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Author Topic: Learning from Imperial Rome  (Read 21701 times)
minor-transgression (OP)
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January 04, 2014, 11:37:10 PM
 #21

cp1 - thanks for your comment and the references - I will look.
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January 06, 2014, 08:08:21 PM
 #22

Interesting writeup, so not even metallic coins escape devaluation, when the coffers are empty.
Some questions:
Currency devaluation was unavoidable? ie if Rome entered a phase of austerity instead would that extend or shorten the life of the empire?
Was there any kind of fractional reserve banking at some point in Rome?
Can you show some graphs with legionaire salary index with wheat and gold?

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January 07, 2014, 08:02:39 AM
 #23

An introduction to the history of the Roman empire.

"ROME: Rise and fall of an empire - Part 1/14" on YouTube

An overwhelming theme is the Romans plundered wealth and had huge military expenses, ultimately unsustainable, a 2 week saga if you watch an episode every night. Also not hard to see how the society could have been sustainable with my BTC0.02 education in economics.

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January 07, 2014, 04:32:46 PM
 #24

An introduction to the history of the Roman empire.

"ROME: Rise and fall of an empire - Part 1/14" on YouTube

An overwhelming theme is the Romans plundered wealth and had huge military expenses, ultimately unsustainable, a 2 week saga if you watch an episode every night. Also not hard to see how the society could have been sustainable with my BTC0.02 education in economics.

lol many seeked the "End" of History, Rome, Genghis, Lui, Napoleon, Hitler, US they all had a Masterplan on how their Empire will live forever. But in nature nothing moves in a straight line, to move forward one must go up and down, up and down.
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January 07, 2014, 08:56:41 PM
 #25

Good lesson in history.

-Bad money always chases out good.

-Although he tried, Aurelian couldn't rid the empire of the debased currency.
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January 07, 2014, 09:16:03 PM
 #26

Greed, does it every time  Cheesy

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minor-transgression (OP)
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January 08, 2014, 08:16:00 AM
 #27


"if Rome entered a phase of austerity instead would that extend or shorten the life of the empire?"

Austerity??? For example, selling your wife to the highest bidder in the local
slavemarket and buying a smaller one? I'm not sure that would work ;-)

In 27BC over half the inhabitants of Rome were slaves, and by the mid 300AD's
the elite were passing laws prohibiting freemen from selling themselves, and
presumably their wives and children, into slavery. Does that sound like
austerity to you?

Can you show some graphs with legionaire salary index with wheat and gold?

http://www.kepe.gr/EN_Pages/disc_papers_en.htm Prodromidis - Discussion paper Nr 85 - Another View on an Old Inflation - P-I Prodromidis
Try p27?

Was there any kind of fractional reserve banking at some point in Rome?
It was a cash society. And I think you need paper money to make
fractional reserve lending work.
minor-transgression (OP)
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January 08, 2014, 08:17:42 AM
 #28

No questions on a cryptocurrency that goes to zero?
oprahwindfury
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January 08, 2014, 09:18:43 AM
 #29

Thanks for the good read. So basically the Romans, well a certain portion of them at least, devalued their own currency until it was worth nothing? Is that the gist of it? What if they hadn't done this and kept the Denarius at a certain percentage of silver? Interesting theories to think about!

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January 08, 2014, 02:19:24 PM
 #30

Was there any kind of fractional reserve banking at some point in Rome?
It was a cash society. And I think you need paper money to make
fractional reserve lending work.

I thought you said there were records of Debts burned, doesnt that mean that there were bank-like entities?
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January 08, 2014, 02:22:46 PM
 #31

No questions on a cryptocurrency that goes to zero?

How about restarting blockchain every 49 years, or better yet have older blocks phase out gradually as , wouldnt that create a rolling reboot of the economy.
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January 08, 2014, 05:07:41 PM
 #32

No questions on a cryptocurrency that goes to zero?
Howie

How about restarting blocsoldiers every 49 years, or better yet have older blocks phase out gradually as , wouldnt that create a rolling reboot of the economy.

They would have done better to enforce free trade and less tax and universal law. Power shifts were a result of insufficient funding for military staff. Debt forgiveness would only benefit the those who made promises they had no intention of honoring, the ones holding the debt the soldiers would still organize to to get there fair share.

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January 08, 2014, 05:20:01 PM
 #33

Interesting that you suggest that an economy should reset every 49 yrs.

Ancient Israel maintained a Jubilee Year which occurred every 49/50 yrs. During the Jubilee Year, all property and debts were paid and returned to their original owners. Any slave was also set free.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jubilee_(Biblical)
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January 08, 2014, 09:21:04 PM
 #34

Interesting that you suggest that an economy should reset every 49 yrs.

Ancient Israel maintained a Jubilee Year which occurred every 49/50 yrs. During the Jubilee Year, all property and debts were paid and returned to their original owners. Any slave was also set free.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jubilee_(Biblical)
You people propably know better Wink
Tongue
So in order to defuse any zionist conspiracy theory hatching up lets make it 42
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January 08, 2014, 09:23:13 PM
 #35

Sooooo....Is this thread supposed to be another one of those "America is like the Roman Empire!!!" kinda bullshit threads?
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January 08, 2014, 09:27:39 PM
 #36

No questions on a cryptocurrency that goes to zero?
Howie

How about restarting blocsoldiers every 49 years, or better yet have older blocks phase out gradually as , wouldnt that create a rolling reboot of the economy.

They would have done better to enforce free trade and less tax and universal law. Power shifts were a result of insufficient funding for military staff. Debt forgiveness would only benefit the those who made promises they had no intention of honoring, the ones holding the debt the soldiers would still organize to to get there fair share.
I think the Romans were pretty good at Trade and Law. Modern Law is actualy Roman Law. If you hold a debt for 49 years you may as well write it off,  I think 49 years is a sufficient period to try and extract some value out of the debt, if you fail then most propably you made a bad judgement took the Risk and lost.
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January 09, 2014, 12:42:47 AM
 #37

No questions on a cryptocurrency that goes to zero?
Howie

How about restarting blocsoldiers every 49 years, or better yet have older blocks phase out gradually as , wouldnt that create a rolling reboot of the economy.

They would have done better to enforce free trade and less tax and universal law. Power shifts were a result of insufficient funding for military staff. Debt forgiveness would only benefit the those who made promises they had no intention of honoring, the ones holding the debt the soldiers would still organize to to get there fair share.
I think the Romans were pretty good at Trade and Law. Modern Law is actualy Roman Law. If you hold a debt for 49 years you may as well write it off,  I think 49 years is a sufficient period to try and extract some value out of the debt, if you fail then most propably you made a bad judgement took the Risk and lost.

I know, but you can’t argue their empire is thriving because we carry the torch, or because there empire was founded on cooperative trade, free trade was not stifled with price fixing and there economic engine extinguished because there army provided little protection at an exorbitant cost.  
The law and taxes at the time we inequitably enforced, those who were not part of Roam were subject to 100% taxation and enslavement, those who found jobs as mercenaries in the army and promised land in gratitude of service had to take it by force as they were not paid by Rome.   They couldn’t wait 49 years to forgive Rome, they needed to eat.


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thaaanos
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January 09, 2014, 07:49:05 AM
 #38

No questions on a cryptocurrency that goes to zero?
Howie

How about restarting blocsoldiers every 49 years, or better yet have older blocks phase out gradually as , wouldnt that create a rolling reboot of the economy.

They would have done better to enforce free trade and less tax and universal law. Power shifts were a result of insufficient funding for military staff. Debt forgiveness would only benefit the those who made promises they had no intention of honoring, the ones holding the debt the soldiers would still organize to to get there fair share.
I think the Romans were pretty good at Trade and Law. Modern Law is actualy Roman Law. If you hold a debt for 49 years you may as well write it off,  I think 49 years is a sufficient period to try and extract some value out of the debt, if you fail then most propably you made a bad judgement took the Risk and lost.

I know, but you can’t argue their empire is thriving because we carry the torch, or because there empire was founded on cooperative trade, free trade was not stifled with price fixing and there economic engine extinguished because there army provided little protection at an exorbitant cost.  
The law and taxes at the time we inequitably enforced, those who were not part of Roam were subject to 100% taxation and enslavement, those who found jobs as mercenaries in the army and promised land in gratitude of service had to take it by force as they were not paid by Rome.   They couldn’t wait 49 years to forgive Rome, they needed to eat.

A believe evolution is a damn good indicator of success, So if we now chose roman law, conducts over anything else, and generaly carry the Torch of Rome, it is that we believe that they were at least in the right track. Credit to where its due man.
Little protection, Stiffled economy? Pax Romana, Roads who do you think made those possible? The Roman Army.
And according to OP soldier's salary was pretty much stable, and got what they asked or else ...
minor-transgression (OP)
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January 09, 2014, 11:10:50 PM
 #39

"How about restarting blocsoldiers every 49 years, or better yet have older blocks phase out gradually as , wouldnt that create a rolling reboot of the economy."

The economy would need to be in a dire state before enough people agreed to such a measure,
and, as pointed out elsewhere, property would likely have to be returned as part of the deal.
While I'm hopeful that I'm wrong and the global economy rights itself, history suggests that
some form of radical solution may be required, not immediately, but eventually. 

While Bitcoin may bring a new paradigm to banking, and make dishonesty more difficult, it will
not alter debt. At best, Gresham's law will apply, bitcoins will be hoarded, driven out by fiat
currencies.

The simplest proposal is for the new cryptocurrency to wipe out its entire blockchain and restart.
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January 09, 2014, 11:30:02 PM
 #40

No questions on a cryptocurrency that goes to zero?
Howie

How about restarting blocsoldiers every 49 years, or better yet have older blocks phase out gradually as , wouldnt that create a rolling reboot of the economy.

They would have done better to enforce free trade and less tax and universal law. Power shifts were a result of insufficient funding for military staff. Debt forgiveness would only benefit the those who made promises they had no intention of honoring, the ones holding the debt the soldiers would still organize to to get there fair share.
I think the Romans were pretty good at Trade and Law. Modern Law is actualy Roman Law. If you hold a debt for 49 years you may as well write it off,  I think 49 years is a sufficient period to try and extract some value out of the debt, if you fail then most propably you made a bad judgement took the Risk and lost.

I know, but you can’t argue their empire is thriving because we carry the torch, or because there empire was founded on cooperative trade, free trade was not stifled with price fixing and there economic engine extinguished because there army provided little protection at an exorbitant cost.  
The law and taxes at the time we inequitably enforced, those who were not part of Roam were subject to 100% taxation and enslavement, those who found jobs as mercenaries in the army and promised land in gratitude of service had to take it by force as they were not paid by Rome.   They couldn’t wait 49 years to forgive Rome, they needed to eat.

A believe evolution is a damn good indicator of success, So if we now chose roman law, conducts over anything else, and generaly carry the Torch of Rome, it is that we believe that they were at least in the right track. Credit to where its due man.
Little protection, Stiffled economy? Pax Romana, Roads who do you think made those possible? The Roman Army.
And according to OP soldier's salary was pretty much stable, and got what they asked or else ...
It’s more like we kept the bits that worked and called it common law. In Roman law it was OK to have a Coup d'état, so long as you could manage the military.

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