KaskadskyjKozak Posted November 20, 2006 Posted November 20, 2006 but ...look what we get in 2016! Quote
Dechristo Posted November 20, 2006 Posted November 20, 2006 (Wiki)"The roots and development of the Thaler-sized silver coin date back to the mid-1400s. As the fifteenth century drew to a close the state of much of Europe's coinage was quite poor because of repeated debasement induced by the costs of continual warfare, and by the incessant centuries-long loss of silver and gold in indirect one-sided trades importing spices and porcelain and silk and other fine cloths and exotic goods from India, Indonesia and the Far East. This continual debasement had reached a point that silver content in coins had dropped, in some cases, to less than five percent, making the coins of much less individual value than they had in the beginning." Quote
Jim Posted November 20, 2006 Posted November 20, 2006 Oh...I thought we were going to counter with Reagan's image. Quote
KaskadskyjKozak Posted November 20, 2006 Author Posted November 20, 2006 Oh...I thought we were going to counter with Reagan's image. Â You'll get Reagan and Clinton eventually... Â I think Nixon is the one that will cause some people the most conniptions though. Quote
archenemy Posted November 20, 2006 Posted November 20, 2006 Canada has a lot of worthless shit. Quote
KaskadskyjKozak Posted November 20, 2006 Author Posted November 20, 2006 Canada has a lot of worthless shit. Quote
chris Posted November 20, 2006 Posted November 20, 2006 The U.S. Treasury also could save billions from a switch because coins last 30 to 40 years in circulation compared to about 18 months for paper currency. A number of other countries, such as the United Kingdom, use coins exclusively for their single-unit currencies. How ironic - the public getting upset for the government actually doing something rational. Fact is, Americans perceive paper bills to be more practical (ignoring the cost of production and distribution), so until the $1 bill is eliminated, we'll never have a succesful $1 coin. And our politicians can't even have enough spine to push that through. Personally I've spent a lot of time in Canada, New Zealand, and Australia, all of whom have $1 and $2 coins (not bills). It wasn't a problem. Quote
archenemy Posted November 20, 2006 Posted November 20, 2006 the travesty of it all. Â Â Â Â this is the lamest argument that rears its head every few years. They keep making dollar coins. People keep not using them. Over and over. Lame. Quote
Dechristo Posted November 20, 2006 Posted November 20, 2006 are you implying our government's not in mint condition? Quote
AlpineK Posted November 20, 2006 Posted November 20, 2006 I thought the Canadian dollar coins were just fine. We have no reason not to switch. Once and a while those Canadians are on to something Quote
chris Posted November 20, 2006 Posted November 20, 2006 are you implying our government's not in mint condition? Its a little tarnished. Quote
archenemy Posted November 20, 2006 Posted November 20, 2006 I thought the Canadian dollar coins were just fine. We have no reason not to switch. Once and a while those Canadians are on to something Yeah, but I sure wish you'd stop trying to use them here. It's embarrassing. Quote
KaskadskyjKozak Posted November 20, 2006 Author Posted November 20, 2006 are you implying our government's not in mint condition? Its a little tarnished. Â That's what Bubba said, and asked to get it buffed... Quote
fenderfour Posted November 20, 2006 Posted November 20, 2006 We need a nickname for our new dollar coin - I nominate "Douchebags". Â "Sacajawea" was a bit long, and "Gold coin" was a little ostentatious. Quote
archenemy Posted November 20, 2006 Posted November 20, 2006 I like Douchebags as a possible name. Butt, what about Enemas? Then, you can say "Blow it out yer ass" when someone asks too high of a price on something. Plus, DeChristo would probably like that better. Quote
Dechristo Posted November 20, 2006 Posted November 20, 2006 Y-y-y-yeh-yeh-yeh-yesss. Â I'd like that b-b-b-buh-buh-buh-but-butt-butter. Quote
foraker Posted November 21, 2006 Posted November 21, 2006 How ironic - the public getting upset for the government actually doing something rational. Â Kind of like that whole metric system thing President Carter tried to introduce us to way back in the day. You know your country is in trouble when it's citizens can't handle multiplying and dividing by ten. Speaking of money, when are we going to stop having dull, fugly money? Quote
archenemy Posted November 21, 2006 Posted November 21, 2006 We'll have to change that "In God We Trust" bit though. Quote
tvashtarkatena Posted November 21, 2006 Posted November 21, 2006 How about "God rides a long board"? Quote
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