Peter Colt
on May 13, 2023
77 views
I'm sure they're trying to establish a list of who's into precious metals for when the time for confiscation comes.
Remember back in 2016 when the Royal Canadian Mint was offering some of their new silver coins for their face value?
This was one of the sets offered. Something was definitely wrong; selling .999 silver coins for $20 (including delivery) when the coin had a face value of $20. https://www.mint.ca/en/shop/coins/2016/the-$20-for-$20-2016-silver-coin-collection?fbclid=IwAR3T2r4EYRfxbRTceE2BJjBPmgRV8ITUSN4ePXcwB7x0pVCmNtp6me0bJmE
Now of course the coin didn't have $20 worth of silver in it so they would still have been making a profit, but to me it looked like an attempt to expose the precious metals hoarders by offering them something that they couldn't refuse: a way to purchase silver without any possibility of losing, because even if the price of silver tanked the face value would still hold, and only precious metal aficionados would be likely to recognize that fact.
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