High Treason in Zimbabwe
The newly installed prime minister of Zimbabwe, Morgan Tsvangirai, is the worst kind of traitor; he has just surrendered the sovereign right of the people of Zimbabwe to issue money to the United States:
“Zimbabwe’s prime minister, Morgan Tsvangirai, has taken an important step toward establishing the new power-sharing government’s credibility by fulfilling a commitment to pay the army and other public-sector workers in dollars because the national currency is worthless.”
—Zimbabwe starts paying soldiers in US dollars, 19 Feb, The Guardian
From now on all assets in Zimbabwe will be priced in US dollars:
“Zimbabwe shares, battered by the world’s highest inflation rate and a decade-long recession, may rebound after the stock exchange reopened yesterday from a three- month suspension with listings re-denominated in U.S. dollars.
…
Reopening the exchange was one of the first steps by the coalition government formed last week as part of a power-sharing agreement between Mugabe, 84, and opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai.
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Zimbabwe may be forced to use a combination of the dollar, the rand and other currencies, Tsvangirai said.”—Zimbabwe Stocks May Soar as Bourse Reopens in Dollars, 20 Feb, Bloomberg
Dollarisation of the economy is the worst kind of high treason, because it surrenders one of the most important sovereign rights of the people, giving up parts of the country (as the Germans did at the end of the Great War) is the height of honour compared to it. Even the most inflated fiat currency in the history of the world is preferable to this!
If they have any US dollars (they don’t) they should then send it all to the mint in South Africa and request the following coin:

Every one troy ounce of pure gold would make eight zimbi’s. The low weight and purity would ensure that there is no foreign demand for the coin from investors.
As to the Zimbabwean dollar, they would stop printing it but keep accepting it for public debt and taxes. People will pay the government with dollars while accepting only zimbi’s, very quickly all the dollars will be absorbed and there would be only zimbi’s.
The state can also exchange one zimbi for 4.66 gram of 22K gold (or equivalent), thus putting a 10% seigniorage on the coin; for every thousand coin given to the public the state makes a profit of a hundred zimbi.
The zimbi would have turned the monetary system of Zimbabwe from the weakest on Earth to the only one based on gold, thus ensuring that Zimbabwe becomes the world’s only country with a trustworthy currency. Capital would pour into Zimbabwe from all over the world and its economy would boom. The opposite is now happening:
“Reconstructing Zimbabwe may cost as much as five billion US dollars (four billion euros), Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai said Friday as he opened his hands to neighbouring countries.
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Motlanthe said South Africa, chair of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) bloc, had directed regional finance ministers to develop a plan to help Zimbabwe, and again called for sanctions to be lifted.”—Reconstructing Zimbabwe may cost $5bln, 20 Feb, AFP [my emphasis]
They might not have dollars ‘printed’ in the US, but they certainly do have gold mined in Africa:
“The Vice-President of Zimbabwe has been accused of trying to sell millions of dollars in gold nuggets and diamonds in defiance of international sanctions.
Joyce Mujuru used her daughter as a go-between to seek a deal for the gold, according to Firstar, a commodities trader based in Britain, which says that it was approached in November.
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Firstar claims that Mrs Mujuru’s daughter and Spanish son-in-law, Nyasha and Pedro del Campo, offered to sell 3,700kg of gold for $90 million to Firstar Europe Ltd, a precious metal dealer. At the present market rate, one kilo of gold sells for $30,700 (£21,500). ”—Zimbabwe’s vice-president foiled in 3,600kg gold deal, Times Online
Three tonnes of gold (let’s assume the 700kg pays all the costs) would make 771,803 zimbi’s; instead of using it in their own country they want to send to Europe in exchange of ‘paper’!
Successive Chinese dynasties built and maintained a magnificent wall to protect their empire. The Ming dynasty (an ethnic Han dynasty) maintained this great barrier and improved it to protect itself from the Manchu tribes in the northwest. The tribes were never able to overcome the wall, but a disgruntled general (Wu Sangui) decided to open the gates at Shanhai Pass and let the Manchu tribes enter.
The result was the fall of the Ming dynasty and its replacement by the Qing dynasty, a non-Han dynasty. The Qing changed China in a way that weakened it—they weakened the cultural bonds of society to bolster their domination—and laid it open to the Western powers in the nineteenth century. China has yet to restore its place in the world after four hundred years of one general’s treasonable act. Morgan Tsvangirai has just opened the gates of Zimbabwe for the barbarians.
Welcome back!
JStudent
March 3, 2009 at 7:32 pm
June 12, 2011 Late response!
The one positive is that if Zimbabwe reverts to the gold standard the beginning of the collapse of the capitalist system is at hand, this is a good thing not bad. The majority of poor peoples of the world will benefit from the collapse of capitalism, gold has been around since bartering!
Curtis Mullins
African American Council
Curtis Mullins, African American Council
June 12, 2011 at 6:28 pm
It’s never too late to comment, thanks for reading.
There is an idea of a gold backed dollar out there in Zimbabwe (see Zimbabwe Central Bank Governor Urges Relaunch of Gold-Backed Zim Dollar).
anonemiss
June 14, 2011 at 1:22 pm