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INTRODUCTION
The
recent bull market in gold and silver has generated much discussion in
the media regarding the “gold standard” of the past – versus the
present system of irredeemable paper fiat currency known as Federal
Reserve Notes.
Even
the issue of the constitutionality of the Federal Reserve and the
irredeemable fractional reserve banking system it wields, as the Sword
of Damocles above unwary heads, has been debated. Many well-intentioned
and knowledgeable writers have rightfully questioned both the efficacy
and the soundness of the present monetary system of paper fiat.
Numerous
articles often discuss the “gold standard” of past history,
including the recommendation of a return to the standard of old, as
being both the financial and constitutional “fix” for our present
financial problems.
However,
is the “gold standard” as popularly put forth and understood by most
of these well-intentioned articles, the same as the original
constitutional standard and “hard” money system, as stated within
the Constitution of the United States?
And
perhaps of even greater importance, is whether returning to the “gold
standard” of old – at least the “version” that is most often
referenced and discussed, in contra-distinction to the original
constitutional standard – is truly the fix-all for the debilitated and
debased state of our present monetary system of irredeemable paper
currency.
Most,
but not all, of those friendly to the precious metals or hard money
persuasion, sometimes referred to as gold-bugs, speak of the “gold
standard” of the past as if it were sacrosanct and beyond reproach –
and thus the standard deemed most suitable as the model for modern day
monetary reform. But perhaps this model is flawed, which inherently, yet
almost unknowingly, except to the elite few who perpetrated the crime,
contributed to its intended demise.
The
belief seems widely accepted, that the “gold standard” of the later
1800’s and the early 1900’s, is sufficient historical documentation
of our monetary system to explain not only the problems with the present
fiat currency; but to also provide the remedy for any such ills to
simply be a return to the “gold standard” of the past.
Such
views may very well explain and offer the best course of monetary
reform, but then again, perhaps they do not: perhaps there are other
more sound and honest alternatives; that are closer in keeping with our
original Constitution – as opposed to the present system of
irredeemable promises to pay.
The
“gold standard” most often discussed, is the standard whereby, U.S.
Notes, or Treasury Notes or Federal Reserve Notes are redeemable in gold
coin. Occasionally, those of a “purer” ideal, refer to the
establishing of the one dollar
gold coin – which was set by
statute as the standard unit of our monetary system – hence the term
“gold standard”.
However,
this setting of the one dollar
gold coin as our standard unit of account, did not take place until
1873; and more importantly, is whether the Act was and is, in accordance
with the Constitution and the Original Coinage Act of 1792?
To
use the creation of the “gold standard” as a starting point for
monetary reform, involves taking quite the leap of faith – as there
may be much more to understanding our currency system than just the
“gold standard” that involved various paper issuances, that were
supposedly backed by, and could be, redeemed for gold coin. Even the
minting of gold coins such as the gold eagles; or the coinage of a gold
“dollar”; or the coining of the magnificent gold double eagles,
leaves out a great amount of very important monetary history and policy.
Such
a leap in faith may end up missing the original Constitutional Standard
– that set the standard for honest money – of silver and gold coin
– not of paper redeemable in specie. It may even be, although
unintentionally, offering a cure that is as deadly as the disease it
seeks to remedy.
It
must be remembered, that even a “gold standard” that has 40% of the
currency backed or redeemable in gold may appear to be solvent – but
it is not liquid
–
as there is only backing for 40% of the currency and that’s it. What
about the other 60%? Is it
any less real then the first 40%?
And
the above is premised on the gratuitously supposed fact or pretense,
that the issuance of paper bills of credit is even allowed or granted by
the Constitution – regardless if they (bills of credit) are redeemable
or not in gold or silver coin; and more importantly – whether the
Constitution directly forbids the issuance of such paper money.
Many
of these well-intentioned articles on gold and or the “gold
standard” often use the word “dollar” in describing “money”,
almost in a flippant manner – as if the definition of a “dollar”
is automatically understood, both by the general reading audience, and
by most writers on the subject as well.
Most
often it is taken for granted, that the definition of the “dollar”
has always been one and the same – which it has been constitutionally,
and according to the Original Coinage Act of 1792. Various subsequent
coinage acts, however, and the generally false beliefs of both
government officials and the public at large, that such legislation was
intended to, and did perpetuate; have seemingly changed the definition
of the “dollar” from the original intent of the Constitution.
All
of which has led to the present make believe world of the Federal
Reserve, and the infamous Federal Reserve Note or dollar bill; and
whether it just may be possible that a dollar bill, and a
“dollar”, are two distinct and separate entities – as
different from one another as night and day.
In
lieu of the above, we are naturally led to ask whether or not the above
assumptions of most present day writers on the “gold standard” and
the “dollar” are correct, according to the actual history that has
transpired?
Also,
is it possible that some of the history regarding these subjects has
been left out and hidden from the public eye – by deceitful design and
behind the scenes manipulation, undertaken by the self-same powers and
interests that brought forth the Federal Reserve, and its irredeemable
paper fiat currency: to purposefully confuse the issues and muddy the
waters?
As
unbelievable and stunning as it may prove to be, perhaps the powers that
have brought us the Federal Reserve, also brought us the “gold
standard”; and the First and Second Banks of the United States,
pre-cursors of our central bank; and perhaps for the same reasons: as a
means of implementing a wealth transference system of plunder – from
“We The People” to “they” who control the system – by
dishonest attempts to discredit both gold and silver, by entangling and
implementing them in unworkable standards and systems, that were
knowingly doomed to fail from the start.
Popular
views have been put forth that under the “gold standard” money is
gold – perhaps this is true – but perhaps there is a bit more to it.
Is the meaning of the statement that money is gold, the same as
– gold is money? This involves much more then mere semantics, as will
be seen.
A
famous quote states: "Of
all the contrivances for cheating the laboring classes of mankind, none
has been more effective than that which deludes them with paper
money.” This is very much true, but does it not include all paper
money, even if fractionally backed by gold, as under a “gold standard”?
Is
the “gold standard” where paper currency is backed by gold, the same
as a system where only
gold
and silver coins
are
the
medium of exchange?
Is
a system of state or even national private banks that issue paper
currency, the same as a system where the government becomes partners
with a national central bank, that Congress grants the sole monopoly of
power to issue bank notes to – that are only fractionally backed by gold?
And
lastly, is the present system of paper fiat currency, that is not only
irredeemable and no longer backed by gold; but is also the mechanism and
means, by which all Treasury bond or government debt is monetized –
exactly the same as any of the systems that came before it, and led to
its creation; or is it a gross genetic mutation, engendered by the
interbreeding of the preceding diseased and sickly schemes of issue?
So
let’s take a trip back in time and follow the money and see where it
leads us – perhaps we will be able to discover a story not often told
about our monetary heritage; and from whence this thing called
“money” and “dollar” has come; all in the pursuit of: Honest
Money.
We
will start by examining “money” according to the Constitution and
the Original Coinage Act of 1792. Next we will look at the subsequent
Coinage Acts that defined our monetary system. Then the different
Treasury Note Issuances will be looked at to see how they fit in. And
finally we will go back to the pre-Constitutional history of Colonial
America to see from whence this “business” of central banking was
born. A summary of conclusions will then be provided.
PART
I: THE CONSTITUTION & HONEST MONEY
SEVEN CONSTITUTIONAL MONETARY CLAUSES
There
are seven main clauses of the Constitution that deal with the issue of
“money”:
Article
I, Section 8, Clause 2.
The Congress shall have Power…To borrow Money
on the credit of the United States.
Article
I, Section 8, Clause 5.
The Congress shall have Power…To coin
Money, regulate the Value thereof, and of foreign Coin, and fix
the Standard of Weights and Measures.
Article
I, Section 8, Clause 6.
The Congress shall have Power…To provide for the Punishment of
counterfeiting the Securities and current
Coin of the United States.
Article
I, Section 9, Clause 1.
The Migration or Importation of such Persons as any of the States now
existing shall think proper to admit, shall not be prohibited by the
Congress prior to the Year one thousand eight hundred and eight, but a
Tax or duty may be imposed on such Importation, not exceeding ten dollars
for each Person.
Article
I, Section 9, Clause 7.
No Money
shall be drawn from the Treasury, but in Consequence of Appropriations made by Law.
Article
I, Section 10, Clause 1.
No State shall…coin Money;
emit Bills of Credit; make
any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender
in Payment of Debt.
Amendment
VII.
In Suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed
twenty dollars, the right
of trial by jury shall be preserved…
DISCUSSION OF EARLY MONETARY HISTORY
Of
particular interest and importance in reading over these provisions is
to note that the word “money” appears but four times in the original
constitutional document. The word “coin” appears five times; the
word “dollar” appears but twice; the word “credit” twice; and
the word “tender” appears but once. Conspicuously absent is the word
– paper, although “bills of credit” is a close surrogate.
Most
striking is the fact that nowhere in the Constitution is a literal
definition of the “dollar” provided. Was the lack of such an
important definition as to the dollar or unit of account of our monetary
system an oversight by such an august and learned group of men as the
First Congress?
Or
did our Founding Fathers perhaps know uncontrovertibly the definition of
the dollar that at the current time was universally accepted by all? –
As in like manner, the usage of the word “day” or “time”
within the Constitution was understood, and the definition was not seen
to be needed, required, or given – as it was already known.
Perhaps
by examining the past monetary history from which the Constitution
evolved, as well as the monetary history the Constitution gave birth to,
a clearer understanding of the Constitution’s meaning and intent can
be revealed.
As
Blackstone noted in his “Commentaries”: “Sir Edward Coke lays it
down, that the money of England must be either gold or silver; and none
other was ever issued by the royal authority till 1672, when copper
farthings and half-pence were coined”.
During
our early Colonial history, Queen Anne’s Proclamation of 1704, and the
Parliamentary Act of 1707 both referred to “…regulation of coin
according to their weight and fineness in proportion to the rate before
limited and set for the Pieces
of Eight of Sevil,
Pillar, and Mexico… commonly known as the silver Spanish milled
dollars”.
In
1776 a report in the Journals of the Continental Congress referred to
“the precise weight and fineness of the Spanish
milled dollar now becoming the Money-Unit or common measure of
other coins in these states”.
The
Continental Congress subsequently laid the groundwork for The
Constitution with the Articles of Confederation in 1781. The following
sections of the articles are the most noteworthy in regards to the
present discussion:
“…The
United States in Congress assembled shall never engage in a war, nor
grant letters of marque or reprisal in time of peace, nor enter into any
treaties or alliances, nor coin
money, nor regulate the value thereof, nor ascertain the sums and
expenses necessary for the defense and welfare of the United States, or
any of them, nor emit bills, nor borrow money on the credit of the
United States, nor appropriate money, nor agree upon the number of
vessels of war, to be built or purchased, or the number of land or sea
forces to be raised, nor appoint a commander in chief of the army or
navy, unless nine States assent to the same: nor shall a question on any
other point, except for adjourning from day to day be determined, unless
by the votes of the majority of the United States in Congress
assembled”.
The
First Congress followed with The Constitution of The United States,
which was adopted in 1787 and ratified in 1788. The sections that
express the monetary powers granted to Congress and that are of
importance to this discussion have been previously listed above.
In
1791 Secretary of State Alexander Hamilton presented to Congress his
report on the subject of a mint to “coin” the “money” the
Constitution had mandated.
In
Hamilton’s report to Congress there are many passages that discuss the
dollar or unit of money to be issued. The following depicts the
definition of the dollar that is constantly used by Hamilton:
“It
may, nevertheless, be advisable to repose a discretionary authority in
the President of the United States, to continue the currency of the Spanish dollar at a value corresponding with the quantity of fine silver
contained in it…”
The
following year, The Second Congress passed the Coinage Act of 1792 by
which The United States monetary system was enacted.
WHAT THE CONSTITUTION DID NOT SAY
The
Constitution was the written plan for the construction of our
government, that was established and ordained by “We The People”,
according to the legislative powers that were granted to Congress by the
People; including the limitations of such powers; the disabilities of
the government in regards to such powers; as well as the delineation of
all rights, duties, privileges, and immunities of the government.
Very
often it is forgotten that what the Constitution didn’t state is just
as important as what it did state. The Constitution was the written
expression of the People’s will, to form a more perfect “Union”,
by granting to Congress specific powers to carry out the implementation
of their new form of government – that the People
had established and ordained.
Of
particular interest is to note that the Constitution does not grant any
of the following powers:
-
No
power to print paper money
-
No
banking powers or regulations
-
No
mention of fractional reserve banking policies
-
No
power to loan money – only to borrow
-
No
power to create any paper currency regardless if it was redeemable
in specie
-
No
power to delegate non-existing Constitutional powers to private
corporations
-
No
power to grant charters of incorporation to banks
-
No
power to form monopolies
-
No
power to issue forced loans
-
No
power to draw money from the Treasury, but in consequence of
appropriations by law
COINAGE
ACT OF 1792
The
Coinage Act of 1792 was the legislative means to implement by statute,
the monetary system of the government, according to the monetary powers
granted in the Constitution.
The
following are the most important sections of The Coinage Act of 1792 as
related to the subject under question – what was the original
Constitutional money or dollar?
Section
9.
“And be it further enacted, That there shall be from time to time
struck and coined at the said mint, coins of gold, silver, and copper,
of the following denominations, values and descriptions, viz
-
EAGLES —each to be of the value
of ten dollars or units,
and to contain two hundred and forty-seven grains and four eighths
of a grain of pure, or two hundred and seventy grains of standard
gold.
-
HALF
EAGLES —each to be of the value of five dollars, and to contain
one hundred and twenty-three grains and six eighths of a grain of
pure, or one hundred and thirty-five grains of standard gold.
-
QUARTER
EAGLES —each to be of the value of two dollars and a half dollar,
and to contain sixty-one grains and seven eighths of a grain of
pure, or sixty-seven grains and four eighths of a grain of standard
gold.
-
DOLLARS
OR
UNITS
—each to be of the value of a Spanish
milled dollar as the same is now current,
and to contain three hundred and seventy-one grains and four
sixteenth parts of a grain of pure silver, or four hundred and
sixteen grains of standard silver. (Note no mention of gold in
regards to the dollar)
-
HALF
DOLLARS —each to be of half the value of the dollar or unit, and
to contain one hundred and eighty-five grains and ten sixteenth
parts of a grain of pure, or two hundred and eight grains of
standard silver.
-
QUARTER
DOLLAR —each to be of one fourth the value of the dollar or unit,
and to contain ninety-two grains and thirteen sixteenth parts of a
grain of pure, or one hundred and four grains of standard silver.
-
DIMES
—each to be of the value of one tenth of a dollar or unit, and to
contain thirty- seven grains and two sixteenth parts of a grain of
pure, or forty-one grains and three fifths parts of a grain of
standard silver.
-
HALF
DIMES —each to be of the value of one twentieth of a dollar, and
to contain eighteen grains and nine sixteenth parts of a grain of
pure, or twenty grains and four fifths parts of a grain of standard
silver.
-
CENTS
—each to be of the value of the one-hundredth part of a dollar,
and to contain eleven pennyweights of copper.
-
HALF
CENTS —each to be of the value of half a cent, and to contain five
pennyweights and a half a pennyweight of copper.
Section
11. And
be it further enacted, That the proportional value of gold and silver in
all coins which shall by
law be current as money
within the United States, shall be fifteen to one, according to quantity in weight, of pure gold or pure silver; that is to say,
every fifteen pounds weight of pure silver shall be of equal value in
all payments, with one pound weight of pure gold, and so in proportion
as to any greater or less quantities of the respective metals.
Section
16.
And be it further enacted, That all the gold and silver coins
which shall have been struck at, and issued from the said mint, shall be
a lawful tender in all
payments whatsoever, those of full weight according to the respective values
herein before declared, and those of less than full weight at values
proportional to their respective weights.
Section
20. And
be if further enacted, That the money
of account of the United States shall be expressed in dollars, or units,
dimes or tenths, cents or hundredths, and the milles or thousandths, a
dime being the tenth part of a dollar, a cent the hundredth part of a
dollar, a mille the thousandth part of a dollar, and that all accounts
in the public offices and all proceedings in the courts of the United
States shall be kept and had in conformity to this regulation.”
Now
that we have before us the pertinent information regarding the original
monetary policy of the United States, according to the Constitution and
the Coinage Act of 1792, let’s take a closer look at what was said.
SUMMARY
OF THE CONSTITUTION & COINAGE ACT OF 1792
Article
I, Section 8, clause 5
of The Constitution states that Congress has the “power to coin
money” and furthermore Article I, Section 10, Clause 1
specifies that “ No State shall…coin Money; emit
Bills of Credit; make any Thing but gold
and silver Coin
a Tender in Payment of Debt.”
The
Constitution undeniably grants Congress the power to coin money, i.e. to form and shape metal (silver, gold &
copper) and to regulate its weight and purity and to affix the stamp of
the issuing government thereon.
From
ages past, before the time of the Bible, man has coined metal to be used
as money. Accordingly, money is brought forth into society to be used as
a medium of exchange to facilitate the trade of goods of all kinds. The
use of money involves the progress from direct exchange or bartering of
goods, to the indirect exchange of goods using a common medium: money.
The
free acts of individual
commerce, that collectively form an economic body of trade, chooses and
decides by its own internal market forces of supply and demand, what
commodity is most widely accepted as “the medium of exchange” –
money.
We
have seen that in early Colonial times that the Spanish
milled Silver Dollar had been the most popular and widely
accepted coin then current, although many other different types of coin also
circulated.
The
Constitution clearly states that money is to be coined and that
only gold and silver coin (i.e. money) is a tender in payment of debt.
Note that Congress was never granted the power to print money, only to coin it.
However,
the Constitution does not define exactly what a “dollar” is,
although twice it refers to the dollar – once in Article I, Section
9, Clause 1 and once in Amendment VII.
Let
us now once again turn our attention to the Coinage Act of 1792 to see
if the Founding Fathers and Congress expressly and explicitly defined
the “dollar”.
In
Section 20 of the Coinage Act
we read, “…that the money
of account of the United States shall be expressed in dollars
or units.”
We
are now getting closer to our goal for a definition of a dollar.
Congress in Section 20 clearly states that the money of account
of the U.S. is expressed in dollars, which are “units”
In
Section 9 of the Coinage Act
we read that “…That there shall be from time to time struck and
coined at the said mint, coins of gold, silver, and copper, of the
following denomination, values and descriptions, viz. Eagles—each to
be of the value of ten dollars or units and to contain two hundred and forty-seven
grains and four eighths of a grain of pure, or two hundred and seventy
grains of standard gold.”
Here
we clearly see that Congress coined Eagles that were of the value of ten
dollars or units. But an Eagle was not a “dollar”, but of the value
of ten dollars. So what is the definition of a dollar?
Further
on in Section 9 it is stated, “…dollars
or Units—each to be of the value of a Spanish milled dollar as the same is now
current, and to contain three hundred and seventy-one grains and four
sixteenths parts of a grain of pure silver, or four hundred and sixteen
grains of standard silver.”
At
long last – the goal we have been searching for – the definition of
“the dollar” or unit – each to be of the value of a Spanish milled dollar as the same is now current, and to contain three hundred and seventy-one grains and
four sixteenths parts of a grain of pure silver, or four hundred and
sixteen grains of standard silver.
According
to the documents we have so far examined, we find that the Constitution
grants Congress the power to coin
money while explicitly limiting
the states to make “any
Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender
in Payment of Debt”.
We
further find in the Coinage Act of 1792, that the money of account of
the United States shall be denominated in dollars
or units of the value
of a Spanish Silver Dollar,
as was current at the
time (1792). Also note that the Gold
Eagle is to have a value
of ten dollars or units.
This
means that originally our monetary system had as its standard the
Spanish Silver Dollar, and that the Gold Eagle coin was not
a “dollar”, but was measured against the silver standard, being
valued at ten dollars or units or 3,712 – ½ grains of fine silver.
Congress
had statutorily defined and legislatively implemented a bimetallic
system of coinage – that had the Silver Dollar as the standard where:
“…the
proportional value of gold and silver in all coins shall be fifteen
to one, according to quantity in weight, of pure gold or pure
silver and that all the gold and silver coins which shall have been
struck at, and issued from the said mint, shall be a lawful tender in
all payments whatsoever, those of full weight according to the
respective values herein before declared, and those of less than full
weight at values proportional to their respective weights”.
The
widely accepted belief that originally the United States was on a
monometallic “gold standard” is incorrect.
The idea that Congress had originally ever issued a gold
“dollar” or that the Constitution ever granted Congress such power
is also incorrect.
The
first monetary standard was a silver
standard that defined the “dollar” as a specific weight of silver,
as well as establishing that the “dollar” was the “money or unit
of account”.
However,
a bimetallic monetary system of coinage was also established by the
Constitutional mandate to Congress to “coin Money, regulate the Value
thereof”.
The
word “regulate” means to “adjust”, as in one thing to another
– which in the use of coins refers to systems of weights and measures
and the regulation of such weights and measures to the standard, which
is the “measure” they are to be regulated to or against.
As
stated in the Coinage Act of 1792 – Section 11 introduces an
exchange ratio of 15 to 1, according to weight.
Therefore, although a dollar was defined as 371.25 grains of
silver, gold exchanged for a dollar at 24.75 grains of gold (10 x 371.25
divided by 15).
Also,
Section 9 of the act defined the Eagle as containing two hundred
and forty-seven grains and four eighths of a grain of pure, or two
hundred and seventy grains of standard gold.
To
reiterate: the standard was Silver
– the monetary system of exchange was a bimetallic system of coinage.
Note,
however, that the “dollar” that the Coinage Act of 1792 statutorily
decreed was not the exact original “Constitutional dollar” – but
as the act says, “…each
to be of the value
of a Spanish milled dollar”.
Thus
“each” denotes
something that is not the
Spanish milled dollar but is to
be the “value” (specific weight and fineness) of the Spanish milled
dollar.
Furthermore,
originally there was no gold dollar – only a gold Eagle valued at ten dollars. The Coinage Act of 1849 created the first
gold dollar 57 years later. Any reference to an “original gold
dollar” dating back to the Constitution is incorrect.
We
have thus answered the question regarding whether or not the United
States was originally on a “gold standard” according to the monetary
powers granted in the Constitution and according to the subsequent
legislative statues of the original Coinage Act of 1792.
The
answer emphatically being – No – the standard was the then current Silver Spanish Dollar
known as Pieces
of Eight, coupled with a bimetallic system of coinage using both
silver and gold.
This
is not a matter of semantics – there are very important distinctions
of detail involved that have greatly affected our monetary history –
especially our present system of irredeemable paper fiat currency –
incestuously wedded to its sibling: fractional reserve banking, spawned
in greed – nurtured by the lust for power.
PART
II: SILVER STANDARD WITH A BIMETALLIC COINAGE SYSTEM
THE STANDARD & THE COINAGE SYSTEM
As
we have seen, the Constitution along with the Coinage Act of 1792,
established by statutory decree that the dollar was the unit of account
and also declared that a dollar or unit was “each
to be of the value of a Spanish
milled dollar as the same is now current, and to contain three
hundred and seventy-one grains and four sixteenth parts of a grain of
pure silver, or four hundred and sixteen grains of standard
silver”.
According
to statute, the United States was on the silver standard. However, as we
have seen, Congress also decreed that gold coins were to be minted and
circulated along side of silver coins, and fixed the statutory valuation
of silver to gold at 15 to 1.
In
other words, Congress had “fixed” the exchange rate between the two metals. Thus the United States was
on a silver standard, but it was also on a bimetallic system of coinage,
that included gold to be circulated at a “fixed” exchange rate to
the silver standard.
Such
a system can present problems, however, as the free market exchange rate
between gold and silver can diverge from the statutory or legally fixed
exchange rate – necessitating the adjustment of the other metals legal
value up or down to conform to the statutory fixed rate of exchange.
In
other words, Congress was trying to make two different types of metal
coinage equal in purchasing power. This was not a good idea and would
have been better left undone.
This
also raises the very interesting question as to whether or not this
“fixing” was an accidental mistake, by very learned men, well
acquainted with this exact monetary issue, as the discussions of such
are in the Congressional records.
Past
historical monetary writings also address the issue in detail. Perhaps
such was not a mistake, but was very much intended and planned, although
unknown by most but a select few. We will trust the reader with making
such determinations, as the following discussions occasion.
LEGAL TENDER & PURCHASING POWER
Involved
in the issue of “fixed” exchange, are the ideas of legal tender and
the concept of purchasing power.
Legal
tender has to do with distinguishing between the legal or juristic
meaning of money, and the purely economic meaning and use of money. The
term legal tender refers to the medium of payment that is designated as
the legally accepted settlement of debts, especially debts due and owed
to the government.
Money
in the purely economic sense is commonly referred to as the medium of
exchange or that which the common man uses to exchange one good for
another to facilitate commerce and trade.
In
a free market environment, whatever is determined to be the legal medium
of payment (legal tender) must first naturally evolve as the accepted
medium of exchange. Man by free choice determines what is to be money
– the most commonly accepted or marketable medium of exchange.
A
truly free society or
government will only declare as legal tender, that media that society
has already chosen as the accepted medium of exchange by its own free
will.
As
we have seen with the development of our Constitution and its monetary
policy, the dollar was the unit or medium of exchange that was the most
accepted then current medium – a specific weight and fineness of
silver – the “silver dollar”.
Any
alteration in this Constitutional dollar, both as the medium of exchange
and the medium of payment or legal tender – without a Constitutional
amendment – would not be the workings of a free society or government,
but one of forced obedience.
This
also goes to the point that the legal intrinsic value of the dollar is
the physical amount of silver or gold as measured against the
“standard”, which in the case of the U.S. dollar is a specific
weight of silver.
However,
the economic value or purchasing power of the medium of exchange is not
“intrinsic”, as it is not based on an objective determination or
standard, but on the subjective valuations of the market participants.
Some refer to this as the subjective theory of value or the theory of
declining marginal utility.
It
is exactly this difference – between the legal intrinsic value of
money based on an objective standard or defined weight of metal –
versus the subjective value of the medium of exchange that changes
according to the supply and demand of the marketplace – that precludes
any system of bimetallic coinage, that sets one metal as the standard,
and then declares the other metal to be “exchangeable” for the
standard metal at a “fixed” rate of exchange – to be inherently
doomed to fighting free market forces and laws of supply and demand,
continually requiring “regulatory” legislation
and “adjustment”. Such is not the workings, of a truly free
market, but of a contrived or fixed market.
Although
in the strict technical and statutory sense, the standard was silver and
the system of coinage was bimetallic – in all practical applications
or according to the prevailing “populist” views – the system was a
duometallic system that reciprocally recognized and exchanged one metal
for the other. As will be
shown, however, the system fluctuated back and forth from one metal to
the other, and with good cause – the purposefully contrived reasons of
power and influence: all in the pursuit of profit and gain.
GRESHAM’S LAW
Establishing
fixed exchange rates allows "Gresham's
Law" to enter the picture, whereby an artificially
overvalued money tends to drive an artificially undervalued money out of
circulation.
Free
markets and supply and demand being what they are, inevitably the market
values one metal over the other. Eventually one metal is driven out by
the other. This process is oft times referred to as
“demonetization”. But
remember, bimetallism under a fixed standard is not necessarily a
completely free system.
Starting
slowly in the 1780’s, the market
value of silver slid downwards, steadily continuing down through the
1790’s, up until about 1804-1805; mainly in response to the increased
supply of silver from Mexico and the diminishing supplies of gold from
Russia; while at the same time, its mint
price remained the same, thereby causing silver to be overvalued
in relation to gold.
Gold
coins started to flow out of our country and ceased to circulate, while
silver coin flowed in and was abundant. Gold coin was melted down and
exported abroad. From 1800 to 1834 only silver coin circulated as the
currency of choice. Gold had been driven out – but by what force?
Might there be an unseen “guiding hand”?
First
gold was driven out of circulation, and then over time silver became the
lackey, until eventually both metals were driven into exile and buried
beneath a mountain of worthless paper debt and hollow promises to pay:
that is our now current system of paper fiat – a mere shade of its
former self. But such events beg the question: a lackey of whom or by
what power?
Congress
would have been better off to have simply minted gold Eagles without
fixing a dollar value on them, thereby allowing the free market forces
of supply and demand to regulate their exchange rate value. This would
help prevent the “authorized” control by other than free market
principles or by “others”.
Because
of this flaw in a bimetallic system of coinage that has one metal as the
standard and then fixes
the exchange rate between the two metals, and the resulting “crying”
up or down of the value of one metal in regards to the other – our
monetary history was one where first one metal was dear and the other
shunned, and vice versa, on several different occasions.
CONCLUSIONS SO FAR
It
has been shown that the both the Constitution and the Original Coinage
Act of 1792 established the monetary standard to be silver, in
conjunction with a bimetallic system of silver and gold coinage.
-
The
definition of a “dollar” has been found to be a specific weight
and fineness of silver; commonly referred to as the silver dollar:
371.25 grains of silver.
-
The
silver dollar was the unit of money or account that the Constitution
and the Original Coinage Act of 1792 established.
-
Silver
was exchangeable with gold at the rate of 15 to 1.
-
Neither
the Constitution nor the Original Coinage Act of 1792 mentioned or
established a gold dollar.
-
A
U.S. gold dollar did not exist at this time in history and did not
appear until 1849.
-
The
gold eagle coin was of the value
of ten dollars – the dollar being defined as the standard
weight of silver of 371.25 grains of silver.
-
Gold
exchanged for a dollar at 24.75 grains of gold (10 x 371.25 divided
by 15), however, there was not any actual gold dollar coin.
-
The
Constitution established that the States could not accept anything
but gold and silver coin as legal tender and that Congress had the
authority to mint silver and gold coins, but not the authority to
print or emit bills of credit or paper money.
Now
that we have discovered just what the Constitution and the Original
Coinage Act of 1792 established as our monetary standard and system –
the standard being a defined weight of silver with a bimetallic coinage
system of silver and gold coins – let’s now look and see how the
various and subsequent monetary acts brought forth, by the process of
devolution, our present system of irredeemable paper fiat currency.

© 2004 Douglas V. Gnazzo
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