I am reposting a response I made in another thread and expanding it. People don't appreciate what it would mean to "go to a gold standard" per H.R.2435. The idea is that it doesn't matter how much money there is, they can set the ratio of gold to dollar at whatever they want. "However much there is in present day dollars. It doesn't matter."
That's the first problem, so let's look at that:
How Much Is Gold Worth
According to the official narrative, there are about 8,133 metric tons of gold in U.S. reserves. I doubt that is true, I think it has been mostly moved into private bankers hands, but we'll go with it. There are 32,150 troy oz. per metric ton. That means there are, in reserve:
8133 metric tons times 32150 troy oz/metric ton ~ 261 million troy oz.
As for the total money that exists, the official number (not that I trust it, but we'll go with it) is between 40 trillion (narrow money), 90 trillion (broad money) or 1.3 quadrillion (derivatives, investments, etc.). With the amount of naked short selling, I wouldn't be surprised if you could double or triple that, so upwards of 4 quadrillion.
Putting this into perspective, we get one U.S. gold backed dollar is equal to:
- narrow money: 6.5e-6 oz
- broad money: 2.91e-6 oz
- derivatives: 2.01e-7 oz
- short sales: 6.5e-8 oz
These numbers don't mean much, so let me try to put it into something that makes a little more sense. Here is a picture of 1g of gold. It's not the best picture since it doesn't show the whole hand, but it shows that it isn't very much. Carrying that around, it would be pretty darn easy to lose it. But let me give you an idea of what one U.S. gold backed dollar would look like:
- narrow money: 1/5000 of a gram
- broad money: 1/11,000 of a gram
- derivatives: 1/160,000 of a gram
- short sales: 1/500,000 of a gram
Even with narrow money, think about dividing that gram picture into 5000 parts, then try to find it in your pocket. With short sales, divide it into half a million parts. It's almost easier to start measuring dollars in atoms of gold.
That 1g sells for about $130. This suggests it should be worth between $5000 and $500,000 if we were to move to a "gold standard" as things stand today.
For reference, that translates to between $150,000 and $15,000,000 per troy oz in today's money.
Now on to the next problem. The dollars that exist aren't money, they are debt. If we go to a "gold standard" there will still be all the debt, and the interest on that debt, that belongs to Megabank. If we move to a "gold standard," all that debt either needs to be paid off, or needs to be wiped out. But where does all the money reside?
Where's The Money
If we just look at narrow money (bank accounts, bank notes, etc.) that's the stuff that people have "on hand" (not really, because it's mostly in the fractional reserve shenanigans, but close enough). But who has the most money in bank accounts? According to this, the median bank account in America (in 2019) was about $5000, and the average was $42,000. That is a HUGE discrepancy, which means that the people with all the money have far more than the average person. The people with all the money are, in general, the Aristocracy AKA the Cabal. If we use the median this amounts to about $1.7 trillion (5000 times 330M people in America). Most of the rest of that $40T of narrow money lies in the hands of the very rich.
However, if we look at derivatives (not to mention naked short selling money) ALL of that money is in the hands of Megacorp.
So no matter how you divide it, as things stand today, the gold goes into the hands of the same people that rule the world right now.
Paying Off The Debt
If we don't wipe out all debt, then all those debts need to be paid off. But money is debt. Money comes to be when a debt is created. That's what "printing" money means. A loan is taken out, in one column a credit is given. This is money. In the other column a debt is created.
Money = Debt
BUT, that's not what really happens. A debt is paid back at interest.
Money + Interest = Debt
So all the DEBT in the world is equal to all the money PLUS all of the interest it has accrued, i.e. there is more debt than there is money. The debt can't be paid off. So all of that gold will eventually end up in the hands of the PTB, PLUS we will remain debt slaves forever.
With the current financial system, no matter how you slice it, all the power remains exactly where it is if we move into a "gold standard."
The system must fail. There is no other choice.
It's a bit of a contrivance, and I don't think it's in any way necessary, but it seems a reasonable "legal" path out.
The other path is to simply declare war on the BIS and say Fuck You.
Personally, I prefer the second. Neither help with the fact that a "gold standard" can't work by itself. The Cabal already owns all the gold and the money that would be turned into gold. Any single "currency," especially gold, is doomed to lead right back to the same problem.
And the Federal Reserve itself isn't a contrivance? It's an Act of Congress that can be repealed.
BIS is a contrivance. I agree. Fuck 'em.
The US Constitution solves this debt cycle. Is that "legal" enough?
Ownership of anything is only enforce-able in law. The "Cabal" you say - yeah, them and what army?
The "Cabal" doesn't exist when/if US government crawls back their dough and disposes the Cabal of their wealth using EO 13848.
Why do you suppose Trump says we'll all be happy?
We just need to get Trump back in to pull the trigger on EO 13848
You can't really get rid of The Fed because it is a Sovereign by treaty (as an Agent of the BIS). You can cancel your contract with it, but you can't get rid of it, nor can you erase the debt, unless you declare war, one Sovereign entity onto another.
The only path the US Constitution has within it to solve this problem is a declaration of war.
"Law" has nothing to do with ownership. It has everything to do with the Illusion of ownership. See my other post in this thread on "law" (just do a search for Natural Law).
Underestimate their power at your peril. Technically they control the U.S. Army through the United Nations. Of course enforcing that law (Treaty) might be problematic, but by law the United Nations controls all armies of every country that is a signatory to that treaty, including the United States.
Plus, they have all sorts of tech we have no fucking clue about. Personally, I think they have already been completely wiped out, and everything we see is just a movie, even if not all the actors realize who the director is.
The path to a successful future relies on us recognizing our own empowerment. WE must be the solution. I mean, "the military is the only way," but I'm fairly certain the military already did their thing, behind the scenes, to lead to us saving ourselves. We must recognize that we don't need someone to save us, or we will follow the savior. That is not the path to a future of actual liberty.
The only reason that a president of the US hasn't ended the Fed is that it gets them shot. It happened to JFK (bankers and CIA). It also happened to Reagan, but he was too tough to die. Trump has mentioned it, and there have been multiple assassination attempts against him.
No, that is not the only reason. Yes, we can end our contract with them. That is totally within the current powers of the US Govt. That doesn't negate our debt to them (legal obligation). To do that we have to declare war. We can just straight up go to war with them, no contract cancelling necessary. That is also in the powers of the US Govt. We cannot "end the Fed" without going to war because we have a Treaty with the BIS that declares that all agents of the BIS are Sovereign (read the link in the post you are responding to).
JFK tried to decouple the Treasury from the Fed. That may have been why he was shot, or it may have been because he threatened the C_A and fired Allen Dulles. But his silver certificate US dollar stuff would NOT have ended the Fed. It could have potentially led to that (by declaration of war, if people saw the fraud), but probably not. It just threw a wrench into their plans. It wouldn't have accomplished much except delay the inevitable.