DGC » Gold Confiscation http://www.dgcmagazine.com — Covering digital currencies, precious metals and online payments Tue, 17 Sep 2013 23:30:47 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.5.1 Mining.com: A History of Gold Confiscation the Infographic http://www.dgcmagazine.com/mining-com-a-history-of-gold-confiscation-the-infographic/ http://www.dgcmagazine.com/mining-com-a-history-of-gold-confiscation-the-infographic/#comments Sun, 10 Mar 2013 03:53:15 +0000 Julia Dixon http://www.dgcmagazine.com/?p=1226 A brief history of gold confiscation that “might make gold investors sweat” in one infographic…

history-of-gold-confiscation-609.jpg.pagespeed.ic.IwbXe3j7Zi

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Bits and Pieces 30thOct12 http://www.dgcmagazine.com/bits-and-pieces-30thoct12/ http://www.dgcmagazine.com/bits-and-pieces-30thoct12/#comments Mon, 29 Oct 2012 21:48:57 +0000 Julia Dixon http://www.dgcmagazine.com/?p=596 Continue reading ]]> Bitcoin makes some TV appearances, drama over German gold, talk of European bonds “part-backed by gold”, a report on mobile payments in developing countries, AML enforcement and more.

Bitcoin makes an appearance on the National Geographic Channel. http://channel.nationalgeographic.com/channel/videos/bitcoin-the-new-way-to-pay/

SilkRoad and Bitcoin make an appearance on Australian TV. http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=youtu.be&hl=en&v=hmiBzvW4P40&gl=US

 

Last week a German court ordered the German central bank to audit its sovereign gold holdings, which includes its gold stored with the Fed in NY. http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2012-10-22/german-court-demands-bundesbank-audit-sovereign-gold-holdings

Then there were reports that in 2001 the German central bank “decided to voluntarily pull two thirds of its gold holdings held by the Bank of England.” http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2012-10-24/why-did-bundesbank-secretly-withdraw-two-thirds-its-london-gold

 

Report – 90% of consumers in developing countries interested in using mobile payments

“The study has also found that consumers’ needs for financial services in developing countries are far more sophisticated than previously believed and go well beyond the established transaction set offered by mobile money services today.”

http://www.thepaypers.com/news/mobile-payments/90-of-consumers-in-developing-countries-interested-in-using-mobile-payments-services-report/748985-16

 

There has been talk in Europe of handling debt issues by issuing new bonds “part-backed by gold” particularly in the case of Portugal and Italy has these countries have relatively large gold reserves. However, there are some legal issue as gold reserves are owned by the central banks, not the government. The two below links from The World Gold Council and BullionVault discuss these issues. http://www.gold.org/government_affairs/new_financial_architecture/gold_and_the_eurozone_crisis/

http://goldnews.bullionvault.com/gold-bonds-eurozone-102420122

 

Dwolla updated it’s iPhone app with “the added ability to view and pay money requests.” http://www.mybanktracker.com/news/2012/10/23/dwolla-mobile-option-pay-money-requests/

 

Financial Institutions: How Much More Will You Have to Spend on Anti-Money Laundering Programs to Avoid Criminal Prosecution?

“This June, the Justice Department brought criminal cases against a number of check-cashing businesses and their owners for failing to implement effective AML programs – remarkable because they are among the first BSA prosecutions brought against non-bank financial institutions and individual owners.”

http://www.forbes.com/sites/insider/2012/10/24/financial-institutions-how-much-more-will-you-have-to-spend-on-anti-money-laundering-programs-to-avoid-criminal-prosecution/

 

An interesting piece from MoneyMorning Australia on Why a Return to the Gold Standard Could Actually Be Bad

“History tells you that governments will always try to fiddle with the money supply in order to pay for votes and wars… In order to fiddle with the money supply, the government needs control over the money supply. Most importantly it needs legal tender laws. Legal tender laws create a money monopoly that makes it illegal for people and businesses to transact in a competing currency.”

“Bottom line: if the US government could easily confiscate gold while most of the population still had a concept of sound money, don’t you think it will be much easier when 99% of the population has no concept of sound money? … And because returning to a gold standard would involve devaluing the currency … governments would only do this after it has confiscated private gold.”

They also  note that due to  “Part IV of the Banking Act 1959” gold confiscation is a possibility in Australia “when the Governor-General says so.” http://www.moneymorning.com.au/20121025/why-a-return-to-the-gold-standard-could-actually-be-bad.html

 

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Jon Matonis: Bitcoin Prevents Monetary Tyranny http://www.dgcmagazine.com/jon-matonis-bitcoin-prevents-monetary-tyranny/ http://www.dgcmagazine.com/jon-matonis-bitcoin-prevents-monetary-tyranny/#comments Fri, 05 Oct 2012 08:00:54 +0000 Julia Dixon http://www.dgcmagazine.com/?p=434 Continue reading ]]> Bitcoin is not about making rapid global transactions with little or no fee. Bitcoin is about preventing monetary tyranny. That is its raison d’être.

Monetary tyranny can take many ugly forms. It can be deliberate inflation, persecutory capital controls, prearranged defaults within the banking cartel, or even worse, blatant sovereign confiscation. Sadly, those threats are a potential in almost any jurisdiction in the world today. The United States does not have a monopoly on monetary repression and monetary tyranny.

Once the State is removed from the monetary sphere and loses the ability to define legal tender, its power becomes relegated to direct legislative and enforcement measures that do not immorally manipulate a currency. Taxes for wars and domestic misadventures will have to be raised the old-fashioned way — that is to say government money cannot be raised by simply debasing the currency.

Just as the Second Amendment in the United States, at its core, remains the final right of a free people to prevent their ultimate political repression, a powerful instrument is needed to prevent a corresponding repression — State monetary supremacy. That task has fallen to an unlikely open source project that is based on cryptography protocols and peer-to-peer distributed computing. As the mechanism for a decentralized, nonpolitical unit of account, the Bitcoin project uniquely facilitates this protection.

The timing of Bitcoin’s appearance, and subsequent growth, is no accident either. If one follows the relevant sentiments and trends, it’s evident that society was approaching a breaking point. Essentially, bitcoin is a reaction to three separate and ongoing developments: centralized monetary authority, diminishing financial privacy, and the entrenched legacy financial infrastructure. An alternative money provider that was centralized would probably not survive long in any jurisdiction. The emergence of Bitcoin was baked into the cake already.

We can see from the case against digital money provider e-gold that an efficient challenger to the provision of a stable monetary unit will not be permitted… really. In 1996, a humble oncologist named Doug Jackson bravely built an auditable and verifiable system of transferring ownership rights to gold and silver bullion in an online digital environment. Wired’s Kim Zetter described it this way:

E-gold is a privately issued digital currency backed by real gold and silver stored in banks in Europe and Dubai. Jackson says about 1,000 new e-gold accounts are opened daily, and the system processes between 50,000 and 100,000 transactions a day.

With a value independent of any national legal tender, the electronic cash has cultivated a libertarian image over the years, while drawing the ire of law enforcement agencies who frequently condemn it publicly as an anonymous, untraceable criminal haven, inaccessible to police scrutiny.

Where have we heard that before? Then in December 2005, the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation and Secret Service raided e-gold’s Florida offices. Jackson tells Wired, “They basically raped our computers and also took us offline for 36 hours, took all the paper out of our office.” Jackson says that the government also froze parent company Gold and Silver Reserve’s U.S. bank account but the company survived, “only because its euro, pound and yen accounts are maintained outside the United States.” The physical bullion assets were subsequently seized as well.

With the prosecution resting on a civil complaint charging Gold and Silver Reserve, Inc. with operating as an unlicensed money-transmitting business, Jackson finally acquiesced in July 2008 and plead guilty to conspiracy to commit money laundering (a victimless crime) and operation of an unlicensed money transmitting business rather than the alternative threat of 20 years in jail and a half million dollar fine.

Wired magazine, in June 2009, published this excellent account of the e-gold business in the wake of the federal investigation entitled “Bullion and Bandits: The Improbable Rise and Fall of E-Gold”. Also included in the article is probably the most telling photo of all — Doug Jackson sitting on the floor surrounded by file boxes labeled U.S. Secret Service.

Zetter writes, “At e-gold’s peak, the currency would be backed by 3.8 metric tons of gold, valued at more than $85 million.” E-gold founder Doug Jackson wanted to solve the world’s economic woes, “but instead got an electronic ankle bracelet for his trouble.”

Recently, in 2009, Bernard von NotHaus was indicted on counterfeiting charges for manufacturing a private metallic coin that actually contained some precious metals. After 23 years of research and development plus 11 years of operating in the marketplace, Liberty Dollar suspended operations. Following the conviction and for the appeal, the prominent Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee filed an amicus curiae brief in support of acquittal and revolving around the question of whether anyone but the government has the right to issue money. Afterwards, many commentators pointed out the absurdity of penalizing honest money to strengthen the facade of manipulated money.

Further contributing to the disturbing trend against monetary freedom and financial privacy are initiatives like the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FACTA), which has been written about many times on these pages and also in The New York Times. Other countries around the world would not even contemplate such a brazen endeavor that imposes a costly withholding and disclosure regime on sovereign foreign entities and financial assets. Furthermore, they see it as American arrogance and American hegemony run amok.

However, society will not be ready to fully embrace the promises of decentralized nonpolitical currency until it can come to terms with the fact that money in a free society should not be used for the purposes of identity and asset tracking. Banks and governments may be concerned with that goal, but it is not the role of our money.

http://www.forbes.com/sites/jonmatonis/2012/10/04/bitcoin-prevents-monetary-tyranny/

 

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Capital Controls: IEEPA, Gold and Argentina http://www.dgcmagazine.com/capital-controls-ieepa-gold-and-argentina/ http://www.dgcmagazine.com/capital-controls-ieepa-gold-and-argentina/#comments Fri, 28 Sep 2012 09:28:33 +0000 Julia Dixon http://www.dgcmagazine.com/?p=362 Continue reading ]]>  


Video Link

Bad economic times and capital controls go hand in hand. In 1933 FDR used Executive Order 6102 to confiscate US citizen’s gold as mentioned in the above video. The International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), means the same thing could happen again today.

Extreme capital controls aren’t just a possibility, they are a reality in a many parts of the world, particularly Argentina.

Earlier this year, in an attempt to keep money in Argentina, the tax authority, AFIP introduced a 15 percent tax surcharge every time a purchase is made outside the country using a credit card, and restricted access to foreign currencies.

This post from Anglo Far East provides more details on the new capital controls.

Interestingly, the Argentine government considers gold to be a foreign currency  and will only allow it’s purchase if an Argentine citizen is traveling to a country that uses gold as legal tender.

If you can read Spanish, here is a local news story on the gold sale ban. Or (if you trust Microsoft Translator) you can read it in English here.

 

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