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Re: Not. [Was Re: Federal Reserve Bank is ILLEGAL?]
At 11:57 PM 11/11/96 -0500, Michael Froomkin - U.Miami School of Law wrote:
>On Tue, 12 Nov 1996, Doug Renner wrote:
>
>> article nearly head-on. However is it true that what you are saying is
>> that two fundamental premises in the article you refer to as "rabid" are
>> incorrect? Namely:
>>
>> "ARTICLE 1, SECTION 8 OF THE CONSTITUTION STATES THAT CONGRESS SHALL HAVE
>> THE POWER TO COIN (CREATE) MONEY AND REGULATE THE VALUE THEREOF.
>
>The above is a true statement. Note however that "congress" cannot
>operate the mint. It must -- **MUST** -- delegate this duty to the
>executive branch (or someone outside the legislative branch, cf. Chadha
>v. U.S.) if it wants it done. Congress is free to select the type
>of agent it wants to do this. Indeed, if Congress chose to license
>private mints, that would, IMHO be legal. The point here is that the
>states don't have the power to coin money.
But, apparently, during the 1800's states (?) and individual banks did
indeed print their own currency.
The way I see it, a positive statement in the Constitution that the Feds
have the power to coin money does not necessarily exclude other
people/banks/states/foreign countries from doing likewise.
Jim Bell
[email protected]