The Flaws of Gold
During my time of escape from the rat race, the discovery of the ills of inflation, and the moral hazard it plays on the back of my fellow man, I was struggling to find hope for a solution outside of politics.
For a long time I hedged myself with physical gold, advocated for a return of gold as primary settlement and monetary reserve asset on central bank balance sheets. I thought if they just allowed the free floating price of gold to balance the books we could right this ship.
Reading the words of Another, an anonymous dude posting on the blog section of usgold.com back in 1997-1998, opened my eyes to the connection between oil and gold and the backroom dealings that were going on.
It made me believe a great reset was just around the corner, which it is.
Gold would be free from suppression and once again show its true colors as the best money in the world, the ultimate store of value. I had the simple view that gold is money and everything else is credit — paraphrasing JP Morgan.
What I never really understood was that the problem of trust, portability, security, transparency, and truthful accounting that lead to the inevitable corruption of gold as money in the first place, hindered its return.
It took some time before I realized the futility of managing a return to a gold backed currency, even with a free floating gold price.
The fiat system was partially held together by managing a discounted price of gold so that major oil trading partners could reinvest some of their petrodollars into real money while they officially held dollars and treasuries in their reserves.