Or maybe what he and others did is deceive folk out of their gold who mistakenly believed themselves to be "citizens of the United States" (colloquial misapplication vs. strict legal meaning) when they were, say, private citizens of New York.
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Or maybe what he and others did is deceive folk out of their gold who mistakenly believed themselves to be "citizens of the United States" (colloquial misapplication vs. strict legal meaning) when they were, say, private citizens of New York.
I like the way you think mikecz.
Treasury Seal
The Treasury Seal bears the date 1789, the year of the Department's creation. The balance scales represent justice; the key, an emblem of official authority; and the chevron with 13 stars, the 13 original states. On Federal Reserve notes the seal is overprinted in green.
Federal Reserve District Seal
The Federal Reserve District seal also bears the name of the issuing Federal Reserve Bank and the letter designating that Federal Reserve district.
A: Boston B: New York C: Philadelphia D: Cleveland
E: Richmond F: Atlanta G: Chicago H: St. Louis
I: Minneapolis J: Kansas City K: Dallas L: San Francisco
Like they say "Whats in your wallet."
Pick one:
Attachment 1091Attachment 1092
I am just using the Silver as a example....
and then you mentioned nixon : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z6NfXk7Bvc8
You know ....
... one may wish to stay away from US stamped gold and silver coin and either deal in rounds or foreign gold and silver coin.
US gold and silver coins are legal tender. Its stamp value is what's considered.
As far as government and the courts are concerned, there is no difference between a $50 gold buffalo coin and a $50 bill.
In fact, you may want to avoid "dollars" and dollar values all together ....