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by tdees40
4147 days ago
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I think a dinosaur lives in the subways under Manhattan. I would be convinced otherwise only by a full audit of all subway tunnels conducted using a dinosaur scanner (which someone will need to invent). But seriously, there are lots of things that are hard to prove wrong, but that's hardly a good reason to believe them. In your case, what motive would the Fed have? Has an employee of the Fed (or any other central bank) ever blown the whistle on this massive international conspiracy? If there's no good reason to think something, there really isn't much good reason to spend time proving it wrong. |
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The Federal Reserve is also intimately bound up in fractionally reserved expansion of the paper currency, so it is reasonable to assume that they might use the same basic technique with gold. And that, in fact, is the historical origin of banking, in the modern, leveraged sense: gold assayers began loaning out gold on a fractionally reserved basis, allowing them to collect interest beyond their core assets. Worked great until people ran on them.
So I assert that it is less irrational to believe that there is a possibility that central banks engage in manipulation of gold prices than it is to believe that there is a dinosaur living in the subway under manhattan.
YMMV.