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Please ....buy silver now! this is a once in a lifetime opportunity!

Folks,
to my fellow like minded brothers and sisters! please read the following article from Ted Butler and Isreal Freidman.. there are no others who knows the Silver market better than these 2! they have been involved in this market for 25 years! this is your once in a lifetime chance to invest 20 to 30 k and retire in 3 to 5 years! this is financial security for you and your family.. please read the below article and please read EVERYTHING Ted Butler has said about silver, the manipulation and the shortage just now starting! the more Americans that take part in this, the stronger our nation will be when we get rid of of the neocon socialists and there fiat trash money!
http://www.investmentrari...

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Can someone give

a good online sites to buy...and BTW what about silver art rounds?

CMI Gold & Silver

out of Phoenix.

Ron Paul supporters.

http://www.cmi-gold-silve...
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Lisa C.

www.women4ronpaul.com

I bought 100 ounces

Sunday night and now the price dropped two days in a row. But I didn't buy it to sell it. I'm thinking of buying more but I am gonna wait a few days to see if it drops below 17.00.
F.Y.I. Before I retired I used to replace contact tips on electrical equipment all the time. Either the contact was copper with silver tip or they had silver insert that mounted to the contact arm. Anyway after a while the silver would wear or burn off and the contacts will stick, then you replace them again. The copper could be recycled but all that silver was just gone. There has to be a shortage at some point, so I know in the long run the price will continue to go up.

But what good are pre 1965 U.S. coins...

if you can't melt them down? I own quite a bit (but never enough) pre-1965 90% U.S. dimes, quarters and halfs... but if silver really does sky-rocket what good will they do if someone can't legally melt them down for there silver content? By 'someone' I refer to industry or manufacturing that needs silver for production; does it become a 'blackmarket' melting of U.S. coins?

Can someone explain that to me?
Thanks.

the way things are going to

the way things are going to get you will use those 90% silver coins just like you use a dollar bill now.. don't worry about melting them down! also i think you can melt them down you just can't melt new pennies nickels etc! but pre 1964 us coins you can!

as for me and my home, we shall worship the LORD

The percentage of silver in a 1964 quarter

is a known quantity. I believe 5 1/2 quarters make an ounce of silver (anyone?). You wouldn't need to melt them, just work out how much silver is in each type of coin and add it all up. If you go to sell them, there will be people who will understand the value of what you are holding. I suggest you find out how much silver is contained in your collection to protect yourself from fraudulent buyers if/when you go to sell.

I'm not sure if i answered your question or not.

Black market melting is already going on with pennies. The Treasury recently made a statement about how it is illegal to do so -- like "black market" people care. It would take some skill, I would think, to melt down junk silver and refine it. However, I'm sure it will be done if it isn't already.

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Lisa C.

www.women4ronpaul.com

Yes, 90% silver, pre-1965

Yes, 90% silver, pre-1965 quarters contain 0.18084 oz. of pure silver, so almost exactly 5 1/2 make one ounce of pure silver, correct. One dollar in face value (ten dimes, four quarters, etc.) of 90% silver US coins contain exactly 0.7234 oz. of silver, or did when they were new ---- most dealers call it 0.715 oz., to account for the average amount of wear on these circulated coins. Strangely, though, old US silver dollars contained more silver, 0.77344 oz. per coin.

Almfree, it has been legal

Almfree, it has been legal for a very long time to melt down old US silver coins --- the restrictions on it were only in the 1960's, when we were undergoing a severe coin shortage due to hoarding of the 90% silver coins. There is no problem with doing it today.

I'm not an old coin person but pennies can't be melted

and I'm not sure there is a date restriction -- it's for all pennies.

The Treasury website would probably have a scary warning on it somewhere about this.
___________

Lisa C.

www.women4ronpaul.com

Pennies probably cannot be

Pennies probably cannot be melted because so many of them are worth more in metal content than their face value. Pennies from 1909 through 1982 contain 95% copper and have a metal value of slightly less than $0.026

You can learn more about the metal value within coins at http://www.coinflation.co...

Get in while you can.

Good post SIERRA.
___________

Lisa C.

www.women4ronpaul.com