NorthCarolinaLiberty
Member
- Joined
- Oct 11, 2010
- Messages
- 12,674
Please post a list of question's I've failed to answer.
Respectfully,
E4E1
http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthread.php?445736-BANKERS-TELL-IT-LIKE-IT-IS&p=6616942#post6616942
Please post a list of question's I've failed to answer.
Respectfully,
E4E1
Ad Hominem saves the day!!!
Well, at least you don't have to debate.
Look if you can't have an adult conversation just say you aren't interested. I'll add you to my slowing growing list of people who would rather call names and leave negative rep than address the topic.
Respectfully,
E4E1
http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthread.php?445736-BANKERS-TELL-IT-LIKE-IT-IS&p=6616942#post6616942
Maybe you should take your own advice. My perception of you is a smug guy who busted into the forum with the intention of schooling everyone without listening.
Okay fine; that's just the nature of forums sometimes, but I am guessing you're here for purpose, aren't you? If so, then what is the purpose? Are you running for some DNC 2020 leadership position as suggested by Dennis Tate in your video interview with Steve Grumbine? Or, are you just someone who does this as a hobby?
I think the questions are important because it speaks of trust. I see trust as being part of this issue. An example would be the aforementioned discussion between you and Devil21 on the difference between getting credit versus creating your own credit.
I trust what @devil21 says, although I don't always understand what he is talking about. The same with @acptulsa. That's why I think this could be a good discussion. I don't really have a problem with your posting here because it doesn't look to me (so far) like you're paid to post. Some might not care what I think because I'm just some guy on the internet; however, you might care what people think because you're, of course, trying to reach people with some kind of message.
I always filter what someone says through a lens of trust. ZippyJuan and TheCount are paid to post here. They converse about economics, but what they say is met with skepticism because of their motivations. There is a good reason why they are not trusted. It really doesn't matter how much they "know." In other words, it's not what they post, but why they post it. I'm not going to forever listen with bated breath to someone whose purpose is to undermine.
So, I want to know why someone speaks. Are they trying to persuade me? Are they trying to inform me? If so, then why? Maybe they just like to mix it up because it has some personal or ego appeal. That's fine.
Applied Economics: I think it's been a decent and civil discussion so far. These discussions are good because I have to work extra hard to wrap my head around some economic concepts. I would like to hear from Devil21, ACPTulsa, or others on this issue.

Feel free to find a forum that is more suitable to your tastes. I don't expect you'll receive a much warmer response from others, either.
If you truly think that mentioning that almost every country is controlled by a Rothschild central bank is "conspiracy theory" then you're either a shill or still much less educated than your college econ classes have led you to believe.
[most of your post]
$#@!, if I got paid to post I'd be making bank! Sign me up!
Seriously,...
Here is something you might find some interest in.
I have one simple question to you.
If you know the answer it should prove your level of actual understanding of the current debt money system and that you're not just a fresh Economics graduate from college regurgitating theory from textbooks.
Can you explain to us how federal debt like Treasury bonds are created?
When the government sells bonds, private banks buy them by offering reserves they hold at the central bank. The Federal Reserve (in the US) debits the buying bank’s reserve deposits and credits the bank’s account with Treasury securities. Rather than seeing this as borrowing by the Treasury, it is more akin to shifting deposits out of a checking account and into a saving account in order to earn more interest. And, indeed, treasury securities really are nothing more than a saving account at the Fed that pay more interest than do reserve deposits (bank “checking accounts”) at the Fed.
So, you're saying the banks don't loan the government money, the government sells banks its debt.
Now, tell us how that doesn't, as a purely practical matter, amount to splitting hairs.
Splitting hairs is a wonderful thing. You aren't lying. But the casual observer can sure look at your statement, and come away believing something that isn't true. That sure is handy, isn't it?
So, you're saying the banks don't loan the government money, the government sells banks its debt.
Now, tell us how that doesn't, as a purely practical matter, amount to splitting hairs.
Splitting hairs is a wonderful thing. You aren't lying. But the casual observer can sure look at your statement, and come away believing something that isn't true. That sure is handy, isn't it?
"Can the government spend US dollars without selling a Treasury first?"
Which government? De Soto Parish, Louisiana?
Of course existing FRNs can be spent.
Actually, @econ4every1 completely missed the point of my question and never answered it. I asked how Treasury debt is created. Not how Treasury debt finds it's way to a holder, like a bank. That part is at the very end of the process. I asked how the debt issue itself is created. IOW, how does the Treasury create a bond that it auctions off. What is that process?
Actually, [MENTION=69780]econ4every1[/MENTION] completely missed the point of my question and never answered it. I asked how Treasury debt is created. Not how Treasury debt finds it's way to a holder, like a bank. That part is at the very end of the process. I asked how the debt issue itself is created. IOW, how does the Treasury create a bond that it auctions off. What is that process?
I didn't miss your point I simply didn't understand what you are asking. Thank you for clarifying the question.
Can't say I remembered all of this off the top of my head...So, this is what I've come up with after a little reading.
When it's anticipating a new federal bond issue, the central bank in coordination with the US Treasury first conducts an informal survey about current market conditions and the type of issue investors might prefer. These informal discussions are held with investment dealers, banks and other market participants who have experience with bond issues of the size and type being considered.
Before the details of the new bond issue are decided, several important questions have to be answered. Most importantly, the federal government must determine the precise purpose of the issue. It can be to "pay for" (offset) military spending, to refund prior securities or to sell new Treasuries at a more favorable interest rate.
There must be a legal precedent that outlines the conditions under which the bond issue can be undertaken. Such a legal precedent relates to the issue's purpose. For example, when its purpose is to fund a capital project, there must be legal precedents to determine that the issuance serves national taxpayers and the greater good of federal constituents. In the case of the refund of a prior debt issue, the question is whether or not the debt is refundable under federal tax rules.
Then the government chooses an underwriter for the debt, often it's an investment firm the government has a pre-existing relationship with which it can choose to underwrite bond issuance. If the Amount is large, the Treasury can choose more than one firm.
In the last phase, the so-called "marketing phase" the details are hammered out and official statements (disclosure docs) are prepared and reviewed where after a short period is given to potential purchasers to review.
Am I on the right track, or were you looking for something different?
[MENTION=2727]devil21[/MENTION]Well, first he said what happens after the bond is created, and now he has said what happens before the bond is created.
You didn't get your question answered, but you got a nice pair of bookends.
[MENTION=2727]devil21[/MENTION]
Ok, you got me I'm stumped...Please enlighten me.
Spend some time learning that part, since without it, there is no Treasury bond to be issued. I'll give you a hint of where to start learning the stuff they didn't teach you in econ classes in school. It starts the moment you are born and your mother signs a piece of paper stuck in her face at her most vulnerable moment. That piece of paper turned you into a corporate slave for the rest of your life. The Treasury doesn't just create issues out of nothing. They're secured by something.
Have fun.
Oh, and here I thought u were being serious.
Now, see, there's where you and 99% of this forum differ. You think it's a lark having your grandparents spend you into insurmountable debt before you're born and leaving you to spend your life paying it back.
Whereas many of us were in on that spending spree back in the day, we see what it's doing to the economy, we know there will be a day of reckoning and even though we may not be around to see it, we actually love our children enough that we hate the fact. We opposed this lunacy back when it was actually benefitting us, and we hate it now.
You say, gee, we can keep rolling this stuff over forever and ever.
But first interest accumulates, and then interest gets charged on interest, and then it mushrooms.
You say anyone can get all the raises they need to keep up with dollar devaluation, or at least you can and you could give damn-all for anyone else. There's another place you and most of us disagree.
You're treating it as some kind of interesting mental exercise. Tell us again who is, and who isn't, being serious.