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Informative information and resources on silver bank deposit

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silver-bank Informative information and resources on silver bank deposit

When you look for more information about silver bank deposit, take time in reading the notes below. It will give you a new side to the details of silver bank deposit that you need.

Why did Andrew Jackson distrust the Second Bank of the United States?
One of the reasons Andrew Jackson distrusted the Second Bank of the United States was because he believed: silver bank deposit a) it was run by the wealthy to seek their self-interest b) it did not have enough influence in the economy c) it was unconstitutional for the bank to accept federal deposits d) the economy would improve as more gold and silver were mined e) economic stability could be created by establishing “wildcat” banks
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Royal Sovereign Products - Royal Sovereign - Portable Bill Counter, 600 Bills/Min., 7.5
Currency reform: issue of legal tender Treasury notes, elastic currency, guaranteeing bank deposits, emergency currency, restoration of silver 16 to 1, illegal coinage
H. R. 12677. Report of the Committee on banking and currency on a bill to establish a simple and scientific monetary system, founded upon gold, guaranteed bank notes, and silver, with uniform banking and bank reserves in gold coin or its equivalent; to guarantee all deposits and note issues, and to fix certain rules and regulations whereby the financial operations of the government shall cease to be a disturbing factor in our trade and commerce ..
silver bank deposit


silver-bank Informative information and resources on silver bank deposit

{ 19 comments }

Gregory F. December 5, 2010 at 10:16 pm

Your CV is quite impressive but one minor mistake you have done is that, you have mentioned your additional experience before work experience, the reason is when employer look for CV they just check qualification, additional qualification then work experience, other thing are just plus.

roguelebeaux003 December 6, 2010 at 10:22 am

No, I’d say it’s because most currencies in the world are paper or coins, not precious metals. And I think banks prefer it if you give them real money.

postal p December 6, 2010 at 10:25 pm

You may consider buying a home safe. It will be cheaper than a safe deposit box in the long run.

Rudolf da reindeer December 7, 2010 at 10:16 am

im not even doing my own homework, y would i do urs?

Scott H December 7, 2010 at 10:19 pm

1) a. & b. but only in “right to work states”2) a.3) b.4) b.5) b.you wrote “5″ twice5) a.6) b.7) a.8) a.9) b.

Laureneliz December 8, 2010 at 10:10 am

23. B24. A25. C26. B27. D28. D29. D30. B

Anonymous December 8, 2010 at 10:02 pm

TRY DIRECTMERCHANTSBANK.COM OR GMFLEXCARD.COM OR WELLSFARGO.COMNO ANNUAL FEE, NO PROCESSING FEE AND NO SECURITY DEPOSIT.YOU WANT TO STAY AWAY FROM ALL OF THAT.IF YOU DON’T HAVE ANY CREDIT THOSE CREDIT CARD WOULD HELP YOU TO BUILD YOUR CREDIT. GOOD LUCK!!!

Roger December 9, 2010 at 10:40 am

Tell me again… why are we doing your homework?

leedleleedlelee December 9, 2010 at 10:31 pm

well, thanks for thati think now i just have guilt for today because i didn’t make yesterday all it could beit would be nice to always these thoughts at forefront of your mind, but everyday worries often overcome, ask the day laborer to make the most out of everyday, everyday grinding in the hot sun, with worrying how to feed the family, whether the car will continue to drive, whether the electricity will remain on, will he ever be able to afford college for his children, how will he afford health care for his family if anything happenssorry I’m a little pessimistic today

MelissaMae123 December 10, 2010 at 10:19 am

1. not sure2.a3.a4.e

cactusgene December 10, 2010 at 10:24 pm

1. An account that doubled from 20,000 to 40,000 PHP is a pretty good deal, because it grow at an annual rate of 14.9%, compounded annually. In a US savings deposit account you would currently get no more than perhaps 2.5% annually. 15% per year is a fantastic growth, unless your rate of inflation is more than 10% per year.2. If you invest it in silver, you speculate on the future value of that precious metal. In 5 years it might double in value (unlikely in my opinion) or it could just as easy be only worth only half as much as today. Those gold and silver investment commercials on TV sound great, but it is a fact that silver is worth less than half of what of what it sold for at its high point in 1980. That’s 30 years ago and we have seen a lot of inflation since, which is not accounted for here.3. My recommendation is to leave it where it is now and let it mature.

Third P December 11, 2010 at 10:15 am

Very worthy of reading. It is a food for my thought. I appreciate it and really make each day a good life with a purpose.Thanks for sharing. Have a good day!

DGS December 11, 2010 at 10:22 pm

A is correct. He was a populist and didn’t trust the aristocratic elite.

alcan52 December 12, 2010 at 9:57 am

Those silver certificates were not redeemable in silver. The Treasury reneged on converting paper for gold or silver on 8/15/1971. Paper is redeemable in paper only. Paper is worthless. For each $20 silver note you could only trade it for 1 $20 Federal Reserve Note. This is exactly why Ron Paul has introduced a bill in Congress to have competing currencies as we used to and to legalize in statute law the Constitution and allow gold and silver to be used as money. If you want real money then you must acquire it on your own and buy physical metals and store them yourself. This is exactly what I do. Had those certificates been converted 40 years ago then they would be worth alot today in physical metal. This is the reason why 3 US dimes in 1964 would buy you 1.25 gal of gas. Today those same 3 silver US 1964 dime will buy you the same 1.25 gal of gas. It only takes more paper to buy the gas. The dimes didn’t go up in value the paper went down in value requiring more of it to buy the same goods and services.Additional Response. Do you understand that you were not ripped off in any way. The notes you deposited were worth no more then the face value. They were not silver, could not be converted into silver at that time and cant be converted into silver today and therefore not worth any more then the $20 printed upon them. The bank did nothing wrong. FDIC insurance only covers your deposit in Federal Reserve Notes if the bank is taken over by the FDIC. The bank has to be declared insolvent in order for FDIC to kick in. The bank did nothing wrong and the deposit was not worth 1 penny more then face value. It was never worth any more then face value. Clearly you are not much wiser due to hindsight. Otherwise you would not be assuming that they were worth any more then face value. I suggest you read history, mainly Ron Paul’s book The Case For Gold. The book is from his first term in Congress. It was the congressional report he wrote while he sat on the Gold Commission. In it he explains all about the different bank notes and the history behind it. Your addition details response shows just how ignorant and uneducated you really are. Just because you dont like an answer given doent mean you have the right to attack those that attempted to give you a response. Grow up!!!

Judy December 12, 2010 at 10:48 pm

You are more protected than 99.9% of the people out there.Good girl!

majoramy_carter December 13, 2010 at 10:49 am

When you deposit cash… your cash goes into the teller’s drawer, along with everybody else’s cash. The computer keeps tabs on how much you deposited. But your original cash is NOT what you withdraw, it will not be the same cash. It will be whatever the teller has in his/her window at the time. Say you deposit 100.00 worth of 2 dollar bills. When you go to withdraw it, the teller won’t know it was 2 dollar bills you deposited. If you want to keep what you deposited (say gold/silver coins)… either invest into a gold marketing thing like the person above mentioned, or get a SAFETY DEPOSIT box. What you put in there is yours, it stays in that box until you take it out. You could keep it in there for years until price of gold goes up. However, safety deposit boxes typically have yearly fees involved.

imaxkr December 13, 2010 at 10:03 pm

Yet he turned 180 after he became Fed chairman. His monetary policies at the fed were quite opposite from his earlier stances and a lot of the blame for the current economic conditions falls squarely at his feet.

Ryan Brown December 14, 2010 at 10:26 am

HAHAHA You are one funny old dude I’d like to see more stuff like this.

raff rawrr(: December 14, 2010 at 10:18 pm

ah :) thanks :)

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