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History
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Title: Why Did Silver Coinage End in the United States?
Source: silvermonthly.com
URL Source: http://www.silvermonthly.com/why-di ... nage-end-in-the-united-states/
Published: Jul 2, 2010
Author: Adam Jefferson Kirby
Post Date: 2011-08-08 13:13:40 by GreyLmist
Keywords: Silver, Coinage Act of 1965, Trade Dollars, U.S. Constitution
Views: 348
Comments: 12

Why Did Silver Coinage End in the United States?

“If we had not done so, we would have risked chronic coin shortages in the very near future.” President Lyndon Johnson commented before Congress just prior to his signing the Coinage Act of 1965, the law which fundamentally changed the composition of America’s coinage. The new Act set the stage for the complete abandonment of the use of silver for U.S. legal tender coins – the custom which Americans had been used to since the original Coinage Act of 1792, signed by President Washington. Thereafter, with the temporary exception of the Kennedy half-dollars, all U.S. legal tender coins would be composed of a mixture of copper and nickel, also known as cupronickel, thus ending a one-hundred and seventy-three year tradition of silver coinage.

Johnson stated:

Our uses of silver are growing as our population and our economy grows. The hard fact is that silver consumption is now more than double new silver production each year. So, in the face of this worldwide shortage of silver, and our rapidly growing need for coins, the only really prudent course was to reduce our dependence upon silver for making our coins. [1]

The comments made by President Johnson before Congress assembled on that historic day implied that the reasoning for making the change was the increasing scarcity of silver as a result of increasing industrial usage of silver and stagnant mining output. This was an incomplete picture. President Johnson did not discuss this matter in terms of the effects of inflation on silver prices. [Cont.]

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Poster Comment:

Goes to show what misleading orators like Adam Jefferson Kirby know about Constitutionality with respect to our money and governance: worse than nothing. Silver coins as legal tender here is not merely a "custom" and "tradition". It's a State order of the Constitution.

Have been unable to find the full text of the Unconstitutional Coinage Act of 1965 yet. Apparently, it further impaired -- and without an Amendment -- the Founder's directive to the States that they make noting but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts. My impression of the situation technically is this:

Except for gold coins, their lawful money options were thereby to be reduced and restricted thereafter to foreign silver coins (globalization of our money supplies) and/or only those US coins minted of real silver prior to 1965 which were still around in circulation. Accepting or using mock-silver US coins minted after 1965 would be a lose-lose-lose boondoggle for the States: in violation of the Constitution if they do -- strongarmed by the color of law Federales if they don't -- financially disadvantaged if they refuse to resort to the mockery of the newfangled de-silvered junk when they can't access enough US gold coinage or pre-1965 US silver coins instead and also don't want to participate as globalist importers for foreign money substitutes.

As far as I can determine at this point, that egregious and loony Act might be defunct now as it seems to have only extended through 1996. More background and info on the subject in the next postings.

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#1. To: GreyLmist (#0)

Goes to show what misleading orators like Adam Jefferson Kirby know about Constitutionality with respect to our money and governance: worse than nothing. Silver coins as legal tender here is not merely a "custom" and "tradition". It's a State order of the Constitution.

This "coinage act" but more importantly the FEDERAL RESERVE ACT sidesteps/circumvents/usurps the Constitution.

The Constitution is an all or nothing document and hasn't been amended to allow for the debauchery of the currency.

However, the contracts clause within the Constitution allows us to do business outside of the Constitution and by this I mean we're permitted to deal in commercial paper if we so choose. And we have so chosen to our own detriment.

The "medium of exchange" dictates the "choice of law" ... and we have chosen commercial law or law merchant.

noone222  posted on  2011-08-08   14:22:06 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: noone222 (#1)

Our Revolutionary War against Britain was more heavily financed with paper money than gold and silver, I think -- perhaps might not have been won by America without that option. I was surprised to learn that back then it was the monied elites who favored gold and silver over paper currency, not the less financially fortunate as seems to be more the case nowadays.

More on the paper-as-not-all-bad perspectives here, which I'm not endorsing as reflective of my opinions on the Federal Reserve, etc., as I believe the problem is largely the abdication of Congress to regulate the value of our currency proportionately upward when the prices of gold/silver/copper/nickle rise. I did find the article of interest, though:

Myth #3: The Federal Reserve Act and paper money are unconstitutional. Gold and silver coins are the only constitutional forms of money.

There are more links and info I intend to post here but will have to get back to that later as I can. Hope you'll check back as you can to review it and add your thoughts again on the subject.

GreyLmist  posted on  2011-08-08   16:00:52 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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