Friday, November 4, 2011

UK Metal Detectors Continue to Disprove Ex Nihilo Government Currency Issuance

Amateur detectors in the UK continue to build the archaeological record that proves empirically that governments do not "get the money from the taxpayers" and that monetarily sovereign governments do not have to first acquire state currency through taxes to be able to spend.

This group in the UK has again found what is probably just a small portion of a much larger find of Roman coins in a farm field last month. If they can get some better equipment, they will most likely find a very large jar filled with Roman currency at a deeper level. The coins in this jar will be the empirical record of balances either in a Roman Treasury account or an account of the savings of a Roman era non-government entity.

It is a shame that our moron economic policy makers cannot understand the mathematical aspects of this archaeological record that is being uncovered right before our eyes. Morons: Where did the Roman treasury officials 'get these coins'? Did they just magically appear in the pouches of peasants in Brittannia so they could pay their taxes FIRST? Or do you think human beings struck them from metal slugs on order from the Roman government in order for the Roman government to spend them to provision itself? ... You morons!

The group even made a video of the discovery and retrieval of one of the coins you can see below. I hand it to these tenacious and patient folks in the UK who go out and do this, here's wishing that policy makers are given the eyes and a brain to be able to see and understand how a state currency system operates , a part of an ancient one which we are witnessing being uncovered in this video.



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