Silver market analyst Ted Butler writes today that he has come to
believe that the U.S. government, while not the instigator of the silver
price manipulation scheme, has become a participant in it and that the
U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which has purported to be
investigating the silver market for nearly four years, has been neutered
by the U.S. Treasury Department, which has given its market-rigging
agent, JPMorganChase & Co., immunity from criminal prosecution.
None of this should be so surprising, as even Butler himself has
noted that when the U.S. government demonetized silver in 1965,
President Lyndon B. Johnson proclaimed that the government would
intervene in the silver market as necessary to keep the price down,
presumably by dishoarding from the government's silver stockpile.
Signing the demonetization legislation, the president said:
"Some have asked whether our silver coins will disappear. The answer
is very definitely -- no. Our present silver coins won't disappear and
they won't even become rarities. We estimate that there are now 12
billion -- I repeat, more than 12 billion -- silver dimes and quarters
and half dollars that are now outstanding. We will make another billion
before we halt production. And they will be used side-by-side with our
new coins. Since the life of a silver coin is about 25 years, we expect
our traditional silver coins to be with us in large numbers for a long,
long time. If anybody has any idea of hoarding our silver coins,
let me say this. Treasury has a lot of silver on hand, and it can be and
it will be used to keep the price of silver in line with its value."
Johnson's comments have been archived with other presidential documents by the University of California at Santa Barbara here:
http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=27108
Of course Johnson's promises about keeping silver coins in
circulation and keeping silver's price down were not fulfilled. The
government's silver stockpile was exhausted and U.S. silver coins did
indeed disappear from circulation. But the government's interest in
suppressing the price of the monetary metal, suppressing the value of a
competitive currency, endures.
Indeed, like so much in the U.S. government's gold price suppression
scheme, the silver price suppression scheme is largely a matter of
official public record rather than mere "conspiracy theory." But GATA
has no idea what it will take to induce mainstream financial journalists
to examine the official public record, even as we keep urging them to
do so.
Butler's commentary is headlined "The War on Silver" and it's posted at GoldSeek's companion site, SilverSeek, here:
http://www.silverseek.com/commentary/war-silver
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