Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Liberty Dollar Founder Convicted in Federal Court

By Chris Powell
Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee
Saturday, March 19, 2011

http://gata.org/node/9717

Here's hoping that yesterday's conviction of Liberty Dollar founder Bernard von NotHaus in federal court in North Carolina won't discourage the advocates of free markets in gold and silver and competitive currencies.

Those objectives were advanced by Liberty Dollar's seeking to put precious metal back into the hands of the people and back into circulation as currency. But the details of von NotHaus' conviction, as cited in the statement issued by the U.S. attorney for the Western District of North Carolina, Anne Tompkins, suggest that Liberty Dollar pursued those objectives in the wrong way -- a way the government was able to construe as more or less counterfeiting.

That is, Liberty Dollar's coins "were marked with the dollar sign, the words 'dollar,' 'USA,' 'Liberty,' 'Trust in God' (instead of 'In God We Trust'), and other features associated with legitimate U.S. coinage."

Of course the suggestion of counterfeiting was always a little silly, insofar as Liberty Dollar's coins were precious metal and general-circulation U.S. currency coins have all been base metal since 1965. How can a supposed counterfeit be worth more than a legitimate original? It's doubtful that any user of a Liberty Dollar coin was ever really confused about the difference.

But Liberty Dollar also was part of an organization that aimed to repeal the Federal Reserve System and thus was more easily construed as subversion. Certainly the Liberty Dollar operation was politically subversive, and the government seems to have gone nearly berserk about it precisely because of its politics.

"Attempts to undermine the legitimate currency of this country are simply a unique form of domestic terrorism," U.S. Attorney Tompkins said. "While these forms of anti-government activities do not involve violence, they are every bit as insidious and represent a clear and present danger to the economic stability of this country. ... We are determined to meet these threats through infiltration, disruption, and dismantling of organizations which seek to challenge the legitimacy of our democratic form of government."

Undermining the legitimate currency of this country? Representing a clear and present danger to the country's economic stability?

Does the U.S. attorney mean undermining the currency that has lost something like 98 percent of its value since the enactment in 1913 of the Federal Reserve System about which the Liberty Dollar operation complained? Does the U.S. attorney mean a danger to the economic stability of the country that has been using that ever-devaluing currency, the country that has experienced only booms and busts and even a couple of depressions under the reign of the Federal Reserve? And by "democratic form of government," does the U.S. attorney mean the Federal Reserve System that, in secret, rigs markets and bestows virtually infinite patronage on the large banking houses that have been looting the country?

If undermining that currency and the economic stability of the country that uses it is really a crime, and if damaging democracy is really a crime, why haven't a few Fed chairmen been prosecuted?

As for the nececessity for the government to infiltrate organizations that might challenge the currency system, the Liberty Dollar enterprise functioned entirely in the open. It operated an Internet site and distributed press releases. Unlike the government, it wasn't in the business of keeping secrets. It seems to have been quite candid about what it was doing.

Nevertheless, Liberty Dollar probably was mistaken, legally and tactically, in its minting format, its using devices that could liken its coins to government coins. If the Liberty Dollar coins didn't use those devices, if Liberty Dollar had distinguished its coins by weight of metal rather than any dollar value and had imprinted on them some legend explicitly distinguishing them from government coins, the case might have ended differently -- or well might not have been prosecuted at all.

In any event the Liberty Dollar case was more a political case than a case of counterfeiting, fraud, or deceit. Indeed, the country probably has gained more from it -- gained some understanding of the currency system -- than the country has lost from the circulation of some precious metal coinage. U.S. District Court Judge Richard Voorhees should take this into account when sentencing von NotHaus.

Today's story in the Asheville Citizen-Times about the conviction of von NotHaus is here. And some sardonic commentary about his conviction can be found at Zero Hedge.

Chris Powell is the Secretary/Treasurer and Director for Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee. Reprinted with permission.

For further reading:
"A ‘Unique’ Form of ‘Terrorism’", The New York Sun, March 20, 2011
"Liberty to Mint Your Own Coins? These Guys Did Not Read the Constitution", Damien Hoffman, March 20 2011
"Using Gold As Money Is Terrorism: U.S. Attorney Tompkins", Walt Thiessen, March 19, 2011
"Local Liberty Dollar 'architect' Bernard von NotHaus convicted", Tom Lovett, March 19, 2011
"Liberty Dollar Founder Reportedly Found Guilty", Brian Doherty, reason, March 18, 2011
"Defendant Convicted of Minting His Own Currency", Department of Justice Press Release, March 18, 2011
"Give me liberty or give me jail", David Forbes, February 3, 2010

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Gold, the States, and Federal Monetary Policy

By Ralph Benko
American Principles Project
Friday, February 18, 2011

http://www.cnbc.com/id/41665142

Why are so many state legislators beginning to call for issuance of a form of gold money?

The Constitution prohibits states from coining money but allows them make “gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts….” By prohibiting everything except “gold and silver Coin” the Constitution clearly contemplates this as legitimate.

Legislators in a dozen states are looking at legislation about gold or silver-based currency, including, right now, Utah, South Carolina, Virginia and New Hampshire. States haven’t issued money for over a hundred years. So … why now? There is disgust by state legislators with the federal government’s promiscuously printing money. This reflects the views of those who wrote and adopted the United States Constitution.

The transcript of the debates in the original Constitutional Convention shows the attitude of the Founders toward paper money was one of disgust. In debate one delegate, Roger Sherman, called for the insertion of an absolute prohibition against states issuing their own paper money.

Mr. Wilson and Mr. Sherman moved to insert after the words 'coin money' the words 'nor emit bills of credit, nor make any thing but gold and silver coin a tender in payment of debts' making these prohibitions absolute…

Mr. Sherman thought this a "favourable" crisis for crushing paper money.

The Founders voted to adopt Sherman’s “crushing” of state-based paper money.

As for the federal government, the original draft of the Constitution included language permitting the federal government to issue unbacked paper money. The Founders objected strongly to this power. The objections were summed up by delegate Oliver Ellsworth:

Mr. Elsesworth thought this a favorable moment to shut and bar the door against paper money. The mischiefs of the various experiments which had been made, were now fresh in the public mind and had excited the disgust of all the respectable part of America. By withholding the power from the new Government more friends of influence would be gained to it than by almost any thing else. Paper money can in no case be necessary. Give the Government credit, and other resources will offer. The power may do harm, never good.

Those who wrote the Constitution decisively stripped the federal government of the power to issue inconvertible paper money. And stripped it stayed… until, temporarily, during the Civil War. Saving the Union was of transcendent importance. A strong constitutional argument exists for the legitimacy of paper money as an expedient. But it set a bad precedent.

For most of American history dollars were convertible into gold or sometimes silver. It is a 20th century innovation to have inconvertible money. FDR suspended domestic convertibility. And then… Richard Nixon’s 1971 suspension of the convertibility of the dollar into gold put the final nail into the dollar’s coffin. President Nixon announced this as a temporary suspension.

Read the rest of the article.

Ralph Benko, a member of the bar of the State of New York, is Senior Advisor, Economics, of the American Principles Project, and was called by the United States Department of the Treasury to testify before the U.S. Gold Commission on the constitutional history of American monetary policy.

For further reading:
"A Comeback for Gold-Backed Money?", Andrey Dashkov, Casey Research, March 11, 2011
"Utah Signals Dollar Distress", Rich Danker, Forbes, March 11, 2011
"Utah lawmakers recognize gold as legal tender", Bob Unruh, March 10, 2011
"Phases of Secret Gold Policy", Dimitri Speck, March 1, 2011
"Gold and Money", Warren C. Gibson, The Freeman, March 2011
"What is a Gold Dollar?", Ralph J. Benko, February 17, 2011
"Not Just Another Article Espousing The Gold Standard", Bill Flax, Forbes, February 3, 2011
"The State Electronic Gold Currency Plan", Edwin Vieira, Jr., April 20, 2005

Saturday, March 5, 2011

Anonymous Money Needs an Anonymous Exchange

By Doctor Nefario
Bitcoin Weekly
Monday,

One of the choke points in the bitcoin economy is the exchange market. Prior to bitcoin's increase in popularity, to get a hold of some, you could mine, run the bitcoin program and generate some coins. Due to the influx of new people to the economy and technological improvement, mining difficulty has risen to a point that even my own dual core machine would take two years to generate 50 bitcoin. To a large extent, this is the result of miners moving to high powered graphics cards, GPUs which are much more efficient than regular CPUs. However the number of "professional" for-profit miners has increased significantly as the exchange value of bitcoins has risen.

Now, unless you're ready to fork out thousands building a custom made mining rig, your only option to get a hold of some sweet BTC is to buy it or trade for it. As a result, the function played in the economy of the exchanges is crucial. Almost everything coming into the economy or leaving it, must go through the exchanges. Before the exchanges were formalised, bitcoin traders were often known to each other, friends you could say, and would trade bitcoins for cash as described in the diagram below.
picture one
This is how things worked in the early days, where friends with a dollar could buy BTC10,000. Sadly, or happily those days have gone, now you no longer need to know someone in the know or someone who's got BTC to sell. Now there is a place, where all may freely gather and do their dirty bitcoin business. These are the exchanges, and you can see how they work, below.
page2
You can clearly see that nowadays people go to the exchange if the want to swap their precious bitcoins for paper money. The way it usually works is the exchange has a bank account that cash can be transferred into. When you transfer your cash to the exchange, they add it to your account. You can now swap your paper notes (or the numbers representing them) for bitcoins and vice versa. When you're all done and you want out, the exchange will transfer your cash to your own bank account. This process happens for everyone that uses the exchange: it looks something like the diagram below. There are some other combinations of this method using Linden Reserve (as bitcoin-central does), however this is essentially the same as Linden Reserve's bank account is replacing that of the exchange owners. It is for all intents and purposes the same.

page3
That peachy coloured blob with "exchange" written in it represent the exchange owner's bank account. With cash being transferred in and out from other users, and bitcoins being sent in or out (although the bitcoins don't go to the bank account), again by other exchange users. Everything hinges around that one bank account; without it, the whole exchange and all its users cannot conduct their trade.
page4
This system is by far the easiest to set up and operate, however there are a number of issues with operating an exchange out of your personal bank account. The main one being that in many (if not most) countries it is illegal: there are countless rules, requirements and regulations to operating a money exchange. With the exceptions of the few bitcoin exchanges that are setting up in a legitimate manner this leaves the exchanges vulnerable to being shut down: their centralised nature with many users with funds in the account and using it. The effect of a shutdown would be a heavy blow to the bitcoin community, not to mention the users directly affected by the loss of their funds. If one of the major exchanges such as MTGOX or Bitcoin-Central or a number of others were to be shut down colossal damage would be done. It might not cause the price of bitcoins to collapse (after recently hitting parity with the dollar) but it would certainly cause a significant drop.

If the exchanges are the lifeblood of the bitcoin economy, then running them out of personal bank accounts is like living life with a razor blade to your throat, all it takes is a little slip or nick and the damage is done.

A solution is needed to avoid a blood letting - one approach is to take the legitimizing route. Register a business, follow all the laws, rules and regulations required to operate this business. It's a good approach and it says a lot about the efforts of members of the bitcoin community who are doing this. There is another way.

Anonymous exchanges.
With the above model, the identity of anyone who uses the exchange can easily be discovered. It's in the exchanges records, and if you've had money transferred in or out it's in the banks records. For certain the identity of the exchange owner/operator is easily known, they're the person who owns the bank account!

Because it is such an easy target and the effect of shutting down an exchange is multiplied by its popularity, the real danger is not to the customer, but to the exchange. It's the exchange that gets targeted - it's the exchange that gets shut down. Yes, the users who have cash in the exchange lose that, but they lose it because it's the exchange that law enforcement goes after, not the exchange users. So it is clear from looking at this situation that it is the exchange that needs protection; it is the exchange that needs anonymity from its users (after all, if the users don't know who the exchange is, then who does?).

What I am going to describe is a method, a protocol that would allow an exchange, that is trusted by its users and customers to run its operations in total secrecy and anonymity.

The cutout
We need to look to the world of espionage for the piece that will allow us to do this and that is the cutout. In order for our exchange to do business with his customers while keeping his identity secret, he needs a cutout.

This can be provided to us in the form of a bank account provided by the customer. These days account owners can both deposit and withdraw funds to their account using an ATM's automatic deposits and withdrawals. Removing the need for the account owner to actually go in person to a bank branch to make cash deposits or withdrawals. This is a key component to our scheme. It should be noted that the customer would open an account specifically for this, and nothing else.

Cards
To use a bank account as a cutout, the customer sends a copy of their ATM card to the exchange (obviously a middle man would need to be used to accomplish this). Once the exchange has the ATM card, the customer can now send money to the exchange. All that needs to be done is deposit the money to the account. Inform the exchange of the deposit and the PIN number for the withdrawal and the exchange operator can then withdraw cash from the account. This would be kept by the exchange operator, who would add the amount to the customers exchange account. The customer can now buy bitcoin. Once the customer wants to cash out they simply inform the exchange operator. He will then, using the ATM card deposit cash into the cutoff account, allowing the customer to withdraw at will (they should do this immediately). The diagram below describes this process.
pic
If we include our trusted third party (trusted by the exchange operator), the above diagram would look like this.
middleman
Once the cutout account is set up, the process of depositing or withdrawing funds from the exchange would be secure, convenient, and even faster than using normal banking transfer methods, but most importantly it would protect the exchange and its operators. The above process could scale to many accounts, possibly hundreds, as not all customers would be depositing or withdrawing funds every day.
many
If the exchange was successful enough the operator would have to employ runners, trusted people to go to ATMs and make numerous withdrawals or deposits. He could have a clearing period, that is at the end of each trading day (say 5pm) the runners would go to different ATMs and make deposits and withdrawals in bulk. It would not be until after the end of the next trading day that cash deposits or withdrawals would be settled.

What of the risk of the exchange being shut down? As long as the middleman, the trusted third party that the exchange operator uses to receive the customers ATM card when their account is opened, does not reveal or does not know the identity of the operator, all is well. The greatest risk then is for the owner of the account, should the authorities attempt to shut down the exchange, they would only be able to target single accounts, which in many cases would be difficult, if not impossible. In the event of a single account being shut down, only that account owner is affected, with the rest of the exchange users remaining unharmed.
groups
Operating issues
There are some issues and details that need to be discussed to ensure the safe operation of the exchange.
  • When depositing or withdrawing from ATMs, the runners/operators face must be concealed as they have cameras;
  • The ATMs used must constantly be changed, they must essentially be random otherwise the operators can be caught;
  • This is for in-country only, running this service across an international border is very likely to get the account shutdown;
  • The exchange operator must be highly reputed and trusted;
  • The exchange operator must be able to find either a highly-trusted third person or one they can remain anonymous to.
Reprinted with permission.

For further reading:
"The system is not inherently illegal", The Times of India, February 20, 2011
"1849: From Gold To Bits - Part 1, GPUs", Dingus, Bitcoin Weekly, February 11, 2011

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Vietnam Central Bank Set to Outlaw Gold Bullion Trading

By Ben Bland
Financial Times, London
Monday, February 28, 2011

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/667412aa-4352-11e0-aef2-00144feabdc0.html

The desire among many Vietnamese to keep gold as a store of value is both a cause and a symptom of the fast-growing nation's economic trouble.

Now the government has said it will ban the trading of gold bars in the "free market" as part of a package of measures designed to rein in soaring prices and tackle deep-seated economic imbalances. But it has befuddled investors and ordinary people alike.

Buffeted by persistent inflation and weakness in their currency, many Vietnamese prefer to save in gold and dollars. Their fondness for gold, which is often used to settle property deals and other large transactions, and for dollars puts further downward pressure on their currency, the dong, in a negative feedback loop from which it is hard to escape.

Vietnam's central bank said on Friday that to prevent speculation and market manipulation, the government would issue a decree in the second quarter of this year banning the free-market gold trade and thereby preventing cross-border smuggling. But, given the government's tendency to issue decrees and circulars by the truckload, gold traders and economists say the real impact of this latest pronouncement will be determined by officials' actions rather than words.

Read the rest of the article.

For further reading:
"Vietnam Central Bank Proposes Banning Gold Bullion Trading", The Wall Street Journal, February 28, 2011
"Vietnam eyes ban on unofficial gold bullion trade", AsiaOne, February 28, 2011