Mexico Silver: More Than Nevada — Olé! Olé! Olé!
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Thom CalandraLeave a Comment(Edit)
Dumbledore Rich: EXK | Plus — Yen-Franc Confirmation Looms
TCR family: More on what to avoid in Nevada; what to look for in Mexico; what to look for in yen-franc trade conirmation for the gold rally.
Originally published for TCR subsribers August 6, 2015
NEVADA – They call this part of the USA the
silver state. Nevada is a land of plenty, we are told. It is home of that state of mind called
Vegas. Best conference city in America. Worst conference city in America.
Nevada State Flag
When I am offshore from the USA, way offshore, the
two spots people mention most often as wanting to go there, or having been there, or intending to go there:
NYC and
Las Vegas.
Vegas is champion of boxing box office. It is the ruling box-office rock star for pop-star engagements, too. It’s a win-Wynn for lovers of food, music, cabaret and luxury.
Outside of LV, the silver state of Nevada has much tagged as
the future of humanity. Thus: the future of electric cars and households via large lithium-ion batteries.
The future of droid-driven retail delivery.
The future of large-scale mining.
We have in Nevada a vast
Reno landscape of Amazon.com and other warehouses and distribution centers. These indoor arenas stretch for square blocks and blocks and are as important to the economy in that city as the Silver Legacy and other casinos are. They are the scale of those super-size-me outdoor gold mining pits operated by Newmont, Barrick and others in the sparsely populated state.
What Does That Even Mean?
In
Nevada as a single state, we have the fourth-largest gold producer worldwide — much of it via
eensy-weensy specs of metal that are harvested in monstrously scaled sand dunes across the western USA’s
Great Basin.
Oh, and more than the national average of extraterrestrial sightings. Just ask my 20-years-and-running friend, neighbor and fellow gourmand
Chris Kitze of
BeforeItsNews.com — he (and I) try to stay aware of all possibilities and have visited sightings and our fair share of ghost towns and abandoned mines in Nevada.
Here is what to sidestep in Nevada and what to look for in Mexico in the way of silver:
as in Endeavour Silver.
Plus: the yen-franc confirmation we have flagged since March 2015.
Please read on.
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