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Guest Post: 150,000 Cigarettes or 3,275 Ounces of Silver, by Gary Christenson

Suppose on January 1, 1995, over 20 years ago, you quit smoking one pack per day and bought silver instead

Assume:

Savings:

When silver sells for $100 per ounce will cigarettes sell for $40 per pack? This isn’t as outrageous as it sounds. I remember buying Marlboros for 19 cents per pack back in ancient times. Cigarettes are about 35 times as expensive now as they were in my youth. The current price is $6.50 for a pack, and 35 times that price would be about $225 per pack. Outrageous! The loss of purchasing power in fiat currencies is also outrageous.

Other Savings:

What about driving to work? Assume traveling 50 miles round trip five days per week. Assume gasoline costs an average of $4.00 per gallon (U.S. prices) and your mileage changes from 15 mpg to 30 mpg. Total savings is about $145 per month, or the equivalent of ¾ of a pack of cigs per day. A more efficient car saves about 2,500 ounces of silver in 20.5 years.

You can do the math yourself, but consider some possibilities:

Another comparison:

According to Steve St. Angelo [1] the major U.S. and European banks have paid over $128 Billion in fines and settlements since 2009. He notes that the mine supply of silver in those six years totaled about $113 Billion. The major banks have paid more in fines than the cumulative value of all silver mined in six years. Moving fiat paper around is quite profitable. The silver is real, but how real are the banking profits?

Summary:

– Gary Christenson of The Deviant Investor [2]