Originally posted by howdoesthehorseymovea highly unstable heavy element, capable of inducing incessant vomitting and laughter, often simultaneously. due to the extremely explosive nature of forum gold, all of its heavier isotopes are deemed too hot to handle by The Man, and get annihilated systematically behind the rhp tool shed in milliseconds. it has been suggested that the heavy forum gold exists so little time that it can hardly be said to have existed at all. the lighter isotopes sometimes linger in the public message achives for years, resurfacing every now and then, causing repetitive abdomen convulsions and hairy palms.
I don't get it. What is forum gold?
Originally posted by howdoesthehorseymoveThat's the way the stomach rumbles
Why?
That's the way the bee bumbles
That's the way the needle pricks
That's the way the glue sticks
That's the way the potato mashes
That's the way the pan flashes
That's the way the market crashes
That's the way the whip lashes
That's the way the teeth knashes
That's the way the gravy stains
That's the way the moon wanes
Originally posted by howdoesthehorseymoveIt shot to $800s between 1976 to 1980, up from $35 an ounce. A decline followed but it never went back, Gold has been trading at a fair and steady price increase since then with ups and down due to the markets. Expectations are for Gold to steady at $850 later this winter, but prior to that some guys are thinking it will hit $1200 first. 😀
Time to take in the wifes jewelry and get a bigger tv.
Gold at 1000 an ounce is way over priced.
In the late 1970's it was 35 bucks an ounce!!
Its been said and fair enough, that it takes the same amount of Gold today to buy a barrel of oil as it did at any point in time where oil was produced comercially... Try that with paper money! 😉
like paper money, gold is worth what people say it is. it has no real practical use except as a conductor in electronic parts or for medical purposes. I read somewhere if gold were not historically valuable and used in jewelry, then its value today would be less than iron ore, which is significantly more useful