Seriously?Though honestly, what is in it for the smugglers?
Seriously?
Just in this thread suggestions have included precious metals, gemstones, radioactives, luxury argicultural products, local liquors, jewelry, and local drugs.
Hans
So they are just dying for some fruit...literally. And a TL6 world that can make nuclear ICBM's but doesn't know what cash is...
sounds uh yeah.
We're not talking here about knowing what cash is, but about giving credit to some specific cash. For each side, the money may be as valuable as wuld be to you or me money script from the Spanish Republic or the Confederation.
You know what cash is, right? If someone came up to you and offered you 10,000 Lubans in crisp Star Empire of Orion bills for your computer, would you accept the offer? After all, as he can tell you, it's a pretty good offer. For 10,000 Lubans you can buy a better replacement and still have cash left over. All you have to do is to get your Lubans exchanged for local cash, or visit the nearest Orion Armed Forces Surplus Outlet.So they are just dying for some fruit...literally. And a TL6 world that can make nuclear ICBM's but doesn't know what cash is...
You know what cash is, right? If someone came up to you and offered you 10,000 Lubans in crisp Star Empire of Orion bills for your computer, would you accept the offer? After all, as he can tell you, it's a pretty good offer. For 10,000 Lubans you can buy a better replacement and still have cash left over. All you have to do is to get your Lubans exchanged for local cash, or visit the nearest Orion Armed Forces Surplus Outlet.
Hans
Sure, if somebody from outer space landed and wanted my computer, I'd take the money and I could sell them on ebay for 5 bucks a piece. That would not be the issue though, the issue would be the government taking me and my space money away.
Sure, if somebody from outer space landed and wanted my computer, I'd take the money and I could sell them on ebay for 5 bucks a piece. That would not be the issue though, the issue would be the government taking me and my space money away.
If I were that guys from outer space, you'd have gotten lubans worth close to what I'd said. I'd then sell the computer to one of my cronies who would then learn the protocols, and probably come back to collapse your economy with rapid virii that delete all the tenths in online transactions, setting them to 8, submitted via various links through unsecured wi-fi hubs. 'Cause I know people who are like that, and, given lower tech hardware would gleefully tear it apart in order to prep for the inevitable invasion.
If it were my acquaintance known as Twisted, they be photocopies... because he's that kind of guy... and he'd laugh, sell your computer to some other local for a crate of local produce and fabrics, and have repeated that until he'd filled his holds or had just the expected shelf life plus a week left on the produce.
Given that a key underlying assumption of the thread was that Imperial currency was not available to the locals, and that - despite this - just about everything that can be said about the currency issue has been said, might I respectfully point out -again - that the thread topic was finding things to trade in when, as declared in the initial post, there are "No CrImps to be had, it's strictly barter," and then suggest - ever-so-politely - that perhaps this endless discussion of Imperial credits might represent ever-so-slight a drift off-topic? Might I then suggest, without meaning to cause the slightest offense, that those obsessed with the notion of - oops, I mean, skillfully presenting arguments in favor of - having the natives flout the thread's declared limitations and somehow obtain and trade in masses of artfully decorated paper/plastic/whatever from places light-years away on the promise of total strangers that the paper/plastic/whatever had value, should perhaps start their own thread where they can freely debate without further aggravating the original poster?
Not really the point, Wil. The computer was simply the example of something valuable that could be sold that came to me first when I was making up the supposition.
The point I was trying to make was that lubans would be worthless to someone living on Earth today, no matter what they were worth elsewhere. You can't spend them at Home Depot, you can't exchange them in the bank, and you can't reach any place where they're accepted as cash.
In view of Dragoner's clever eBay suggestion, I'm going to amend that to lubans being worthless unless they can be disposed of for profit in some way other than as cash. Since the claim I was refuting was that Imperial credits would be valuable as cash, their potential value as curiosities are besides the point.
Hans
If I were that guys from outer space, you'd have gotten lubans worth close to what I'd said. I'd then sell the computer to one of my cronies who would then learn the protocols, and probably come back to collapse your economy with rapid virii that delete all the tenths in online transactions, setting them to 8, submitted via various links through unsecured wi-fi hubs. 'Cause I know people who are like that, and, given lower tech hardware would gleefully tear it apart in order to prep for the inevitable invasion.
If it were my acquaintance known as Twisted, they be photocopies... because he's that kind of guy... and he'd laugh, sell your computer to some other local for a crate of local produce and fabrics, and have repeated that until he'd filled his holds or had just the expected shelf life plus a week left on the produce.
Given that a key underlying assumption of the thread was that Imperial currency was not available to the locals, and that - despite this - just about everything that can be said about the currency issue has been said, might I respectfully point out -again - that the thread topic was finding things to trade in when, as declared in the initial post, there are "No CrImps to be had, it's strictly barter," and then suggest - ever-so-politely - that perhaps this endless discussion of Imperial credits might represent ever-so-slight a drift off-topic? Might I then suggest, without meaning to cause the slightest offense, that those obsessed with the notion of - oops, I mean, skillfully presenting arguments in favor of - having the natives flout the thread's declared limitations and somehow obtain and trade in masses of artfully decorated paper/plastic/whatever from places light-years away on the promise of total strangers that the paper/plastic/whatever had value, should perhaps start their own thread where they can freely debate without further aggravating the original poster?
There would be no barter, it is complete fantasy to think it.
Organized crime is called "organized" for a reason. They know how to survive. They know who to bribe, how to blackmail, how to cover up, how to make an example of someone who causes trouble. They know how to persuade a witness to change his testimony, how to persuade the detective not to be too thorough, how to keep the various threads of the organization separate so they can retrench and rebuild if the authorities manage to infiltrate and land the goods on someone. And, with 6 months to play with, they know how to assemble an acceptable payment without attracting too much attention.