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| Argentina's Economic Tragedy: Lesson for U.S. | | Print | |
| Written by Charles Scaliger | ||||||||
| Tuesday, 07 September 2010 06:45 | ||||||||
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South America’s second-largest country in many ways resembles our own. Like the United States, Argentina lies mostly outside the climatic extremes of the tropics and the polar regions. Blessed with a varied topography, Argentina has robust natural resources and world-class agriculture. Like the United States, Argentina is a melting pot for immigrant peoples as diverse as Boers, English, Italians, and Basques, in addition to Hispanics. Argentines are among the world’s most patriotic people and her culture among the most vital in Latin America. With a solid work ethic, top-notch educational standards, and a modern professional class, Argentina is a far cry from the “banana republics” and cocaine fiefdoms so typical of large swaths of Latin America. Photo: Buenos Aires Trackback(0)
Comments (4)
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Restorationary
said:
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Who's behind this It is not an accident or coincidence that these things are happening in the United States and around the world. There is a unifying force behind it. Unions, socialists/communists, all have a vested interest in the collapse of the world economic system. restorationary.wordpress.com |
T. Dan Tolleson
said:
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We CAN emerge from bankruptcy . . . a second time! We CAN emerge from bankruptcy . . . a second time! During the War for American Independence, the paper currency printed by the Continental Congress of the Articles of Confederation was inflated by more than 5,000 percent! As a result, most Americans quickly became destitute and survived, if they could, mainly by bartering goods and services. So when the Founding Fathers gathered in Philadelphia to write the new Constitution, they decided to put a stop to inflation. Instead of compromising by, for example, trying to lower the inflation rate by 50 percent to a mere 2,500 percent, the Founding Fathers ELIMINATED inflation by giving Congress the enumerated power to “COIN money” – not to print money – and in 1792, Congress ordered the U.S. Mint to coin the first American silver dollars. With this new, uninflatable currency, our country was soon enjoying the greatest prosperity the world had ever seen. We’ve done it once before – let’s develop the necessary backbone and then take the necessary steps to do it again! All we have to do is elect public servants who will abolish the Federal Reserve and re-establish uninflatable, constitutional money! |
Jim
said:
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... Ditto concerning Dan Tolleson's comment. The Mint Act of April 2, 1792, established the weights and measures for our system of coinage and, to my knowledge, has never been repealed. The Founding Fathers never wanted those who came after them to experience the hyper-inflation they endured and the worthlessness of their paper money during Revolutionary War times. They also wanted future generations to have real wealth in the form of money of intrinsic value, i.e., gold and silver. Since the last vestiges of silver coinage was done away with in the 1960s we have had nothing but runaway inflation because the dollar is no longer tied to anything of intrinsic value. Federal reserve notes are not constitutionally required money; they are counterfeit for all intents and purposes. The people no longer have any store house of wealth; just worthless paper money that keeps losing value through inflation which is the cruelest tax of all. |
Jess Smith
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... Technically our currant situation would be our fourth bankruptcy as a nation I believe. Other than that small fact, I totally agree with the rest of your comments. |





For a peek at where debt-ridden America may be headed, look no further than modern-day Argentina.

