Time: Fri Dec 05 14:35:53 1997 To: Scott Bergeson <Scott.Bergeson@m.cc.utah.edu> From: Paul Andrew Mitchell [address in tool bar] Subject: SLS: Silver mining - OK to repost (fwd) Cc: Bcc: sls References: <3.0.3.16.19971203105035.3107a73a@pop.primenet.com> This estimate may be based on assumptions which exclude mining operations on federal lands. Have you checked into their assumptions? Remember the "green revolution" [sic]? Translate: make federal lands uninhabitable, to drive humans into central cities, where they are more easily controlled, taxed, regulated, and subdued. This is the strategy of the NWO, yes? I oppose this strategy. I believe the earth is brimming with silver, if we only get a little creative about finding, and mining, it! /s/ Paul Mitchell, Candidate for Congress http://supremelaw.com At 02:11 PM 12/5/97 -0700, you wrote: >I found the following in the Sunday, Nov. 30, 1997 Deseret News, >page M5, in Brendan Boyd's Investor's Notebook column entitled >"Dow overvalued? Check GDP growth": > >The Silver Institute (1112 16th St. N.W., Washington, D.C. >20036) predicts that by 1999, 541 million ounces of silver >will be mined annually, reports Gold Stocks Advisory (23-00 >Route 208, Fair Lawn, N.J. 07410). "Meanwhile, The Metals >Consultancy estimates that 1,984 million ounces of silver >will be required by industry and jewelry manufacturers >every year. That 1,443 million-ounce shortfall spells >higher prices for silver." > >On Wed, 3 Dec 1997, Paul Andrew Mitchell wrote: > >> 2. silver, on the other hand, has not been stolen >> by the families of the Federal Reserve Banks, >> and is plentiful in raw deposits concentrated >> in places like Nevada; Congress should issue >> contracts, via the U.S. Mint, to begin bulk >> purchases/mining of these raw silver deposits; > > >
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