You keep going back to that same weak red herring - finding a specific use for one thing, and dismissing the value of another for not being suited to that particular purpose.
Steven,
It is you who created this red herring - you seem to believe that because you don't like paper, that it can't be used for money.
Yet, when other's don't like gold and say it can't be used for money, you go ballistic ....when they use your own argument against you!
It's a completely daft argument because gold does not derive its value from being edible or for its use as a fuel.
Your argument is completely daft argument because FRBN does not derive its value from being jewelry or filling for your teeth.
Gold also doesn't compute by itself, isn't drinkable, can't be used as a hammock or underarm deodorant, and it won't keep your garden pest free.
FRBN have great art and skill in its manufacture, made out of the finest linen paper in the world.
But that does not negate gold's intrinsic properties
Paper doesn't have "intrinsic" properties? You jest!
or the purposes to which gold is UNIQUELY suited, and therefore DIRECTLY valued.
FRBN purpose is UNIQUELY suited and therefore DIRECTLY valued...too!
Probably why we use it as money!
And note this: it is precisely because gold is directly and valued for its many uses that it has gained market exchange value throughout most of humanity over the past several thousand years
So what?
IT
AIN'T
MONEY
NOW.
So who gives a flying rat butt what the Egyptians used 5,000 years ago?
Do you think salt is money today because the Romans used salt as such???
It is for that reason that even long after gold has been demonetized, it can STILL be exchanged for many 88 times what the original dollar bill note that was once backed by it was worth.
And if you bought it in 1977 and sold in 1982, you'd be in the poor house!!
Some store of value, huh?
Do you?
Not one thing you raised about gold cannot be applied to FRBN.
Just, in your opinion, you like gold. *shrug*
Gold continues to have both direct utility value AND universal exchange value (irrelevant isolated exceptions noted and dismissed), even through wars, pestilence, famines, and fiat currency failures worldwide.
FRBN continues to be money, direct utility value AND universal exchange value. It sits as the reserve currency for most of the world and most of the world uses FRBN adjacent to their own national currency, even through wars, pestilence, famine and currency failures worldwide. It is the currency everyone runs to when theirs collapses.
Which is FRBN is money.
Meanwhile, the paper you believe in and are so in love with as somehow being on par with gold only loses value
So did gold in 1982, Spain 1600, California 1849, Yukon 1902....
Repeal legal tender laws and allow PM's to compete freely as currency, without taxation and other barriers to entry, and watch the steadily eroding value of your precious FRBN's accelerate.
But we already know... FRBN are used in every country on earth ... and many have tied their own currency to it, and most countries you can buy goods directly at the retail with it...
You have your "competition" and the winner is perfectly clear ... except to those that have gold in place of their eyes.
I don't know how you are defining money, but it seems pretty narrowly constrained to me.
Darn right.
A definition of something that encompasses 1/2 the world is useless.
I mean isn't:
Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo.
...kinda hard to understand? (The longest, grammatically correct, 1 word sentence in the English language)
Gold is a penalized, taxed form of money
Your argument is against tax, not for gold.
Nonsense.
Take a gold coin and try to buy your food, they will laugh at you - or you will have to suffer a huge discount to its commodity price.
Take a gold coin to France and try to buy your food, they will laugh at you - or you will have to suffer a huge discount to its commodity price.
Take it ... Brazil... same thing.
But I take the FRBN and they say "Thank you, sir!"
Gold is not money ... today.
that gold IS a form of backing.
So is FRBN, which is why it is the
World's Reserve Currency and sits in every Central bank on earth as such.
That's why it CONTINUES to have market value, even when it is not a widely accepted or officially recognized form of currency.
It has market value, like copper, platinum, palladium, etc. Heck, you can buy coins in those metals too, just like gold.
But like those other metals, gold is NOT money unless it has a stamp of some national current as a coin... otherwise, today, it is just a valuable commodity.