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In Government We Trust?
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
DIGG THIS
Many who agree
with me on a lot of other issues do not understand my enthusiasm
for gold and sound money or why I spend so much time studying and
talking about monetary policy. It's true that I talk about money
differently than most, but the fact is sound money offers many benefits.
For example peace.
Can sound money
really bring about peace? Actually, it plays a big part in peaceful
international relationships. Money based on commodities, rather
than paper, is not subject to government manipulation, and is a
key component to free and honest trade. History shows that if countries
engage in trade with each other, their governments tend to find
ways to get along for the same reason you do not kill your customers
at your place of business, even if they occasionally annoy you.
If someone outright cheats you, however, you may engage in war
by taking them to court, for example, and the relationship will
sour. Governments and central banks with unfettered power to manipulate
currency also have the ability to cheat their creditors. One way
they do this is to simply create enough currency to pay off debts.
This devalues the currency and cheats the recipient
out of what they are owed. It would not be fair if you watered down
your product the way our government waters down its currency, so
it is not hard to understand, in these simplified terms, why loose
monetary policy contributes so much to ill will and war around the
world.
Sound money,
on the other hand, simply is what it is. Removing governmental power
to manipulate money removes the temptation for government to spend,
print and cheat. Sound money ensures that our governments
spending priorities would be brought into sharp focus and reduced
to only what we can afford.
Sound money
also limits the ability to wage wars of aggression. Imagine how
much more careful Washington would have to be about starting a war
if they did not have this financial sleight of hand at their disposal!
Fiat currency allows government to do expensive things they should
not be doing while paying the bills with cheap money. The Federal
Reserve has lately been auctioning off large amounts of treasury
bills as a way to finance the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and
our crushing entitlement burden. The resulting devaluation of the
dollar is quickly eroding our image as a good trading partner in
the world. As a consequence, there is therefore more talk of economic
isolation and war.
This vicious
cycle of spending, fighting and inflating is not what Americans
want. It is what the government wants, and it has had to deceive
the citizens into allowing and supporting it. Sound money curbs
the governments ability to engage in these shenanigans and
reduces the wars we fight to only truly defensive ones, for which
Americans are more than willing to stand and fight. So in these
ways, sound money is very conducive to peace.
See
the Ron Paul File
September
1, 2008
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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Paul Archives
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