You are here

Look who's calling Utah and gold 'eccentric'

Section: Daily Dispatches

2:37a ET Saturday, March 26, 2011

Dear Friend of GATA and Gold:

There's revolution and war in the Middle East and Africa, devastation and nuclear contamination in Japan, and turmoil throughout the world financial system, but the Financial Times always has time to try to make fun of gold and those who see any virtue in it.

In its Friday editorial, "In Gold They Trust," the FT finds humor in Utah's potential experiment with accepting gold and silver as currency, as allowed to states by the national Constitution. The FT writes:

"Utah is no stranger to eccentric laws. This is, after all, the state whose citizens have, at various points, felt the need to outlaw both fishing from horseback and dispensing gunpowder as a headache cure. Now it has another legislative feat to match these illustrious forebears. The state's legislature has passed a bill that paves the way for gold and silver to become legal tender. All that remains is for Governor Gary Herbert to sign on the dotted line."

... Dispatch continues below ...



ADVERTISEMENT

The Gold Standard Now: It Can Work

Today a dollar is worth 80 percent less than it was 40 years ago, and less than 5 percent of its value a hundred years ago. We deserve a dollar that is as good as gold, a dollar that will hold its value from year to year so we can be financially secure and our economy can generate more and better jobs.

For most of America's history, our dollar was literally as good as gold. But on August 15, 1971, our politicians destroyed the link between gold and the dollar. They destroyed the foundations of our economic system.

A new Internet site, TheGoldStandardNow.org, provides news and cutting-edge analysis about this most important issue and explains how the gold standard worked in the past and how it can work in the future. Visit us today:

http://www.thegoldstandardnow.org/about/137-welcome-newsmax



Ah, yes, the quaint American West, where more people earn their livelihoods by creating things than by shifting money around, and where the newspapers don't exploit their opportunities to reciprocate the fun with foreigners, as well they might do with a paper from enlightened London, capital of a country where the courts lately have taken to issuing injunctions keeping everything secret and prohibiting citizens from raising grievances with their elected representatives (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/law-and-order/8394566/Hyper-injun...), where the monarch is prohibited not only from marrying a Catholic but also from becoming one himself, (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Act_of_Settlement_1701), and where every square yard ("This royal throne of kings, this sceptred isle, / This earth of majesty, this seat of Mars, / This other Eden, demi-paradise, / This fortress built by Nature for herself") now comes fully equipped with a tax collector and a closed-circuit television camera.

The FT somehow thinks that gold's ever-higher price is more of a problem for the metal's monetization than the constant devaluation of government currencies is for their continuing to serve as money.

Here's something even funnier than Utah's quaintness, a pretty good joke that seems lost on the FT -- a chart of gold priced in British pounds over the last decade:

http://www.24hgold.com/english/interactive_chart.aspx?codecom=GOLD&chgec...

The whole of the FT's oblivious mockery of Utah is below. Let's come back in a year or two and see who's still laughing. Let's hope that Britain itself, if not the FT, is even still there to laugh.

CHRIS POWELL, Secretary/Treasurer
Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee Inc.

* * *

In Gold They Trust

Financial Times, London
Friday, March 25, 2011

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/3b3dee16-5721-11e0-9035-00144feab49a.html

Utah is no stranger to eccentric laws. This is, after all, the state whose citizens have, at various points, felt the need to outlaw both fishing from horseback and dispensing gunpowder as a headache cure. Now it has another legislative feat to match these illustrious forebears. The state's legislature has passed a bill that paves the way for gold and silver to become legal tender. All that remains is for Governor Gary Herbert to sign on the dotted line.

By the standards of the most fanatical hard-money purists, the plan is quite modest. Ron Paul, the Republican congressman who is the high priest of currency privatisation, has just reintroduced a bill that would allow everyone to mint their own coins. Both this and Utah's law are meant as rebukes to the US Federal Reserve, whose boundless enthusiasm for printing dollars has not exactly boosted confidence in the greenback. But Utah's unilateral gold standard has problems of its own.

For one, it would mean very small coins. Under Utah's law, the value of the coins would reflect the gold (or silver) price. A troy ounce (roughly 31 grams) of gold is currently changing hands for more than $1,400. At that price a gold coin worth a dollar would weigh all of 22 milligrams. That may be great news for microscope makers but it will be pretty fiddly for anyone hoping to buy a coffee in Salt Lake City. Of course, bigger coins could be used. But then even the change for a gunpowder-free headache pill would run to several suitcases of the worthless greenbacks Utah's goldbugs so despise.

If the gold price surged, those coins would have to become smaller still. A fall would not be much more helpful. Shopkeepers would presumably stop accepting coins worth less than their face value, bringing the economy to a juddering halt -- unless, that is, Utah's state government stepped in and guaranteed the coin's nominal value. Which sounds rather similar to the arrangement critics of the Fed are so upset about.

* * *

Join GATA here:

An Evening with Bill Murphy and James Turk
Sponsored by Deutsche Edelmetall-Gesellschaft
Friday, April 29, 2011
Hofbrauhaus, Munich, Germany

Support GATA by purchasing gold and silver commemorative coins:

https://www.amsterdamgold.eu/gata/index.asp?BiD=12

Or a colorful GATA T-shirt:

http://gata.org/tshirts

Or a colorful poster of GATA's full-page ad in The Wall Street Journal on January 31, 2009:

http://gata.org/node/wallstreetjournal

Or a video disc of GATA's 2005 Gold Rush 21 conference in the Yukon:

http://www.goldrush21.com/

Help keep GATA going

GATA is a civil rights and educational organization based in the United States and tax-exempt under the U.S. Internal Revenue Code. Its e-mail dispatches are free, and you can subscribe at:

http://www.gata.org

To contribute to GATA, please visit:

http://www.gata.org/node/16



ADVERTISEMENT

Sona Drills 85.4g Gold/Ton Over 4 Metres at Elizabeth Gold Deposit,
Extending the Mineralization of the Southwest Vein on the Property

Company Press Release, October 27, 2010

VANCOUVER, British Columbia -- Sona Resources Corp. reports on five drillling holes in the third round of assay results from the recently completed drill program at its 100 percent-owned Elizabeth Gold Deposit Property in the Lillooet Mining District of southern British Columbia. Highlights from the diamond drilling include:

-- Hole E10-66 intersected 17.4g gold/ton over 1.54 metres.

-- Hole E10-67 intersected 96.4g gold/ton over 2.5 metres, including one assay interval of 383g of gold/ton over 0.5 metres.

-- Hole E10-69 intersected 85.4g gold/ton over 4.03 metres, including one assay interval of 230g gold/ton over 1 metre.

Four drill holes, E10-66 to E10-69, targeted the southwestern end of the Southwest Vein, and three of the holes have expanded the mineralized zone in that direction. The Southwest Vein gold mineralization has now been intersected over a strike length of 325 metres, with the deepest hole drilled less than 200 metres from surface.

"The assay results from the Southwest Zone quartz vein continue to be extremely positive," says John P. Thompson, Sona's president and CEO. "We are expanding the Southwest Vein, and this high-grade gold mineralization remains wide open down dip and along strike to the southwest."

For the company's full press release, please visit:

http://sonaresources.com/_resources/news/SONA_NR19_2010.pdf