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27th September 07, 02:58 AM
#31
Originally Posted by Archangel
We will be absorbed into the US Borg and, no offense, I don't want that.
You mean "We will be absorbed into the US Borg and, no offence, I don't want that."
The Borg is already on the move, it seems!
[B][COLOR="DarkGreen"]John Hart[/COLOR]
Owner/Kiltmaker - Keltoi
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27th September 07, 06:56 AM
#32
I thought (obviously erroneously) that NAFTA was supposed to make these tariffs and duties obsolete.
NAFTA did little more than send a lot of jobs south. I live in an area where factories, textile mills, etc are shutting down all the time. What was once a highly prosperous industry is now dead.
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27th September 07, 08:30 PM
#33
Originally Posted by slohairt
You mean "We will be absorbed into the US Borg and, no offence, I don't want that."
The Borg is already on the move, it seems!
...and the weasels are using Firefox spellcheck to do it.
Caught me.
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27th September 07, 10:55 PM
#34
That's okay. It is annoying when we (the non-American world) spell things correctly only to be told it's not!
[B][COLOR="DarkGreen"]John Hart[/COLOR]
Owner/Kiltmaker - Keltoi
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27th September 07, 11:24 PM
#35
Originally Posted by Thebes
When I grew up, near Detroit, some of the larger stores kept Canadian money under the drawer. Lots of Canadians would come over for cheap cigarettes, and other items which were taxes more heavily in Windsor. I don't know if any still do though, even then it varied place to place.
Personally, I'd welcome just about anything over the USD right now. Its really tanked in the past few years, and now with "Helicopter Ben" at the Fed....... I'm a bit worried the only kilts I'll be able to afford in the future will be sold in pesos or something.
Originally Posted by katmills2005
NAFTA did little more than send a lot of jobs south. I live in an area where factories, textile mills, etc are shutting down all the time. What was once a highly prosperous industry is now dead.
This is why I'm in favour of some sort of standard for the USD (like the gold standard). I'd prefer my money's value to not be dependant on the government's say-so. I seem to recall something like that happening in Germany in the 1920's…
Originally Posted by slohairt
That's okay. It is annoying when we (the non-American world) spell things correctly only to be told it's not!
In fact, I prefer the non-American way of spelling (favour, apologise, etc.)
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29th September 07, 08:30 AM
#36
Originally Posted by Archangel
...and the weasels are using Firefox spellcheck to do it.
You can download the Canadian English dictionary for Firefox to fix that problem.
Originally Posted by Coemgen
This is why I'm in favour of some sort of standard for the USD (like the gold standard). I'd prefer my money's value to not be dependant on the government's say-so. I seem to recall something like that happening in Germany in the 1920's…
Well, all currency is based on a standard - the Special Drawing Rights. Paper gold, it's called. Kind of complicated, but currencies are pegged to the value of the SDR, which is determined by the values of major currencies, weighted by importance.
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1st October 07, 01:10 PM
#37
Originally Posted by Coemgen
This is why I'm in favour of some sort of standard for the USD (like the gold standard). I'd prefer my money's value to not be dependant on the government's say-so. I seem to recall something like that happening in Germany in the 1920's…
I completely agree. It causes me a great deal of concern that, basically, the only thing holding up the US Dollar is debt. And now, with the discontinuation of the M3 monetary index, subsequent "injections" of fait money, and the so-called "credit crunch", it seems to me money is being too rapidly created. This devalues the already existing dollars, as we see in the USD vs Loony or Euro.
Oh, and I trust the IMF even less than the Federal Reserve. Nor do I trust "paper gold", from what I've read a large number of gold leases are not backed by actual metal in a vault, but rather the oweing of such metal.
Sometimes I think the whole house of cards is on the way down.
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1st October 07, 01:46 PM
#38
Originally Posted by Colin
Good Luck trying to buy a book or magazine in the store though Most places haven't adjusted the rate in years. The last book I bought (2 weeks ago) was still way cheaper in US funds despite that we were at $.97 to the US $1.00 that week.
It's a bloody gauge I tell ya!!!
Just pay for your books in U.S. dollars. That would shock the sellers! Truthfully I don't often buy books in book stores anyway. I can find most books I need online for a fraction of the price.
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1st October 07, 03:48 PM
#39
Originally Posted by Thebes
I completely agree. It causes me a great deal of concern that, basically, the only thing holding up the US Dollar is debt. And now, with the discontinuation of the M3 monetary index, subsequent "injections" of fait money, and the so-called "credit crunch", it seems to me money is being too rapidly created. This devalues the already existing dollars, as we see in the USD vs Loony or Euro.
Oh, and I trust the IMF even less than the Federal Reserve. Nor do I trust "paper gold", from what I've read a large number of gold leases are not backed by actual metal in a vault, but rather the oweing of such metal.
Sometimes I think the whole house of cards is on the way down.
Indeed. Curse you, John Maynard Keynes!
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1st October 07, 04:09 PM
#40
Why is it I get the feeling this tread will end badly?
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