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7/19/2025, 5:27:03 PM
>>510806312
>How did silver and gasoline work in boomer days? I vaguely remember boomer working an hour for a silver dollar and buying gas for a dime a gallon. How does it figure today? (I think oil is cheap in silver and gold and wages lower)
It's actually pretty interesting because nothing has changed except the number of units of account. The weight of silver still trades for the same volume of oil most of the time. Because of technological efficiencies created since the 70s, the ability chemically to extract more gasoline from a single gallon of oil has increased quite a bit conversely, however extraction of that same gallon of oil has become more energy expensive. Simultaneously, the silver extraction has become more abundant in locations and means, but the ratio of silver harvested is decreasing. There's fluctuations in both industries, yet both industries complement and symbioticly stimulate and / or complicate each other. As the resources become more difficult to obtain, the technology must adapt and overcome the hurdles.
Looking beyond the physical and tangible restrictions and advances to the regulatory one's is where you will see how the majority of disparities occur, as the unit of account is purely a means of controlling productivity and belief in order to placate and nuter the populace into systems of managed chaos. If you look at the website wtfhappenedin1971.com this isn't only about closing the gold window as silver had been removed from circulation 6 years prior, but also a doubling down by the "rule makers" to detach the population from tangible things of utility (noble metals, constitutional money) It's really no surprise to me how Trump just hand waves how the treasury will no longer produce pennies. As 1982 was the removal of copper.
All the physical metals that promoted health simply by handling them in circulation have been unavailable to the masses for over 40 years now, and we wonder why we're getting sicker and sicker.
>How did silver and gasoline work in boomer days? I vaguely remember boomer working an hour for a silver dollar and buying gas for a dime a gallon. How does it figure today? (I think oil is cheap in silver and gold and wages lower)
It's actually pretty interesting because nothing has changed except the number of units of account. The weight of silver still trades for the same volume of oil most of the time. Because of technological efficiencies created since the 70s, the ability chemically to extract more gasoline from a single gallon of oil has increased quite a bit conversely, however extraction of that same gallon of oil has become more energy expensive. Simultaneously, the silver extraction has become more abundant in locations and means, but the ratio of silver harvested is decreasing. There's fluctuations in both industries, yet both industries complement and symbioticly stimulate and / or complicate each other. As the resources become more difficult to obtain, the technology must adapt and overcome the hurdles.
Looking beyond the physical and tangible restrictions and advances to the regulatory one's is where you will see how the majority of disparities occur, as the unit of account is purely a means of controlling productivity and belief in order to placate and nuter the populace into systems of managed chaos. If you look at the website wtfhappenedin1971.com this isn't only about closing the gold window as silver had been removed from circulation 6 years prior, but also a doubling down by the "rule makers" to detach the population from tangible things of utility (noble metals, constitutional money) It's really no surprise to me how Trump just hand waves how the treasury will no longer produce pennies. As 1982 was the removal of copper.
All the physical metals that promoted health simply by handling them in circulation have been unavailable to the masses for over 40 years now, and we wonder why we're getting sicker and sicker.
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