Central NE | priced in real money.
When you can wrap your head around the fact that gold and silver are constitutional money that does not change, and it is the paper fiat debt notes that are falling in purchasing power, it turns your world view on its head.
Everyone needs to be familiar with the coinage act of 1792 signed into law by George Washington, and if you havent read it, google it.
Last fall, the best land here cost 6-7.5oz of gold per acre, that would be $120-$150 per acre in grandpas money, or $12,000 to $15,000 in federal reserve debt notes.
Today, the best land here has fallen to a cost of 3-3.75 oz of gold per acre, or $60-$75 per acre in constitutional money.
If you use fiat debt to store your wealth, it has lost half its purchasing power like land has, negating the fall in land values, consumed by the results of the spending in the inflation act - So it still cost you $12,000 to $15,000 for the best land, while you pay half your wealth to the government in the form of an inflation tax without being any wiser.
This is how you pick up land at a bargain... but should you now?
I predict that since land is falling so rapidly, that holders of real money may be able to buy 50% more land by spring for the same amount of money. Of course fiat debt holders will be taxed through inflation by their decreasing purchasing power at the same time.
Just a different perspective to think about.
Edited by Hayinhere 10/15/2025 00:59
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