To coin Money, regulate the Value thereof, and of foreign Coin, and fix the Standard of Weights and Measures;
Fiat currency is not money. It's an IOU.
lol, again, fiat currency is no more or less money or an IOU than a gold coin. What do you do with fiat currency? You trade it for something else. What do you do with a gold coin? Unless you're going to melt it into jewelry or use it for some industrial purpose, you're going to trade it for something else.
Both are just a medium of exchange.
Egyptians and gold
The first firm evidence we have of human interaction with gold occurred in ancient Egypt around 3,000 B.C. Gold played an important role in ancient Egyptian mythology and was prized by pharaohs and temple priests. It was so important, in fact, that the capstones on the Pyramids of Giza were made from solid gold.
The Egyptians also produced the first known currency exchange ratio which mandated the correct ratio of gold to silver: one piece of gold is equal to two and a half parts of silver. This is also the first recorded measurement of the lower value of silver in comparison to gold.
Gold has occupied a unique social status for millennia. It has a long history as a valuable metal an...
bebusinessed.com
It's recorded that nuggets the size of goose eggs were laying on the surface sands of the Philippines, just a few hundred years ago; and mining is nothing new
Ancient civilizations and their love of gold
Human fascination with gold is as old as recorded history. We don’t know for sure when the first human picked up a gold nugget and thought, “Hey, this is pretty cool.” However, flakes of gold have been found in Paleolithic caves dating back as far as 40,000 B.C.
Gold has occupied a unique social status for millennia. It has a long history as a valuable metal an...
bebusinessed.com
I don't know what you were trying to prove there, but the only thing in that whole piece that was even relevant to your point was this:
Mining Production: The amount of gold mined each year affects supply. Major discoveries or mining innovations can increase supply, potentially lowering prices.
...which completely undermines your claim that the world's gold supply is relatively static. It's not static at all. Production is at near-record highs.
Additionally, we don't want a static money supply, because as the population grows, there would be less money per capita, which means saved money would be worth more over time, which is deflationary. Deflationary economies are bad because they're typically recessionary.
I'd also point out that Article I, Section 8, Clause 5 that you quoted gives congress the sole authority to "regulate the value" of money, and going back to a gold standard would cede some of that control to mining firms.
I'm not talking about spikes. I'm talking about the historical average of value of fiat currency being inversely proportional to the value of gold.
Maybe representing it this way will help you:
View attachment 359610
I got a little laugh out of this one:
View attachment 359611
Chronicles the path of the Dollar and Gold since the Dollar's closing low of March 26 2008, and makes comments about such.
www.economicgreenfield.com
and I was talking about volatility.
In your chart, the value of the dollar dropped by about 25% while over the same time frame, the value of gold increased by about 400%.
Having your currency value swing 400% in the course of 11 years would be
wildly disruptive to an economy.
You don't have to have a degree in Austrian Economics to infer that from the trends.
I never argued that gold didn't go up while the dollar fell. I just don't think that's an important point when there are so many other problems with your position.