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Archive for October, 2014

Working or Fighting: Your Choice

October 30th, 2014 No comments

Leading up to next week’s elections—November 4—the mail, newspapers, radio, and TV are saturated with political ads.  Time and again, Democrats and Republicans say, “I’m going to fight for you.”  That’s the big problem we have on all levels of government—there’s just too much fighting.  I’m looking for the candidate who says, “I’m going to work for you.”   We need politicians who spend time “working”—not “fighting”—with their fellow legislators on the other side of the aisle. 

 

We hear political pundits—both the Democrats and Republicans—saying it is a mistake to compromise: “We must stand up and fight for what we believe in.”  It is important to hold firm on principles that are the very core of who you are, but in most instances, it is possible to reach consensus.  However, it takes “give” and “take”—and that takes work—it doesn’t just happen. Read more…

All that Moola: The History of “Bucks” and Other Words We Use to Mean Money

October 23rd, 2014 No comments

Last week, my wife and I went to our favorite pizza place.  When we were finished eating, the waiter brought us the check.  I didn’t have the correct change.  So I quickly figured the tip in my head, gave him two larger bills, and said to him, “Just bring me back five dollars, and I’ll be happy.”  He replied, “Okay, I’ll bring you back five bucks.” 

His referring to five dollars as five “bucks” caught my attention.  When growing up in southern Missouri, “bucks” was a very common term used for “dollars,” but having lived in the St. Louis area for the last twenty years, it had been some time since I had heard “bucks” used in this way. 

This caused me to wonder how bucks came about to mean dollars and, for that matter, what about other terms often used to refer to money such as “grand,” “dough,” “lettuce,” “bacon,” “sawbuck,” “scratch,” and “stash,” to mention a few.  So for the third week in a row I am writing about money. Read more…

Follow the Money

October 17th, 2014 No comments

When writing last week’s article, Where did that money come from?, a banker called my attention to “Bitcoin,” a virtual currency introduced in 2009.  An informal survey I took indicated that few people know very much about “virtual” currencies.  So this week I decided to do a brief sketch of the historical development of the U.S. monetary system, hitting the highlights of what most of us have known and perhaps become a little foggy about, concluding in more detail with the development of virtual money.  Acknowledging that I am not a currency historian, after extensive research I am using layman’s terminology to explain things as I understand them. 

The value of a country’s currency is basically dependent upon the country’s integrity and having the assets necessary to pay its debt and back up its currency.  This was a real problem for early Americans prior to, and for several years following, the Revolutionary War. Read more…

October 11th, 2014 No comments

$$$   Where did that Money Come From?   $$$

“Two bits, four bits, six bits, a dollar; all for Lebanon stand up and holler.”  I was reared in Lebanon, Missouri, attended Lebanon High School, and that was a cheer used especially at our basketball games.  Of course, other teams used the same cheer, inserting their own names.  Back then, it was quite common to refer to a quarter as “two bits” or a half-dollar as “four bits” or seventy-five cents as “six bits.”  

We hardly see half-dollars now, and although quarters are still quite common, we seldom hear them referred as “two bits.”  In fact, from an informal survey I took, most people about forty years and younger do not have any idea what “two bits” or “four bits” or “six bits” or any number of bits refer to.  Many people assume that using “bits” to refer to USA money is slang.  But the “bit” has a legitimate historical connection with the USA monetary system that can be traced to colonial times.  Read more…

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Wanning Influence of Religion in U.S.A.

October 3rd, 2014 No comments

On Monday of this past week, the Pew Research Center released the results of a poll taken earlier this month about religion, with this heading, “Public Sees Religion’s Influence Waning.”  The survey addressed a wide range of religious topics relating to life in America.  

The first question in the poll was: “At the present time, do you think religion as a whole is increasing its influence on American life or losing its influence?”  The answers: 72% answered losing its influence; 22% said increasing its influence; and 6 percent responded the same or don’t know.  “Losing its influence” is up five percentage points from 2010, to the highest level in Pew Research polling.  

Most people who say religion is losing its influence in American life see this as a negative development, Read more…