>>Of course, using potato credits would be the best deal. <<
What? Of course? How stupid of a generalization is that? You're PRESUMING that all credits require the same amount of investment (including time, LABOR) to produce. Anyone older than 10 can figure out that that's just silly.
>>You have a lot of onion credits, though, as you grow onions in your garden. <<
Where did you break down the increased cost of all agricultural goods distributors being open to unregulated growing by random people? Someone has to pick up or take your onions, package them, evaluate them, and distribute them. Sure you get your "onion credits," but there's a lot more cost involved in taking all products randomly from accross the globe/area than current producers. And then there's that lack of regulation for health/safety purposes. Pardon my sarcasm. I know that you have not, in fact, addressed either of these points. Again, those are the increased cost and difficulty of regulation (with any additional regulation, by the nature of this extremely decentralized production in which every single private citizen is a contributor on their own, to catch up costing EVEN MORE).
>>You think maybe they're short on potatoes or something.<<
Maybe you'd think that if you were a retard? They don't want microchips or raisins either. They'd just be trading for other things. Like money. It sounds like your system would SCREW anyone with resources which become overly abundant (thus lowering their value) MUCH more than a monetary system does now. Fact of life: If what you're selling isn't worth much, you're not going to get much for selling it. Find a new product or service and move on. That's life. You can produce 10 million of something nobody wants--how does that make you entitled to anything because you produced junk?
>>Anyway, while in line, you push a few buttons on your keypad and do a little online banking: you exchange your onion credits for potato credits at a good rate: 1:1.<<
So, after this hastle of having to exchange credits while in line to get lunch (just what I want to do during lunch, more economic transactions!), what you end up with is a very fluid economy of assets in which the value of things changes in relation to the general cost of goods in an economy? THAT SOUNDS A LOT LIKE A MONETARY SYSTEM, YOU DUMB [saving some poor mod some work]. Pardon my French. But read it again until you take it in. And again, if necessary. And then again. And again... Forget it. You're just not equipped for basic economics yet. I wish you well.
In case you haven't been entirely "owned," in terms of pre-teen arguments, yet:
"You see that you can get a happy meal for 1.5976 potato credits"
"You see that you can get a happy meal for... 2.1 onion credits"
-----coupled with:------
"you exchange your onion credits for potato credits at a good rate: 1:1."
This has to be the most disgusting display of ignorance of the most basic economics EVER by anyone who's started a thread they're still posting in 19 pages later. This is simply the dumbest and most idiotic lack of applied consciousness I've ever seen.
[I wish I could obey forum rules]