By Keith Wagstaff
Gov. Rick Perry tells Glenn Beck he wants the state's $1 billion in gold bars on Texas soil
Texas
wants its gold back — all $1 billion of it. That's what Gov. Rick Perry
told Glenn Beck on his radio show last week, according to the Texas Tribune.
The Federal Reserve
holds the gold bars, which are owned by the University of Texas
Investment Management Company. Perry wants to bring them all back to
Texas to store the gold in what would be called the Texas Bullion Depository.
Former Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas), a stalwart gold standard proponent, supports Perry's proposal. But Texas state representative Giovanni Capriglione, who wrote legislation to fulfill Perry's wishes, wants to distance the move from that kind of rhetoric, telling the Texas Tribune
that the measure is "not about putting Texas on its own gold standard."
He says, instead, that it looks to "give the state a reputation as
being more financially secure in the event of a national or
international financial crisis."
But what's so bad about keeping the gold in the Federal Reserve's vault
in New York City? If there were a serious spike in inflation (a big
worry of gold standard supporters), there would be nothing to stop Texas
from accessing its store of gold in Manhattan. And taking the gold to
Texas would likely be more problematic than helpful. As Neil Irwin of
the The Washington Post notes, building, staffing, and securing the proposed Texas Bullion Depository would be incredibly expensive.In fact, it would take a Mad Max-style breakdown to justify bringing all of that booty back to Texas, says Irwin:
For it to make sense to go to all that hassle of storing your own gold, you have to be insuring against some much darker possibilities, like a collapse of the U.S. government and monetary system...
In some episode of hyperinflation and U.S. government collapse, as the nation falls into a Hobbesian state of nature, paper dollars will be no good, but gold would likely be the medium of exchange for buying food and guns and whatever else is needed for Texas to prosper amid the post-apocalyptic hellscape. [Washington Post]
Another reason — other than the one put forth by Capriglione — that a state might want to keep $1 billion of gold handy is if it were planning to secede. Texas has already tried to break away from the Union twice — in 1836 and 1865 — and more than 100,000 Texans signed an online petition earlier this year asking the White House to allow the state to secede.
Other than support from the Tea Party set, though, many Texas politicians aren't sold on the gold idea. State Rep. Lon Burnam (D) told the Texas Tribune, "We've got plenty of real problems that we're not going to deal with this session. Let's deal with them."
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