WH Press Secretary Refuses to Rule Out Trillion Dollar Coin

This idea won't die. The press secretary today refused to shutdown the concept.
The press has recently dived into Treasury and Mint law more than we've seen in quite awhile.
Can this raise the overall level of "coin consciousness" to the extent of creating more collectors?
The press has recently dived into Treasury and Mint law more than we've seen in quite awhile.
Can this raise the overall level of "coin consciousness" to the extent of creating more collectors?
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Comments
Maybe this issue will stir up a little interest in bullion coins, but I doubt it will do anything to make more people become coin collectors.
<< <i>I'm curious - but how does the President spend money?
He spends money by signing into law spending bills passed by congress. Also, he is using executive orders more and more.
Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
"Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
"Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire
<< <i>
<< <i>I'm curious - but how does the President spend money?
He spends money by signing into law spending bills passed by congress. Also, he is using executive orders more and more. >>
ahhh - so Congress spends the money. Got it.
<< <i>The platinum coin valued at One Trillion Dollars should work well for Obama to spend even more than he does presently. I hope our politicians are able to close this platinum coin loophole before Obama uses it. >>
Actually, if somehow this trillion dollar coin came to fruition, it would not be used for future spending but would simply honor those debts that have already been incurred by the laws that Congress has legislated.
In other words, Congress wants to hold ransom (via the debt ceiling) funds they have already spent authorized by the very laws they have legislated. Small wonder their approval rating hovers in the basement. What is it now... 13%?
<< <i>Small wonder their approval rating hovers in the basement. What is it now... 13%? >>
At least Congress is more popular than a few things, among them Linsey Lohan and having a meth lab next door to you. Not by much though!
60 years into this hobby and I'm still working on my Lincoln set!
<< <i>
<< <i>
<< <i>I'm curious - but how does the President spend money?
He spends money by signing into law spending bills passed by congress. Also, he is using executive orders more and more. >>
ahhh - so Congress spends the money. Got it. >>
I say ban tdn for his political posts!
Just kidding.
"The buck stops here" is a phrase that was popularized by U.S. President Harry S. Truman, who kept a sign with that phrase on his desk in the Oval Office. (Footage from Jimmy Carter's "Address to the Nation on Energy" shows the sign still on the desk during Carter's administration.) The phrase refers to the fact that the President has to make the decisions and accept the ultimate responsibility for those decisions. Truman received the sign as a gift from a prison warden, who was also an avid poker player. The ship's motto of the U.S. Naval Aircraft Carrier, USS Harry S. Truman (CVN-75), is also "The Buck Stops Here."[2]
linky
* Will the trillion dollar coin be included in the 2013 Mint Set?
* If so, will the Mint impose ordering limits?
* Will there be a discount for rolls?
* Will it be worth more in a First Strike holder?
* Will there be fractionals also? (I'm in for a 100-trillionths version.)
* Is it worth flipping, or should I hold it as a long-term investment?
My Adolph A. Weinman signature

<< <i>Everybody's ignoring many of the issues that REALLY matter:
* Will the trillion dollar coin be included in the 2013 Mint Set?
* If so, will the Mint impose ordering limits?
* Will there be a discount for rolls?
* Will it be worth more in a First Strike holder?
* Will there be fractionals also? (I'm in for a 100-trillionths version.)
* Is it worth flipping, or should I hold it as a long-term investment?
Thank You!
The name is LEE!
<< <i>At least Congress is more popular than a few things, among them Linsey Lohan and having a meth lab next door to you. Not by much though! >>
<< <i>
<< <i>
<< <i>I'm curious - but how does the President spend money?
He spends money by signing into law spending bills passed by congress. Also, he is using executive orders more and more. >>
ahhh - so Congress spends the money. Got it. >>
I don't want to get too deep into politics because that is what the open forum was for, until PCGS closed it! However, TDN appears to be one of those "look away" liberals. For example I had a friend who blamed alot of spending on W. Bush and I said the same thing "...how does the President spend money?" He would go....ahh...ahh. and I would remind him of the Congress spending money. Now whatever side you're on, please get stuff straight - It was not the "Bush Iraq war" or "Bush Tax Cuts". The Congress voted for those items and if you hate them, that's fine, but please understand what is going on in the world. Personally at least, I don't remember W. Bush issuing an executive order demanding the war on Iraq or to spend a trillion dollars. How come some people now saying Obama isn't spending the money because Presidents can't were the first to accuse W. Bush of spending money? And again, if you hate GOP members in the Senate and house, that's one thing, but please put the blame where it belongs. That is all. JJacks
One more quick thing, if they print a Trillion $ coin, they better not leave Mr. Burns in charge of it!!
JJacks
While "technically" it addresses the national debt (as long as the Federal Reserve Bank goes along with it) it's sole purpose would be to stave off bankruptcy with the intent of eventually raising the debt ceiling thereby allowing the borrowing or more money.
To me, regardless of what "could occur", the country is already bankrupt if the only way they can address the national debt is by raising the amount they agree to borrow?
Or did I miss something somewhere?
For all the Obama bashers, before you even start, this has been a problem that has been growing and festering since the Federal Reserve System was voted into law and its something that Thomas Jefferson warned against over 230 years ago.
The name is LEE!
<< <i>jjacks >>
cool - you got all that from one statement? lol
I have a few coins that I think should be the first trillion dollar coin. If they want them, they can write me a check. And I'll even wait until Congress authorizes the debt limit increase to cash it!
<< <i>
<< <i>jjacks >>
cool - you got all that from one statement? lol >>
Hey man, I'm pretty good
I could say alot more, but again back to coins...
JJacks
<< <i>Philip Diehl takes credit for the law that allows the trillion dollar coin. Seems to think it is no big deal.
linky >>
I just hope the circulating versions in a couple of years are clad.
<< <i>
<< <i>Philip Diehl takes credit for the law that allows the trillion dollar coin. Seems to think it is no big deal.
linky >>
I just hope the circulating versions in a couple of years are clad.
Can't be. The loophole allowing unlimited denominations only exists for the platinum American Eagle.
<< <i>Actually, most Americans blame Cheney [
At least Cheney's boss didn't abuse the executive order priviledge.
I wouldn't be surprised if BO by-passed Congress and created a clueless coin czar to advance this ridiculous agenda.
<< <i>
<< <i>Actually, most Americans blame Cheney [
At least Cheney's boss didn't abuse the executive order priviledge.
I wouldn't be surprised if BO by-passed Congress and created a clueless coin czar to advance this ridiculous agenda. >>
Are these types of posts not in violation of forum rules? I know that I now censor myself because I value my participation here. Yet some folks seem to get away with politically charged posts/snarky comments quite often.
linky
<< <i>NBC Nightly News report on the story:
linky >>
Incredibly stupid report!
<< <i>SO a trillion dollar coin, huh? What would this thing look like? >>
Fellas, leave the tight pants to the ladies. If I can count the coins in your pockets you better use them to call a tailor. Stay thirsty my friends......
<< <i>SO a trillion dollar coin, huh? What would this thing look like? How much platinum needs to be in it to scale it to current US gov platinum issues? >>
The government could ignore scaling the coin to current issues and make it any size they want, if I understand the law correctly. It's a loophole that no one caught and it applies only to the platinum bullion issues, I believe.
The trillion dollar coin will make completing a registry set slightly more challenging.
My Adolph A. Weinman signature

$1 trillion or more in Treasury debt to accept the new coin in exchange for the debt. Only China
would be affected.
Wait, can we make that a platinum clad coin? Platinum plated zinc?
Which country is getting the best of the deal? We get Gap jeans for the same price as 35 years ago,
flat screen TVs for half the price of a 20" tube TV in 1993, and they get paper.
Recipient of the coveted "You Suck" award, April 2009 for cherrypicking a 1833 CBHD LM-5, and April 2022 for a 1835 LM-12, and again in Aug 2012 for picking off a 1952 FS-902.
<< <i>
<< <i>I'm curious - but how does the President spend money?
He spends money by signing into law spending bills passed by congress. Also, he is using executive orders more and more. >>
which is getting out of hand anyway. jmo
<< <i>SO a trillion dollar coin, huh? What would this thing look like?
If they did do it there is no doubt that Mickey Mouse should be on the obverse. Maybe a view of downtown Detroit on the reverse. Here is a trial pattern.
$1 gold. That way the Fed might lose it. We should break with tradition and have Obama on one side and
Boehner on the other side. Neither side would be defined as "heads."
<< <i>
<< <i>Actually, most Americans blame Cheney [
At least Cheney's boss didn't abuse the executive order priviledge.
I wouldn't be surprised if BO by-passed Congress and created a clueless coin czar to advance this ridiculous agenda. >>
Careful now! The wonderful thing about today's information super highway is that it makes it easie-peasie to separate the wheat from the BS.
Personally, I'm not seeing any "abuse" here. BTW, every EO is available through the National Archives.
The name is LEE!
<< <i>SO a trillion dollar coin, huh? What would this thing look like? How much platinum needs to be in it to scale it to current US gov platinum issues? >>
The same amount of precious metal that exists in a 100 dollar bill.
Actually, one ounce would serve the purpose of the coin since the Treasury Department under authority of the law could assign any value they wanted on the coin. I expect that such a coin would get housed right next to the 10 1933 Saints in Fort Knox.
Don't get me wrong, I think the idea is incredibly irresponsible but then it is within the law and as long as the Federal Reserve Bank (a privately owned entity) goes along with it, then it should work. I mean, the goal here is simply to address whats due since there is hesitance to raise the debt ceiling.
On the other hand, such a move just might set the precedent for future "trillion" or "quadrillion" dollar coins. Who knows?
The name is LEE!
<< <i>
<< <i>
<< <i>Actually, most Americans blame Cheney [
At least Cheney's boss didn't abuse the executive order priviledge.
I wouldn't be surprised if BO by-passed Congress and created a clueless coin czar to advance this ridiculous agenda. >>
Careful now! The wonderful thing about today's information super highway is that it makes it easie-peasie to separate the wheat from the BS.
Personally, I'm not seeing any "abuse" here. BTW, every EO is available through the National Archives. >>
OK, let's not start injecting facts into a perfectly good political discussion.
If it were that easy, just make 13 of them and pay off the debt.
Is this effectively a QE3, 4, 5 etc. strategy??