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Speaking of dissent... I would not silence Earle42 for having a different opinion (wrong as it is, wink-wink, just teasing). On the contrary, I would buy him a Pepsi and together we would be thankful for being in a country where we can disagree without fear.
I agree - As long as I could follow it up by buying you one!
Yes, I guess people who don't know us would think we would get down to fisticuffs if in person. But be assured people, there is nothing further from the truth. jbuck and I enjoy exercising our debate skills with one another and have for a couple of years. When it comes down to it, we are kindred spirits. I find him unusually perceptive for a person in today's society and believe he is one of the major personalities to make this forum the great place it is.

Ok - back to the thread:
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I know you like polymer, so let us use that for the higher notes
Actually... I don't. I don't like the "feel" of them after using them up North. But, it would be more cost effective and be better in the long run rather than more short lived paper. Therefore I think it would be a good idea for saving money.
OK...Let's shift gears a bit here and discuss he waste of the already minted coins.
The number of the wasted/stored coins is (according to this article) just over a billion.
http://www.npr.org/2011/06/28/13739...nobody-wants That's 1 billion (plus a bit more) coins in holding. But its not 1 billion dollars since according to this website:
http://coins.about.com/b/2008/05/10...us-coins.htm it costs .16 to make a dollar coin or (1,300,000,000 X.16) = 20,800,000 wasted/spent taxpayer dollars being stored in coin form.
What percent of the national debt is this 20,800,000?
$20,800,000 / $18,154,932,588,744.92 = .000115 %
ouch! Pathetic we are that much in debt, and yet the wasted amount is not even large enough to be called a pittance (also pathetic that this is true).
How much money per taxpayer is wasted if we forget about the coins in stotage?
$20,800,000U / 321,658,197 )9/2/2015 @ 4:32 PM - number not rounded to ensure no fudge factor in favor of this post) = .06 (or less than the cost to make a nickel) per person.
Since the nickel and penny are considered trivial by people advocating the dollar coin usage - the wasted money over these unwanted coins itself is a trivial matter like they see the value of a nickel ("just round up").
Hey, I'd give a whole dollar and make 15.4 dollar coin advocates happy they were not in the group of people losing money... except it would cost me .42 to mail them their penny and nickel (which they would see both coins as worthless anyway).


The problem is we see 20 million as a a huge number when compared to the individual, but on the whole, and unfortunately, it stacks up with one of the coins people here say we need to get rid of and implement the dollar coin.
More number fun:
1. Looking up
State Quarter mintages we find several that have mintage of over a billion per year!
http://www.coinnews.net/2007/09/17/...igures-3573/2. From Wikipedia,
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Presi...Coin_Programthe total amount of dollar coins minted up to 2015 is only about 2.6 billion circulation strikes (added up the numbers from the list rounding to millions) - so about half are now storage
Also a chart from Wikipedia shows that from the year 2000 to 2014, ANNUAL Quarter mintage totals went from 6.5 billion to as low as 347 million. Taking the time to average all of the numbers in the list shows the US mint has averaged minting 2.2 billion quarters per year.
So the trivial (if advocating dollar coins and eliminating pennies and nickels... but not trivial if we are advocating to force the majority into what they do not want) .06 cents per person is the issue now?
So it again comes down to a devaluation of current specie so it does not cost more to make a penny than its value, getting rid of cloth dollars for polymer, everyone being willing to say its OK to lose 6 cents from a bad decision (which we likely do anyway all the time in life), not throwing more bad money after something Americans have overwhelmingly said they don't want, and solving the problem so the majority of people can be happy.
Hmmm... .06
Government coercion... having to pay higher costs for services and handling volumes of metal vs. paper (polymer), inconvenience of too much change and weight, inevitable rise in prices overall from the "new" quarter in our pockets...
.06
the "trivial" penny
the "trivial" nickel
...