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Silver Coin Money
Ptolemaic Kingdom of Egypt
Ptolemy II, Philadelphos, 285 - 246 B.C.
This commentary was originally posted at www.financialsense.com on 6th May
2005.
Introduction
As established in Part I of Silver
Is Money, the original constitutional monetary standard was a well defined
specific weight and fineness of silver: 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. The Coinage Act of 1792 also established that
their was to be a Silver Standard with a bimetallic coinage system of both
silver and gold coins.
"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."
It
is readily apparent to all except the blind who wouldn't know a bubble if it
bit them in the butt that silver has always been money within our beloved country,
just as gold has always been money. All one has to do is to read the Constitution
to find that "nothing but silver and gold coin" was to be issued as money.
Such a monetary system is known as an honest hard money system, as opposed
to the existing soft and getting softer paper fiat monetary system of irredeemable
Federal Reserve Notes.
And wouldn't it be nice, if our elected officials in Congress read the actual
Constitution and understood what it says in regards to our monetary system,
as has the learned Congressman Ron Paul from Texas, who advocates a return
to honest money. Perhaps our representatives should read the first Congressional
Records to see how all of these hard money versus soft money issues were debated
repeatedly before deciding on silver and gold coin, and no bills of credit
(a.k.a. paper money).
Then our elected officials would also get to see the monetary history of the
world which was often discussed as well, which shows that back to before the
days of the Bible that silver and gold were used as money, and that all experiments
with paper money ended very badly - in depressions and currency collapse.
Silver and gold is mentioned as money in the Bible, in the ancient Jewish
scriptures in The Hesiod, in most ancient Greek Classics, in Babylonian, Sumerian,
Egyptian and Chinese ancient writings - just about anywhere and everywhere,
at all time periods throughout man's history - silver and gold were Real Honest
Money.
A bit of patience is asked of the reader, as we will talk more about silver
as money, but we are going to take a little detour to provide some theory and
history of just why silver and gold is honest money.
Kondratiev Wave Theory
Kondratiev was a leading Russian economist during the 1920s. In 1922, while
compiling statistics for the Soviet government on various economic variables
such as: wages, prices, interest rates, imports and exports, consumption and
production, including 14 other statistics, he discovered what he considered
to be a long term cycle of expansion and contraction in capitalistic economies,
running approximately 50 to 60 years in length.
His work went back to 1789, the dawn of the industrial revolution, compiling
data on international trade, capital, and money flows. The belief in long term
cycles was a not a novel idea attributable to Kondratiev. Many others before
him were familiar with the idea going back to the Jubilee Cycles in the Bible,
the work of Jevons, up to and including Schumpter.
Professor Antal E. Fekete's excellent work: Causes
and Consequences of Kondratiev's Long-Wave Cycle has pointed out that
in regards to economic cycle theory there are four major cycles recognized
by western economists: Kitchin's short term cycle of 3-5 years; Juglar's
cycle of 7 years; Kuznets' medium-wave cycle with an average duration of
15-25 years; and lastly Kondratiev's long-wave cycle with an average duration
45-60 years. These cycles were discovered between 1862 - 1922.
Ian Gordon of Long-Wave Cycles explains the genesis of Kondratiev's thesis
to the conventionally accepted theory most often used today:
"Really, all I've done, and I think all other writers
who've written about Kondratieff, have done, is to break the cycle into
the four seasons and I think they're very apropos. Spring being the rebirth
of the economy. Summer being the period when the economy really flourishes
and it's also the time when you get the inflation. Autumn being a period
when people feel good even though winter lies ahead. You still get those
Indian Summer days and so on. Then Winter being the time when the economy
sleeps and it's the season when debt is flushed from the economy so that
it can start refreshed in the Spring."
Other Cycles
And then - there are even longer term cycles as well: 100 year cycles, millennium
cycles, super-cycles and their geometric fractal forms ala Robert Prechter
in the western world of economics; and the mother of all cycles: a Mavantara
- from the eastern sphere of the world.
But all pairs of opposites produce children, which beget further children,
as minutes produce hours; hours of daylight and hours of darkness together
form a "day"; days together make weeks; weeks give birth to months; and months
become years. Cycles, cycles everywhere.
Presently some say we are in the Kaliyuga Age, which consists of 432,000 years.
The Kaliyuga Age is to be followed by the Dvaparayuga Age of 864,000 years.
The Dvaparayuga Age is to be followed by the Tretayuga Age consisting of 1,296,000
years; followed by the Krtayuga Age of 1,728,000 years - at least some would
say.
The axis of the earth travels approximately 2,000 years within an astrological
sign, and moves backwards on to the next sign, continuing such "progression" or "regression",
depending on one's view, through all the signs of the zodiac.
The slow retrograde motion of equinoctial points along the ecliptic is known
as the Precession of the Equinoxes. Presently the Piscean cycle is ending and
the Aquarian cycle is beginning. Hence the references to the "dawning of the
age of Aquarius" - at least for the next 2000 years or so.
A complete cycle of small yugas takes approximately 24,000 years (2000 x 12).
This is the amount of time needed for the earth to travel through each of the
12 signs of the zodiac, which may not exactly be the case, (spending the exact
same "time" in each "sign") but we will attempt to explain that later on, angles
and arcs and all that kind of stuff.
But for now, the grandma and granddaddy of the ages.
Longer Cycles
Longer term cycles are divided up into what are called Kalpas, which are based
on the formation, continuance, decline, and disintegration of the universe
- the disintegration cycle being similar to the western world's second law
of thermodynamics or mass entropy: the heat dissolution of all physical bodies
that are moving from order towards chaos in a dissipative state - sort of.
Also note there are four "phases" mentioned, kind of like the four seasons
on a grander scale - or so we perceive it to be grander, but that's another
story, for another time.
The above delineation of four is similar to that of an individual man, who
is born as a child, which is the formative cycle; he then grows and develops
in the continuance cycle into adulthood; during adulthood he peaks and begins
to slowly decline; and in old age he begins to wear down faster or disintegrates
and dies.
Come to think about it, stocks and commodities and such do about the same
- don't they? Base, rise, top, and fall. Man that number four gets a-round.
The Cycle of All Cycles
While the earth's axis moves in an arc as it travels through the signs of
the zodiac, the entire solar system revolves around the Central Sun of the
Galaxy. This orbit is elliptical rather than circular.
Earlier we mentioned the four yugas, which translates as ages. Believe it
or not, the four ages are denoted by the four seasons: winter, spring, summer,
and fall. And this was done thousands of years before Christ.
Presently we are in the winter season or the Kaliyuga Age.
- Winter - Kaliyuga Age: 432,000 years
- Spring - Dvaparayuga Age: 864,000 years
- Summer - Tretayuga Age: 1,296,000 years
- Autumn - Krtayuga Age: 1,728,000 years
However, 1998 is 5,090 years from the beginning of Kali Yuga of the long
cycle. For the short cycle, winter is ending with the entrance of the planetary
axis into Aquarius, which begins the season of Spring, for the shorter 24,000
year cycle.
- Total Time for One Cycle or Manvantara: 4,320,000,000 years (add 4 above
seasons)
- One complete day and night of Brahma: 8,640,000,000 year
- 360 of these days is called "One Year of Brahma": 3,110,400,000,000
years
- 100 of these years constitute the life of Brahma called a Maha Kalpa:
311,040,000,000,000 years
At the end of the Grand Cycle, the dissolution of the Universe occurs, which
is similar to matter and spirit becoming one, as in balance or undifferentation.
That yin/yang yoga thingy.
An interesting side point - if you decipher any of the above numbers using
numerology (whatever that is), they all come out to the number nine. Cycles,
cycles everywhere.
Awesomeness
Now, before you dismiss any of this as too far out, remember - this is the
same system that had the laws of physics, thermodynamics, algebra, geometry,
etc. approximately 1000-2000 years B.C. As an example of the insight of these
systems into the workings of the Cosmos, note the following Puranas:
- "By one more than the one before"
- "All from nine and the last from 10"
Let's try it out and see how and if they work. Let's subtract 665 from 1000.
All from nine and the last from 10, so 9 minus 6 = 3; 9 minus the next
6 = 3; 10 minus 5 = 5; so we have a 3 another 3 and a 5, for 335 . 335 plus
665 = 1000. Cool.
Since were having so much fun, let's try another - let's subtract 335 from
4000.
By one more than the one before, so 4(000) minus 1 = 3000 - now
all from nine and the last from ten
9 minus 3 = 6; 9 minus 3 = 6; 10 minus 5 = 5 - for 665, which gives 3665
3665 plus 335 = 4000. Radical.
Now the real awesomeness:
Take our first example, in which the answer was 335. If we add the individual
numbers of 335 together we get: 3+3=6 and 6+5=11 and 11 is 1+1=2
Now take the number 665 from the first example and do the same: 6+6=12
and 12+5=17 and 1+7=8
Now take the number 1000 from the first example and do the same: 1+0+0+0=1
Now take the 2, and add it to the 8 from the above two numerical breakdowns,
and we get 10, which added to itself is 1+0=1. Awesome.
Cycles and patterns - everywhere. You can do the same with the second
example. You can do the same with any and all examples. More awesome.
So what does any of this have to do with silver? Patience, we are getting
closer.
Kondratiev Revisited
Earlier we mentioned that the conventionally accepted model of Kondratiev's
long term wave theory has been divided into four parts named after the four
seasons: spring, summer, fall, and winter.
- Spring represents the beginning of a rebirth and rising trend in the economy.
- As spring matures and turns into summer, the economy begins to heat up.
- Summer then moves into fall and the economy begins to peak and cool off.
- Winter arrives and the economy begins to significantly slow down, ultimately
destined for a bottom or "death" from which the next spring renews "life".
This is a simplistic synopsis, as there are many variables involved in each
of the "seasons": interest rates, money supply and demand, capital flows, geo-political
factors, wars, tariffs and other forms of protectionism, population trends,
stock markets, commodity markets, prices, foreign exchange values, health and
disease patterns, even weather patterns - innumerable factors are present.
The chart below depicts the signatures of the various seasons and their markers,
according to conventional Kondratiev Wave Analysis.
Kondratiev Seasons 1949 - 2010

[Chart courtesy of FSO article on Ian Gordon of The Long
Wave Analyst, as noted above]
As is readily apparent from the chart above, one of the long term Kondratiev
Cycles is depicted as starting approximately in 1949 and continuing until approximately
2010, with the delineation of the cycle into four parts named after the four
seasons. The words of W. D. Gann have been used by some to explain the seasonality
of the cycle and the order of nature's law.
"The four seasons of the year teach us that there
is a reaping time and a sowing time and a time that we cannot reverse
the order of nature's law."
It is generally assumed by almost all followers of Kondratiev's Cycle theory
that presently we are in the winter season, as expressed in the following quote:
"I don't think that there can be any doubt that we're
now in Winter. We're in the period when debt is cleansed from the
economy, so, as I say, that the economy can be renewed with little debt
in the system. The winter period starts, following the peak in stock prices
at the end of autumn. We always know we're getting into that Autumn period
-- when we're going to have the greatest Bull Market in stocks in our lifetime
and probably the greatest Bull Market in bonds and also the greatest Bull
Market in real estate -- because four events anticipate these great autumn
Bull Markets. Those four events occurred between 1980 and 1982. They
were the peak in commodity prices, the peak in interest rates, the recession
and the Bear Market in stocks." [Long Wave Analyst]
It is also generally assumed that Kondratiev's Cycle Theory is basically about "waves" of
credit inflation and credit deflation, as the following quote explains quite
well:
"Well, when the Kondratieff Cycle starts (and our
present cycle started in 1949 with the beginning of Spring), debt has been
cleansed from the economy during the previous winter. People are very,
very wary. They're scared that the depression will come back. Everything
is paid for in cash. But, as the economy starts to regain some strength,
as spring moves a long, some people start to borrow money for their major
purchases like housing, but it's mainly corporations borrowing to expand
in line with demand. During the Summer, borrowing picks up pace
in line with increasing confidence. Corporations borrow quite heavily to
expand their enterprises. So that borrowing goes to what I call a worthwhile
cause because it goes to expand the capital goods area of the economy.
When the recession hits at the end of Summer and the interest rates peak.
The Federal Reserve gets very scared about what's happening, so it starts
to bring down (the) interest rates, quite dramatically, and it pours money
into the banking system in an effort to revive the economy. What happens
then is that most of the corporations have already borrowed throughout
the Summer, really don't need to borrow that heavily, so a lot of the borrowing
is done by consumers. Because banks have all this money, they've got to
make it available to somebody, so they make it available to the consumer.
The consumers start to borrow quite heavily. Because
they're borrowing, they have the extra money with which to make purchases
and therefore the economy starts to expand and, of course, the stock market
expands with the economy. So consumers eventually, or fairly soon into
this expansion, start to put money into the stock market and you get the
growth of the mutual fund industry and so on, growing and attracting more
investor money into it and the economy continues to expand. People start
to get wealthy as a result and eventually the whole system becomes completely
overwhelmed by the amount of debt and that occurs right at the end of the Autumn period.
The U.S. now has, 32 trillion dollars of government,
corporate and individual debt in the system. Most of that money is going
to have to be cleansed from the economy during the Winter. Once the peak
of the debt cycle is reached at the end of Autumn, it must be eliminated
from the economy during Winter -- we're probably 2 1/2 years into
Winter now - debt is being cleansed as we can see, through corporate bankruptcies.
We've just seen the biggest one in U.S. history with WorldCom. Before that,
the biggest one I think was Enron. So we're starting to see some very big
debt bankruptcies and that debt being taken out of the economy. At the
same time, consumers, too, are starting to file for personal bankruptcies
in record numbers. So, we are starting the debt cleansing process." [Long
Wave Analyst]
Upon reading the above it is amazing to see how many of the signature events
of the cycle have occurred and or are occurring. When the present cycle is
said to have started in 1949, it is obvious that the United States had just
come from out of a depression during most of the 1930s. People were scared
- very scared and very leery of the stock market and the economy in general.
It is also true that slowly confidence returned and the economy became stronger
and stronger, until the summer season of the cycle had been entered and the
economy was booming or in what some refer to as a crack up boom.
Notice in the above chart how some of the signature for the summer season
read: gold soars - which it did; interest rates soar - which they did; commodities
boom - which they did. Then summer turns into fall.
On the chart, once again, notice the signatures: stock market booms - which
it did; interest rates fall - which they did; bond prices rise - which they
did; commodity prices drop - which they did; stocks peak and then crash - well
they may have peaked, but they didn't crash; and perhaps most importantly, debt
levels rise to unsustainable levels.
All in all, however, most signatures appear to be fairly right on the money.
Of interest and import is the basic "tag" to each of the seasons. Spring
was a time of the "start of inflation", summer was "runaway inflation",
autumn was "disinflation", and winter is "deflation". This is
where long term cycle theory gets a bit tricky, and may not be as readily discernable
as some suggest. We will try to keep this as simple as possible, so let's go
back to the main premise of Kondratiev's Cycle Theory.
Main Premise
The basic premise behind Kondratiev's Theory is that there is a cyclic path
that a capitalist economy follows that is due to waves of credit inflation and
then credit contraction or what some call a crack up boom followed by
a bust.
Also note that listed under the winter season is a spike in interest rates and
a currency crisis, including a run from paper money into gold. Also
notice how back in the summer season commodity prices peaked, and in
the autumn they fall. Let's take a closer look at these few issues.
A Closer Look
The basic premise under consideration is that a capitalist economy goes through
periods of credit expansion or inflation, followed by credit contraction or
deflation. This sounds fairly simple and appears most likely, but is it? Have
any of the past cycles taken place under a complete fiat monetary system -
no they have not. All examples of past cycles were during periods when gold
was involved in the system in some way or form - either as the money or the
backing for the money (mostly the latter).
Whenever one talks about an economy, and the expansion or contraction of credit,
one is talking about money and the lending of money. Consequently, money is
at the basis of monetary theory, or if it isn't, it should be, unless the economy
is run by barter. Once the threshold from direct exchange to indirect exchange
is crossed - money - the medium of exchange - is the basis of the monetary
system by which the economy is run.
The economy is based on the monetary system, which in turn, is based on the
standard of money. You can tell the inherent nature of a tree by the quality
of the fruit it bares - a witness thereto.
Finally, we are getting a bit closer to the title of this paper: Silver
Is Money. Sorry for the delay, but you can thank the Federal Reserve for
the seemingly never ending winding road to paper fiat land - I'm just trying
to explain what they've done and where it is leading us.
As was shown in the first part of Silver
Is Money, the definition and monetary standard of a dollar according
to the Constitution and the Original Coinage Act of 1792 is
a specific weight and fineness of silver - the Silver Dollar.
Since there has never been a constitutional amendment to change our monetary
system, the standard is still in place, whether or not it is used and honored -
by the government or by We The People.
Without a constitutional amendment, any deviation from the Constitution is
an unconstitutional act, and, as such, it is as if it never occurred, and is
in opposition to the Supreme Law of the Land.
Unconstitutional acts are as if they never occurred, and are not the law -
but unlawful. Consequently, there is a strong possibility that our monetary
system of irredeemable Federal Reserve Notes is not only unconstitutional -
it may also be the antithesis of what an honest monetary system is supposed
to be.
Instead of providing a system of savings and wealth accumulation
for all participants, money by fiat is nothing more than a wealth transference
scheme that enables the rich to get richer, while the poor get poorer. Wealth
is siphoned away from the many - over to the few.
The Basis
The foundation of any monetary system is the money it uses, the medium of
exchange by which trade occurs. The extension of credit is based upon the soundness
of the money that is extended as credit. The extension of credit creates debt
to be repaid. Debt can only be paid for by real money - by honest money.
The offsetting of debt or the rollover of debt into another debt is not payment,
it is a game of double entry bookkeeping and nothing more. Now you see it,
now you don't. It is the work of a magician that performs tricks of illusion
- not honest labor. It is a game of slight of hand - of wealth transference.
Because of the moral hazard of paper fiat, which is fraudulent and dishonest,
any monetary system based on it is destined to the unwinding of the inherent
moral hazard. Likewise, any system of economics that is based on an unsound
monetary system, which accepts the unacceptable, is subjecting itself to a
false premise, i.e. that a fiat money system that extends credit by fractional
reserve policy is real as opposed to illusionary - sound as opposed to unsound.
A structure is only as sound as the foundation upon which it is built. A monetary
system of paper fiat is but a house of cards. An economy that lives by and
within a house of cards, is exposed to the ill winds of fortune - as fortune
wears the faces of Janus. One is reminded of the nursery rhyme of the three
little pigs and the big bad wolf - would you want the house of straw or the
house of bricks when the wolf comes a calling?
Kondratiev Revisited
The Kondratiev Theory maintains that there is a cycle of debt expansion (inflation),
followed by debt contraction (deflation). On the surface this appears
correct, but if one looks deeper, are there other possibilities just as probable?
If paper fiat is itself inherently inflationary, is deflation the only outcome,
or even the most likely scenario? What of hyperinflation, is that a
possibility?
And what of this thing called prediction - how valid is it? Does not
prediction imply determinism? Can the future be predicted? With what certainty?
Perhaps a closer look should be given to the theory of determinism as well.
According to the Kondratiev chart above, commodity prices peak in the summer of
the cycle and we are presently in the winter season, yet commodity prices
have recently been at near record levels, when according to Kondratiev theory,
they should have been falling since autumn, which has already passed.
This could very well be just a small glitch, or it could be a harbinger of
other things to come, as in mutations and or other probabilities or outcomes.
The jury is still out on this, as time and price action will tell the tale,
as either a huge top is being put in place or a huge base. This will also be
dealt with when we get to the discussion of paradigm shifts.

CRB Index From 1960 - 2005
Chart courtesy of Sharefin at www.sharelynx.net
The Kondratiev chart also states that during the winter season, which we are
said to be in, that a currency collapse occurs as interest rates spike up and
a credit contraction takes place. Before discussing the present situation,
let's take a look at the recent past, as that is from where the present has
come.
The current cycle is said to have started with a renewed spring season around
1949, that had risen phoenix-like from the ashes of the previous winter.
We all know how bad the great depression was - horror stories are legion and
there are still many survivors alive to tell the tales. My father is one.
What is most curious is that during the great depression fortunes were made
that hardly ever get mentioned. Now how can one make a fortune during a depression,
isn't everyone losing money? The answer is a resounding no - not everyone is
losing money. By investing in the bond market there are some making fortunes,
a literal killing. Professor Anal Fekete has written extensively on this subject: Stop
Greenspan From Plunging America Into A Depression, as well as on the topic
presently under discussion.
During the great depression bond rates steadily dropped. When interest rates
drop, bond prices rise. Large institutional investors in the inside loop made
a killing. During the recent great decline in the Japanese economy fortunes
have been made in the bond market as well. The speculation in the bond market
is one of those dirty little secrets "they" don't want you to know about. There
are also other ways.
Many of the elite collectivists know when to go shopping - when things are
on sale. Nothing like a nice fireside sale to pick up entire businesses for
pennies on the dollar. Ask Carnegie or Morgan or Rockefeller how they fared
during depressions. Both the action in the bond market and the action during
the fireside sales is simply wealth transference by the elite few - nothing
more, nothing less.
Outcomes
Let's take a quick review, before proceeding further ahead. The following
appears to be the case according to the evidence thus far revealed:
- Silver is the constitutional standard of our monetary system
- The required constitutional amendment to change the standard has never
occurred
- A completely paper fiat monetary system of Federal Reserve Notes is
in direct opposition to the Constitution and the Silver Standard that it
and the Coinage Act of 1792 established
- The present paper fiat system confuses the means of paying debt (money),
as the same as the debt itself. Debt is not being paid, it is being offset
by rolling over one debt into another(s)
- A monetary system is only as sound as the money it is based on
- An economy is only as sound as the monetary system it uses
- Economic theories that do not first consider the soundness of the money
of the economy is subject to false premises and false conclusions
- How valid are predictions of economic theories and models based on determinism
and false monetary standards?
- Kondratiev's Cycle Theory may be true, but does that mean that one can
use it to make predictions of future events; and if so, with what probability
or certainty?
Near the beginning of this work a quote was cited by W.D. Gann:
"The four seasons of the year teach us that there
is a reaping time and a sowing time and a time that we cannot reverse
the order of nature's law."
This is somewhat similar to the quote the first part of Silver Is Money ended
with:
"As to every purpose there is a season and to every
season a purpose."
Both quotes appear to be related to the saying: "a time for every season,
and a season for every time." There is obviously a time and a season
in which to enact the purpose of reaping and of sowing.
But what of the statement: "and a time that we cannot reverse the order
of nature's law."? This sounds true, as how can we possibly reverse the
order of nature's law. Are we, however, the only entity possible or existent
to reverse the order of nature's law? Perhaps nature itself reverses the
order of its own law?
However, do we even know the order of nature's law? The Law has been
previously covered in an earlier work Whence & Pence,
Part 10: The Unwounding, but what is this thing called "order"?
Chaos and Order
Henry Adams once said, "Chaos often breeds life, while order breeds habit." Pretty
interesting statement to say the least. So now chaos is thrown into the mix
as well, which makes sense, as how can one get order unless chaos is present?
And it only seems natural that order breeds habit.
Chaos is generally thought of as disarray or randomness, which many an ancient
philosopher and many religious and occult texts say was the cauldron from which
the Cosmos came forth from. Ilya Prigogine won the Noble Prize for his theory
and experimental demonstration on how order can come from Chaos.
Chaos Theory examines and questions the random behavior of deterministic systems.
Such random systems have been found to be extremely sensitive to infinitely
small changes in the initial parameters of the system. Consequently, chaos
theory questions the plausibility and validity of making predictions on how
such systems will act.
Determinism
Determinism is the belief that for every cause there is an effect, and for
every effect there is a cause; or in other words that every act is the result
of preceding acts. We can thank Mr. Newton for popularizing this belief. He
did almost as good of a job as Keynes did in his field. Perhaps they were magicians
by night.
Sir Isaac's Laws were able to predict systems very accurately, but not even
Sir Isaac could come up with the answer to King Oscar II of Norway's challenge
as to who could prove or disprove that the universe was stable. And Sir Isaac
was no dummy - he was the keeper of the mint, scientist extraordinaire, and
Grand Master of the Prior de Sion, which meant he was an adept of the ancient
ways - actually a Grand Master of the art. He wrote about some pretty arcane
and occult "stuff." The pairs are always tricky - even for a Grand Master.
Chaos
Chaos is most readily seen in long term dynamic systems that involve complex
motion(s). Chaotic systems can be extremely mathematically deterministic, yet
also aperiodic, which makes them very hard to predict, as the initial conditions
are extremely sensitive to the slightest of changes that in turn can produce
totally different end results.
Fractals are an example of such as they are very complex geometric designs
that are infinitely detailed yet recursively defined. Weather systems and their
forecasts or predictions are another example of chaotic systems and how difficult
their forecasts or predictions are.
As common sense would dictate, war is a very chaotic system, which Iraqi has
demonstrated quite emphatically. Race horsing is another, try making a living
by predicting the outcome of horse races - it's called gambling. You can have
the fastest horse in the world, that has won all his races, yet the next time
he slips coming out of the gate, goes 8 wide on the first turn as a result,
cuts to the inside and gets blocked in, the undefeated champion loses the race.
The initial set of conditions changed, and so did the outcome of the race.
Complex dynamics occurs in man-made systems as well as natural ones. Man himself
is very complex, and consequently, so too are his social, political, and behavioral
systems. As we saw in the race horse example, complex systems contain many
variables or causes and effects, which are not proportional to one another,
they are synergistic. There is communication or feedback that occurs at any
given point, which changes what appeared to be a very deterministic sequence
of events. Suddenly the system becomes unstable. This is referred to as bifurcation,
at which point the system can break apart.
Instability
Originally, scientists believed that if they could reduce the uncertainty
to the initial conditions in any given system, they could likewise reduce the
uncertainty in any final outcomes or predictions of the system. What scientists
have now found, however, is that two sets of conditions that are nearly indistinguishable
from one another, can and do result in two final conditions or outcomes that
vary greatly from one another. In other words, any imprecision, even extremely
minute ones, will grow at ever-expanding rates.
As the renowned Nobel prize winner Ilya Prigogine says, "This suggests,
moreover, that most of reality, instead of being orderly, stable and equilibrial,
is seething and bubbling with change, disorder, and process." Complete
equilibrium is actually fairly rare, as the more complex a system gets, the
more variables there are that can become unstable. Brings to mind the old
adage, "keep it simple, stupid".
Notice some of the words that have been used: stable, unstable, change, variable,
uncertainty, bifurcation, complexity, etc. It is almost as if one were describing
our paper fiat monetary/debt system, which has become so complex, with so many
variables, creating so many imbalances - the resulting system is very unsound
or unstable. The Fed is basically walking a tight-rope trying to balance all
of these unknown variables. Will they succeed, can they do it? Time will tell,
as that is what it does - expresses change.
Money Issue Revisited
So we have once again returned to the money issue, having gone way out in
left field where chaos rules, and back home again where determinism used to
be the norm. But I think you can see the point: our monetary system according
to the Constitution and the Coinage Act of 1792 was on Silver Standard with
a bimetallic coinage system of silver and gold coin.
Such a system is referred to as a "hard money" system, because the
coins are hard, being as they were, struck from metal. Such a system is also "sound" as
one can not as easily inflate gold coin as one can inflate paper money, or
what now is electronic money, computer entries on a screen and nothing more.
Mining gold and silver is very hard and dangerous work that requires taking
the metal from the bowels of the earth. This is what makes precious metals
- precious - their stocks to flow ratios are very high, which will be gone
into in more detail in part three.
Also in part three we will look at the linkage between interest rates and
prices and the money flows between the bond and the commodity markets; and
how these could effect the systems of prediction we are examining. Part of
the inquiry will also deal with closed and open systems and linear versus non-linear
models. In the words of Nobel Prize winner Ilya Prigogine:
"While some parts of the universe may operate like
machines, these are closed systems, and closed systems, at best, form only
a small part of the physical universe. Most phenomena of interest to us
are, in fact, open systems, exchanging energy or matter (and one might
add, information) with their environment. Surely biological and social
systems are open, which means that the attempt to understand them in mechanistic
terms is doomed to failure."
All of these issues are reasons why our monetary system should not be one
of paper fiat. You cannot pay a promise to pay with another promise to pay,
that is simply rolling over the debt. You cannot pay debt by default. You cannot
pay debt by debasement. A system that must continually grow and expand and
debase its quality or purchasing power just to stay alive is very unstable,
it is like a drug addict that needs an ever larger fix or dose - until one
day he needs it no more, because he is no more.
This is why an honest system of silver and gold is needed to replace our present
system of irredeemable paper debt. Chaos awaits - as we peer down into the
abyss.
The chart below is a chart of the quality or purchasing power of what we will
refer to as the dollar bill as opposed to the dollar, as there is a difference
between a Constitutional Dollar and a dollar bill, as was shown in part one
of Silver Is Money.
As is evident from the chart - the direction of the debasement of our currency
to 95% of its original "value" does appear to be a decent into the abyss.

Chart courtesy from Sharefin at www.sharelynx.net
Chaos

"In truth at first Chaos came to be ..."
[Hesiod, Theogony 116]
Part III To Be Forthcoming - The Four Horsemen
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