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Replies: 36 / Views: 4,816 |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
4901 Posts |
Quote: Connoisseurs of a certain type of establishment  Imagine if you had to use dollar coins....don't really want to go there.... 
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
20753 Posts |
Quote:
Sooooo...can you imagine having a hundred one dollar bills in your wallet? What's your point? Yes. And in many places it is normal to have large quantities of singles to make change. Many people that shop in places where exact change is a necessity carry large quantities of singles. Of course if your not one, you wouldn't know. There are so many places that requier cash only and exact amounts too. Again, if you don't know them, makes little difference. Also, very possibly if they would make the baby dollar ooins look much different than a quarter they would go over a little better. That has always been the biggest complaint I've heard is how they look to much like a quarter.
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New Member
Canada
40 Posts |
Been using the Loonie since 1987 and the Toonie since 1996 in the Great White North. Absolutely could not imagine going back to the small denomination bills.
Unfortunately, like the metric system, I don't see the US changing it's way for a long, long time if ever.
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Valued Member
United States
454 Posts |
Quote: Imagine if you had to use dollar coins....don't really want to go there.... HA! I'd like to see the pockets they'd have to add.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
4901 Posts |
Quote: Also, very possibly if they would make the baby dollar ooins look much different than a quarter they would go over a little better. That has always been the biggest complaint I've heard is how they look to much like a quarter. Probably why they change their color many years ago.... I do agree that they still can be mistaken for quarters though....
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Pillar of the Community
United States
899 Posts |
I actually think the debate should be moved from a $1 coin to a $2 coin. The fact is most places I go - I am giving up $2 to get a cup of coffee and get change. The buying power of a single is pretty much gone and there is no need to even have them any more.
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Bedrock of the Community
13014 Posts |
Quote: I actually think the debate should be moved from a $1 coin to a $2 coin That honestly may have a better chance. It doesn't have a recent history of failure and wouldnt be replacing/living side by side with something commonly used.
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
10038 Posts |
Quote: Who in their right mind would ever carry around 100 one dollar notes? At least it could be (and is done) without near as much trouble as trying to cart around 4 rolls of the dollar coins. I feel sorry for coin machine venders if they ever force these metal disks down our throats. Can you imagine nowadays having to cart 2-3K a week in coin (small operation) to the bank instead of bills? The bills a child could carry easy enough. But 2-3K of dollar coins would mean some unnecessary straining unless you are susceptible to kryptonite.
How much squash could a Sasquatch squash if a Sasquatch would squash squash? Download and read: Grading the graders Costly TPG ineptitude and No FG Kennedy halveshttps://ln5.sync.com/dl/7ca91bdd0/w...i3b-rbj9fir2
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Bedrock of the Community
Australia
21788 Posts |
Actually, I DO in fact carry $200 in $2 coins.
But not in my pocket.
They are in a small snap lid tablet container in the car, and they pay for 98 octane fuel for my old 6.9 litre Mercedes. That way, I kid myself that I am paying cheaply for fuel for that old beast!
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Valued Member
United States
223 Posts |
Those 6.9L Benzos were cool cars.
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Moderator
 United States
189340 Posts |
Quote:Quote: Connoisseurs of a certain type of establishment Imagine if you had to use dollar coins... Without saying too much, the establishments in my area have been giving the two dollar notes as change for over ten years now. You can bring one dollar notes in, but you will never get them in change. What further proof do you need that inflation affects everyone? 
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Bedrock of the Community
13014 Posts |
What a great racket those places have going on. I take it this is all just from word of mouth that you heard that 
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Pillar of the Community
United States
998 Posts |
While I have suggested several "solutions" to the problems facing current coinage and currency it won't be long I am afraid that none of the various solutions will really matter. Coins and bills will most likely go the way of the vinyl record album and cassette tape and be replaced with virtual money. Debit and value cards will be like CD's, an interim if not ubiquitous solution until some sort of biometrics take over for the majority of transactions. What will really seal the deal on cash transactions will be like so many other innovations. The criminal and  elements will drive a cashless solution much like  created the home VCR/DVD market and then mainstream users will buy in. Later on that will evolve to something akin to iTunes' takeover of music purchases. I see people these days, especially youths, use debit or credit cards for purchases that would shock the older crowd. Why use cash to buy a can of pop or a candy bar, just whip out the plastic. No signature needed under $25. I already have people want to use PayPal for small payments all the time. It's coming folks. Diehard cash users will fight it all the way, these are like the guys who still prefer 8-tracks in their T-Top Camaro.
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
3692 Posts |
I don't think that CDs are really obsolete, the same way LPs are not obsolete. They're not popular, but they can be read with simple technology because the data is stored in there and it's just a matter of getting it out.
The proof: we're here in a forum talking about old-school types of money. We trade it, collect it, buy it, sell it... Not obsolete, but underground, non-mainstream.
I like the jump from $1 to $2 coin.
Edited by Libertad 12/03/2013 09:24 am
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Valued Member
United States
293 Posts |
America would simply half to do what Canada did and stop making $1 bills. The problem is that is a very big POLITICAL move and neither the elephants or the donkeys want to walk though that political minefield. Of course the stories about the Susan B. Anthony (A.K.A. Susan B. Agony and Carter Quarter) and the Ike dollar (basically a promise LBJ made to Vegas although Nixon actually carried it over the goal line) are well known. What many people outside the coin community do not realize is that the Morgan dollar generally was widely used only in the Western states and it was the primarily Republican members of Congress from these states (California and Nevada) that were the key votes in getting the Morgan dollar off the drawing board. When they teamed up with Democrats led by Rep. Richard "Silver Dick" Bland of Missouri, they forced through the Bland Allison Act and overrode President Hayes veto. Now keep in mind that all time going back to President Washington only about 7% of all vetoes have been overturned. The Bland Allison Act forced the federal government to buy all that silver out of the western mines and coin it as silver dollars. It basically was a subsidy as the coins were not need by the entire company. The Morgan dollar production was finally halted in 1904 because the mints had all these bags sitting in their vaults were many of them lay until the government sales of the 1960s.
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Replies: 36 / Views: 4,816 |
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