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Re: Inflation-index bonds and private e-currency
Toto wrote:
> Gary Howland wrote:
> > But digital currencies will never become fiat currencies, let alone legal
> > tender, unless governments say they are. So why should they worry? (OK, OK,
> > they will worry about tax evasion etc. etc.)
> Exactly. How can they claim, on one hand, that something does not
> qualify as currency, or as legal tender, and then turn around and tax
> it? If I have 10 Million UNITS that aren't considered to legally be of
> value, then I'm certainly not going to 'go easy' to tax court.
> Any currency that becomes sufficiently distributed and traded will
> find itself becoming a 'legal entity' in some form or another. Once it
> has been 'entityenized' (don't bother looking for that word in the
> dictionary), it will be a short step for it to achieve a quantifiable
> status among other currencies. [snip]
One should always look at the Mike Milken example of an alternate
currency. This has not been reported from this point of view in, say,
the NY Times that I know of, but some "underground" publications have
done so.
The Wall Street Cabal (as they say) was genuinely frightened that since
Milken was so successful with high-yield bonds, they deliberately created
the term Junk Bonds and flooded the markets with appropriate propaganda,
and thereby killed off their competition. How they turned it into a
criminal offense is truly an art.