Economy
In reply to the discussion: Weekend Economists Going to the Dickens December 16-18, 2011 [View all]Demeter
(85,373 posts)The fascinating story of Marion Szablicki, as reported in Marc Fabers Gloom, Boom and Doom Report:
My economics education was started as a child by my grandfather, Marion Szablicki, who was a living testimonial to the value of gold. Notably, toward the end of his life at 99 years of age in 2010, he felt there was simply too much debt, and that a long downward spiral was underway with difficult times ahead. He had lived through times of extremis and his account of fiat money, war, gold and survival should serve as a reminder to all people that those who choose to ignore historys lessons do so at their own risk.
On September 17, 1939, Russia invaded Poland, and over the next year over 1.7 million Poles were deported to labor camps or sent into exile into Kazakhstan and Siberia. Their only crimes at the time were being Polish citizens. None of the land or homes taken by the Russians was ever returned to these Poles after the war, despite their release from the Gulag in 1941 to fight with distinction under the British army. Per the 1943 Tehran Declaration, post WWII, Eastern Poland remained a part of Russia. Winston Churchill said of Poland in 1946, We who went to war on her behalf
watch with sorrow the strange outcome of our endeavors.
Fiat currencies are particularly vulnerable during war and often become rapidly worthless as countries fail. Such was the case for my grandparents, who in 1939 resided in eastern Poland. This is their story as told to me by my grandfather, Marion Szablicki:
We lived near the Russian border and I knew the soldiers would arrive soon. I was a working-class man; however, my wifes family were better off, and we had a very modest amount of gold and jewelry kept by her family. I hid it carefully in a hole in the ground. I knew our currency (the Zloty) would not last and I knew that gold would be the only money I would have to try and save us.
Polands great inflation (1923) happened when I was a boy and was concurrent with the Weimar hyperinflation in Germany. My father, brothers and I bartered for food, goods, services, and gold. Gold was preferred then to cash. My father was well versed in history, and often cited the great inflation in pre-revolutionary France. It was he who taught me that gold was the only money that knows no sovereign borders....
Read more: Gold and Money in Extremis... One Man's Story http://dailyreckoning.com/gold-and-money-in-extremis-one-mans-story/#ixzz1gn0nICdW
IT'S A GRIPPING TALE