Sound Money Makes For Short Wars
World War III Began With The Demise Of The Gold Standard One of the longest and most stable monetary regimes from the Early Modern Era
World War III Began With The Demise Of The Gold Standard One of the longest and most stable monetary regimes from the Early Modern Era
Guest post from John Rubino originally posted on his Substack: Today’s hot inflation number might force the Fed to tighten until it breaks something. And if past
Guest post by Charles Hugh Smith from his blog Oftwominds.org: One of the great fictions about money is that it is neutral. It isn’t. It’s
Guest post by John Hussman from Hussman Funds: One can go some distance in a mine field without anything blowing up – it’s just that
Guest post by Michael Pento from his blog on Pento Portfolio Strategies: Those investors who are hanging on to the hopes of an imminent Powell
Guest post by Simon Black from Sovereign Man: At precisely 8:13PM eastern time on the evening of October 28, 2003, a lonely 19-year old schoolboy
Guest post by Rudolph Kohn from the Mises Institute: Mises describes five characteristics that are vital to the function of money: marketability, durability, fungibility, trustworthiness, and convenience. The history of
Guest post by Frank Shostak from the Mises Institute: The heart of economic growth is an expanding subsistence fund, or the pool of real savings.
Guest post by George Ford Smith from the Mises Institute: This will be brief, appropriate to the topic at hand. It consists of a quote
Guest Post by Matthew Piepenburg from Gold Switzerland: If you want to understand modern CBDC, it may be worth considering the context of history, the
Guest Post by Nick Hubble form Fortune and Freedom: My fellow sceptics of government interference in our lives are up in arms about central bank
Guest post by George Ford Smith from the Mises Wire: Commentaries about World War I frequently discuss causes and consequences but almost never mention the
Guest Post by Matthew Piepenburg from his blog on GoldSwitzerland.com: From Main Street USA to the village corners and central banks of Europe, Japan and
This is a quick and easy read on what “sound money” is. And how the devaluation of currency has led to tyranny and ruin. Repost
Originally posted by Jesse Felder on the thefelderreport.com: Many investors like to use price-to-earnings ratios as a short-hand valuation tool for both individual equities and
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