about it: a penny just ain’t worth
a penny anymore. Neither are nickels. According to the Washington
Times, it costs the Feds 1.7 cents to mint a penny and 8.3
cents to mint a nickel. Even a high school dropout cashier at the
local Scarf and Barf can tell you that’s just plain goofy. But hey,
consider the cause: those government employees who flunked
Everyday
Mathematics.
Let’s get
this straight. The Federal Reserve mints all our pennies and nickels.
To pay for the minting they use the money obtained from our taxes…
our money! Of course our money is legally stolen from us by the
powers that be, but that’s another rant.
And then, all these shiny new pennies and nickels get dumped
back into circulation for us to squander in gumball machines… or
for us to age to a ripe old vintage in a pickle jar.
When interest
rates are high, spare change may be placed to advantage in an interest-bearing
savings account. However, the Feds will tax any profits made that
way. So… why bother?
Folks, this
is a rip-off. We are spending $17 to mint $10 worth of pennies and
$83 to mint $50 worth of nickels! What the hell!? What kind of lard
brain would spend more money for a product that’s value is significantly
less than that which it costs? Ok, no offense intended to collectors
of art, Beanies
Babies, Star
Wars Memorabilia or even Hawaiian
Aloha shirts (see photo below)!
Now, I’ll
be honest here. I’m a Libertarian who’s waiting to earn
his wings. I’m not even sure I’ll
ever qualify. The last time I tried to sneak into the Ludwig von
Mises Institute I was driven off by an angry mob wielding pitchforks
and torches. And before I forget, I do want to thank Lew for the
wonderful visit. I’m better now Lew. Thanks. The medications are
working.
See, a good
Libertarian ought to know all about economics. I really don’t know
jack about money matters. This should come as no surprise since
nobody has ever been willing to give me any money for my talents.
I am… uh… penniless. Here’s what I do know about money. I like the
nickels sporting the Indian and the buffalo better than the ones
imprinted with Thomas Jefferson. That is who’s on the nickel,
right?
Of course my
impecunious state does make tax time simple. I just write down “pauper”
for occupation, fill in the blank for my total annually earned income
of $77 from royalty checks and sit back and wait for that big fat
refund check from George W. Bush! He seems to have lost my address
though. Never answers
any of my letters either. Oh well, it may be for the best. I’m not
sure I want him to know how to find me.
Nevertheless,
it is obvious that the path towards financial security is paved
in junk metals! There are a couple of catches. Uncle Sam
has put a limit on our freedom to sneak those precious pennies and
nickels out of the country. Shocking isn’t it? By law, we are not
free to remove
more than $5 worth of the worthless coins out of the USA to
hide them in a Swiss bank lock box or launder them in the Cayman
Islands!
Uncle Sam
can send pallets
of cash to Iraq, but you and I
can’t take our nickels and dimes to Zurich. Humph!
You may wonder
what is the melting point of copper anyway? 1083.0
degrees C or 1981.4 degrees F. Oh… I guess that rules out melting
them on the stove. Might have to use a burner with a little more
chutzpah.
First you want
to call your slimy bloodsucker… uh… lawyer: what might be the legality
of melting down your pennies and nickels and turning them onto something
more valuable… like a blob?
Sorry to say
it but, you do not have the freedom to melt
or destroy your pennies and nickels! Dang. When it comes to
suppression of freedom, the government has written the book.
Uncle Sam has
the perfect right to debase the currency. But, you do not.
The debasement
of our currency has greater consequences than the loss of the penny
and the nickel. Rolf
Nef writes: "When empires fall, their currencies fall first.
Even clearer is the rising debt of empires in decline, because in
most cases their physical expansion is financed with debt."
Doesn’t that
sound familiar?
Meanwhile,
for American citizens the penalty of willful destruction of pennies
or nickels can pack a wallop. Debasing your cumbersome loose change
can cost you up to $10,000 in fines or get you sent to the hooscow
for up to five years… or both! Aye carumba! Does this mean that
while on the family
vacation to Wally World, if little Rusty blows two quarters
to get a penny smashed with an imprint of Marty Moose on it, he
could become a felon? We’re gonna need a lot more prisons! Fortunately
Halliburton
will provide.
Of course there’s
always a good sporting chance the Feds will abolish pennies and
nickels altogether.
David
Margolick opines that the penny's face is insufficiently
glorious for Old Abe and that all patriots should rush to liberate
the 16th president from the common copper coin. Well, it looks
like the US Government will be doing the liberating in much the same
style as they liberate foreign countries.
The good news
is that once pennies and nickels are no longer minted or in circulation,
then they’ll really be worth something… to collectors of
worthless junk.
All right Uncle
Scam! Have it your way! But I’m looking out for number one.
You ain’t getting any more pennies or nickels out of my pickle
jar!
Elizabeth
Gyllensvard contributed to and edited this story.
February
14, 2007
Tom
Chartier [send him mail]
played lead guitar in legendary Los Angeles punk band The Rotters
for 26 years until their final appearance in January of 2004. He
has lived in Tokyo and Los Angeles. Currently he resides somewhere
in the Caribbean.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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