In Money We Trust?

Guest Post by John Stossel

In Money We Trust?

Look at the dollar bills in your wallet. They say they are “legal tender for all debts.”

But are they? What makes them valuable? What makes them worth anything?

Each bill says, “In God We Trust.” But God won’t guarantee their value.

The $20 bill depicts the White House. Congress is on $50s. But neither guarantees the value of our dollars.

I wouldn’t trust them if they did. I don’t trust politicians, generally, but I especially don’t trust them with money. Since President Richard Nixon took the U.S. off the gold standard, the dollar has lost 80 percent of its value.

So what makes money trustworthy?

A new PBS documentary, “In Money We Trust?” points out that money is only useful if people agree that it can be trusted.

I made a short version of the documentary.

To earn trust, money should be “reliable, like a clock,” says Forbes magazine publisher Steve Forbes. “It has to be fixed in value: 60 minutes in an hour, 60 seconds in a minute. Imagine if that floated each day. That would make life chaotic.”

Throughout history, people needed a way to assign a fixed value to money.

“The best mechanism for this would be some kind of commodity that’s permanent, easily transported, easily understood by everyone. And that medium was, of course, gold,” says anthropologist Jack Weatherford in the documentary.

But gold isn’t the only thing to which people have pegged the value of money. They’ve also linked it to things such as silver, crops and salt. Salt-based trade is where we got the word “salary.”

But gold created “a kind of mobility in people’s lives that they never had before,” says Weatherford.

But gold is heavy — hard to carry around. That limited trade.

So people created banks.

“The Knights Templar developed a system where they said, ‘Well, you can just deposit your money here with us and then, when you need some, withdraw it from your account,'” explains economist Nathan Lewis. “This enabled the peasants to travel Europe without being in danger of being robbed.”

That meant people could engage in more trade.

“You could … sell a bond in London,” says Lewis, “and build a railroad in India.”

The increased trade made the world much richer.

In the United States, the first secretary of the treasury, Alexander Hamilton, fixed the dollar to gold and silver. The whole world came to trust the dollar as a reliable indicator of value.

But governments like to enrich themselves by debasing currency, making it appear the government has more wealth than it really does — spreading the same wealth over more units of currency.

The evil emperor Nero did it in ancient Rome, says Weatherford. “They would call in all the coins, melt them down, reissue them — of course, with his picture on them,” but with less gold in each coin. Rome’s decline was tied to the decrease in the trustworthiness of its currency.

“When you change the value of money, you’re stealing property,” says Forbes.

That happened in Germany after World War I. The victorious nations demanded that Germany pay for the cost of the war. So, Germany just printed more bills. That created massive inflation. That inflation helped elect Hitler.

Governments rarely resist the temptation to print more currency.

During the Great Depression, Franklin Roosevelt confiscated private supplies of gold.

Without a clear legal peg of each dollar to a specific amount of gold, the government could print more currency. That only added to the financial instability.

After World War II, governments returned to gold-based currency. “Those two decades,” says Lewis, “were the most successful economically of any time.”

The documentary argues that a return to the gold standard is what’s needed to have reliable money.

Today, most economists disagree.

But “In Money We Trust?” will give you a new appreciation for how important it is that we get this right.

As technologist George Gilder concludes in the documentary, “All this is the struggle for trust.”

John Stossel is author of “No They Can’t! Why Government Fails — But Individuals Succeed.” For other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit www.creators.com.

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16 Comments
Jack Lovett
Jack Lovett
May 22, 2019 2:22 pm

Its true, In money we trust.Gold/Silver being real money. The joo created paper fiat is garbage. Exists as long the public trusts it. The 12 joo families that own the “fed” are criminals of the worse sort. Thanks to them the “dollar” has lost 97% of its value since its inception in 1913. The suppression of real money is on its last legs.

Fourth Reich Of The Rich
Fourth Reich Of The Rich
May 22, 2019 2:33 pm

The reason it say’s “In God We Trust.” is because it is the money ITSELF that is that god. Find another currency that has reference to the respective nations god or religion on it. Does the Yuan or Remimni say “In Budda we trust”? And no other currency either. This government is not a Christian government and neither are it’s people. Just look at how they both behave. You shall know them by their fruits. It’s people imitate their governments immorality. Adolf Hitler said this was proof the government was successful is when it’s people adopt the same immoral standards out of fear of it’s government. America is the Fourth Reich. It has successfully copied a combination of Nazism coupled with 1984, dollar worship, and corporate fascism.

Justice And Gold
Justice And Gold
  Fourth Reich Of The Rich
May 22, 2019 4:05 pm

Actually, the 5th plank of communism is where the whole currency debauchery comes from. I don’t think America is the 4th Reich and it hasn’t successfully copied Nazis. It HAS successfully copied at least 7 planks of the communist manifesto. The U.S. is closer to the old USSR than “nazism”.

5. Centralization of credit in the hands of the state, by means of a national bank with State capital and an exclusive monopoly.

People don’t “imitate their governments immorality” with respect to currency debauchery. It is that currency debauchery is a root cause of immorality because it creates artificial destruction of purchasing power and that leads far more people and businesses into economic and other “cheating” than they otherwise would have (lie about weights and measures, for just one example, with undisclosed fillers – fraud….or drug dealing in ‘da hoodz…).

Bad currency (a promise to pay/work) drives out good money (work completed/finished products) AND good behavior.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
  Fourth Reich Of The Rich
May 22, 2019 4:17 pm

comment image

Augee
Augee
May 22, 2019 4:32 pm

John forgot to mention how after FDR enforced theft of his countrymen’s gold, pegged at $20/oz., he turned around and revalued it at $35/oz.

Many in the ‘greatest generation’ revered him and his policies, believing he shepherded the nation out of the great depression, and thru WW2.

They fell prey to propaganda and lies, as have other generations, before and after.

I’ll stick with pre-1965 silver coinage.

Saxons Wrath
Saxons Wrath
  Augee
May 22, 2019 11:41 pm

King Roosevelt, doing the work and bidding of his ((( masters))). Know your enemies. (((They))) are many and subtle, the steel fist in the velvet glove. Look no further than Trump today, and see how “Javanka” have him eating from (((their))) hand. But the Deep State are also controlling Trump thru various methods, for the same (((masters))). Don’t trust the (((Fed))). Trust God, gold, silver, and lead. In that order.

John galt
John galt
  Augee
May 23, 2019 7:57 am

Junk silver is us minted coinage and not gold. It will always remain legal currency whereas gold may not.

StackingStock
StackingStock
May 22, 2019 4:37 pm

Federal Reserve note

Money is debt

Carry on and arm up

wholy1
wholy1
May 22, 2019 4:50 pm

“FRNs” are NOT “money”. They are [filthy lucre] CURRENCY – [UNsecured] promissory NOTES for the transfer of DEBT. In the end, who/what REMAINS the OWNER of said “notes” – the “author”/issuer, the PRIVATELY-held [NOT]Federal[NO]Reserve. And . . . they remain “current” only in so long as a “counter-party” is available/willing to accept them for something of [possible] real/tangible value. Oh, BTW – “bonds” will eventually be “worth” even less!

BB
BB
  wholy1
May 22, 2019 6:22 pm

I fear God is getting ready to take it all away in or with judgement. I have said before no nation on the face earth has been so blessed but now we mock God ,sin and evil.During the next collapse we will find out the gods of this nation .

Name
Name
May 22, 2019 7:16 pm

Even a currency pegged to chick peas has real world value. Fiat currency is literally “monopoly money”.

Paul
Paul
May 22, 2019 9:42 pm

Here’s a Tennessee bible believing christian pastor that trust in god.
Tennessee Pastor who repeatedly raped daughter, 14, gets light sentence because Jesus

The wonder Of it all
The wonder Of it all
May 22, 2019 11:17 pm

Only in a government collapse will gold and other precious metals /things become acceptable currency. Fiat collapsing will reign in the necessity for more worthless and super controllable digital currency. No need for paper symbols – just tap on your phone – and hope it is working that day.

Anonymous
Anonymous
May 23, 2019 5:19 am

Love ya, George, but PBS pushing trust is not the number one issue with US legal tender – trust is a lagging indicator! THE REAL ANSWERS: Get rid of the FED – free market interest rates, tie US ‘legal tender’ back to the gold standard and BALANCE THE BUDGET (reduce size of government)! I’d add to my Christmas List to UNWIND the oppressive socilaist control over US markets and shrink all government and eliminate income tax.
Oh, what a wonderful world it would be!

John galt
John galt
May 23, 2019 7:53 am

When too many people fear a fake dollar and start hoarding gold as a capital preservation method they will simply make gold illegal again and then your hoard is worthless because nobody will want illegal contraband. Only wealthy people will accept your gold because they have other methods, currency, to live off while many they trade with don’t. The poor with small amounts of gold will be getting a discount when bartering their gold with the wealthy because there is a fair amount of risk associated with holding the gold. The wealthy the. Have enough wealth to wait it out until gold becomes legal again. The rich stay richer each generation this way…it will be best if you can do the same and know your hoard of gold is not for your use but a store of generational wealth for your grandkids….

James the Deplorable Wanderer
James the Deplorable Wanderer
May 23, 2019 10:48 am

[ Imagine if that floated each day. That would make life chaotic.”]
But it does. It floats against all the other fiat currencies (FX), and against gold (manipulated, true, but it floats) and against real assets. Those who only trade in dollars just don’t see it – until they go to the grocery store.