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Archive for July 20th, 2010

Some good people in Michigan have said the hell with Federal Reserve notes and have begun using alternatives, including—gasp!—gold and silver coins. At the end of the newscast, the reporter says that yes, gold and silver coins may actually be used for buying things. Then viewers are invited to answer the question: “Would you consider using precious metals as currency?” How quickly Americans have forgotten that until not long ago, gold and silver coins—along with Treasury notes backed by gold and silver—were the only currencies considered lawful!

New types of money are popping up across Mid-Michigan and supporters say, it’s not counterfeit, but rather a competing currency.

Right now, you can buy a meal or visit a chiropractor without using actual U.S. legal tender.

They sound like real money and look like real money. But you can’t take them to the bank because they’re not made at a government mint. They’re made at private mints.

“I sell three or four every single day and then I get one or two back a week,” said Dave Gillie, owner of Gillies Coney Island Restaurant in Genesee Township.

Gillie also accepts silver, gold, copper and other precious metals to pay for food.

He says, if he wanted to, he could accept marbles.

“Do people have to accept dollars or money? No, they don’t,” Gillie said. “They can accept anything they want or they can refuse to accept anything.”

He’s absolutely right.

Read more at ConnectMichigan.com.

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News flash to the residents of Bell: There is an economic war being waged by the public sector against the private sector. They are seizing your wealth and assets. You in the private sector, doing real work and producing real goods and services, are merely “blood bags,” allowed to work and live for the sole purpose of feeding the parasites.

This is not hyperbole.

Congratulations for having the guts to stand up to them.

Hundreds of residents of one of the poorest municipalities in Los Angeles County shouted in protest last night as tensions rose over a report that the city’s manager earns an annual salary of almost $800,000.

An overflow crowd packed a City Council meeting in Bell, a mostly Hispanic city of 38,000 about 10 miles (16 kilometers) southeast of Los Angeles, to call for the resignation of Mayor Oscar Hernandez and other city officials. Residents left standing outside the chamber banged on the doors and shouted “fuera,” or “get out” in Spanish.

It was the first council meeting since the Los Angeles Times reported July 15 that Chief Administrative Officer Robert Rizzo earns $787,637 — with annual 12 percent raises — and that Bell pays its police chief $457,000, more than Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck makes in a city of 3.8 million people. Bell council members earn almost $100,000 for part-time work.

City Attorney Edward Lee said the council members couldn’t discuss salaries in public without advance notice. The council then adjourned for a private session. About an hour later, the council members returned, and Hernandez read a statement saying the city would prepare a report on the salaries and seek public comment at the next council meeting, scheduled for Aug. 16.

Read more at Bloomberg.com.

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