You really need to read what I wrote, not a few things here and there. Private ownership of gold was abolished in 1933, not the gold standard.
A gold standard means that the money is convertible from cash into gold. If you are not allowed to own gold, how are you supposed to convert your cash into it? Yes, this is a pretty strict definition of the term, but you said "If I recall correctly, gold wasn't taken out of our system until 1933...", which is what I was referring to.
Tying the dollar to gold wasn't abolished, as I noted earlier (though I was off by two years) by the
Nixon Administration in 1971. Private gold owndership was reauthorized during the 1980s with the advent of Gold Eagles.
And the 1980's had only one recession, not till 1991.
You were arguing with my claim that we didn't have a 100% reserve gold standard. Just proving that there was some loose connection between the dollar and gold does not prove me wrong in saying we did not have a 100% gold reserve. The post you were responding to whas this:
You are claiming that libertarianism was tried in 1929? You mean the Fed was abolished, and we had a 100% reserve gold standard? I didn't know that!
Within that context, what I said was relevant and true.
Where in what I posted did I ever say that gold was the problem or that getting rid of it should have solved your phantom problem?
I was merely noting that gold was still a part of circulated currency until 1933 - four years after the Crash and that the U.S. maintained the Gold Standard until 1973 (actually 1971 as I corrected immediately above).
You were arguing with my sarcastic admission that we had a 100% gold reserve in 1929. If all you are asserting is that we were still on a gold standard, though greatly weakened by fractional reserve banking and the Federal Reserve, you are arguing entirley beside the point.
There's a great deal of bandwidth and ink used by some Conservatives and all Libertarians to make the point that the New Deal didn't end the Great Depression, it actually exacerbated it. The only consensus opinion I've seen on that opinion is amongst some Conservatives and all Libertarians. I haven't read much of their writings,
Then do so. I strongly recommend it.
but IIRC, most seem to ignore the Dust Bowl and Prohibition which occured during that time... well, that and how the world economy was in the absolute crapper, and that Japan's agression began in 1933 with the invasion of Manchuria, etc. etc.
Those can have a strong effect. But the Dust Bowl was caused, in part, by a government program to have people settle in and farm areas of the country that were not suitable for it, or only appeared suitable because of unusually wet weather for a couple of years. And of course, you can't blame Libertarian policies for the effects of wars, or Prohibition.
It's also interesting to hear these same Conservatives and Libertarians claiming that the New Deal was a total failure because the U.S. didn't come out of the Great Depression until... wait for it.. the massive governmental spending during WW II.
They do not say WWII ended the Great Depression. Many of them say that it continued through the war, and ended only once the war ended. The war itself took politicians' minds off trying to regulate the economy, and the optimism and soldiers coming home to get to work helped to rebuild. I know of one who said that the war didn't end the Depression, just covered it with a high fever.
Oh bravo. Great example of what I mentioned at the top of the post. You're so myopically focused on target you missed the fact that I specifically used words that have meanings you're not arguing against. And no thanks for the history of
Recessions since I've lived through a number of them so I didn't need your link or list to be aware of them. I specifically used the words
Panic* and
Depression since I was referring to specifically... Panics and Depressions which occured about every ten years from the founding of the Union, but occured only once since the establishment of the Fed.
What we are experiencing now isn't a panic? The Dow just dropped another 300 points. It has lost half of its value in the last couple of months. We have a Federal Reserve now. Why isn;t it preventing a crisis? Why didn;t it prevent the one in 1929?
Since you failed at making the case that economic libertarianism has never been implimented, especially in banking, in the U.S.
How have I failed to prove that? I have listed one government intervention into the markets after another, ad infinitum. The Federal Reserve, the GSE's, "Open Space" laws (though I didn't mention that in this thread), HUD, the CRA, thousands of pages of new regulations added to the Federal Register. How is that failing to prove that libertarianism was never implemented? What libertarian has argued for those measures. In fact, name me a libertarian that has not argued for their repeal! That is what libertarianism is all about, repealing all those government interventions in the market. None of them has been repealed. All there is that can be presented contrary to all this is one regulation repealed that kept two sectors of the banking industry separate. One little, obscure regulation removed, against all I have named.
...the rest of your comments are based on a false premise and therefore aren't worthy of consideration.
What false premise?