The president has not just the option to do this, but also the requirement. He would just be following the constitution, something this so-called constitutional scholar has repeatedly failed to do.
============
Here is most of the letter I hand-delivered to Representative Jerry Nadler's office a day after we met. It contains a summary of the advantages of U.S. Notes. I have not yet received a reply:
January 22, 2013
Dear Congressman Nadler:
It was a great honor to meet you at the Progressive NYC launch party last night. With your platinum coin idea, you have solidified your reputation as a true progressive, unafraid to think outside the box, a rarity in politics.
To summarize our discussion on Greenbacking last night, these are some of the advantages and features of issuing debt-free money, direct from the Treasury Department:
1. The money does not have to be borrowed from the Central Bank by issuing Treasury bonds, which carry interest. The seigniorage savings is in the hundreds of billions/year.
2. Congress can issue any amount, at any time, for any reason, under the Constitution's Article 1, Section 8, "coin Money" clause (see Robert Natelson's paper from the Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy, "The Coinage Clause in the Constitution" Click Here).
3. President Lincoln DID issue $450 million in United States Notes (aka Greenbacks) in 1862-1863 to fund the north during the Civil War, when NY banks wanted up to 36% interest. This money was up to 40% of the currency during the height of the war, at a critical time for our nation (then, as now, the banks cared more for their own profit, than for the nation's well-being).
4. The Supreme Court, in a series of legal tender cases, but culminating in Julliard v. Greenman, by an 8-1 ruling, affirmed the right of the Federal Government to create money itself in 1884 (before there was a Central Bank). This ruling stands today.
5. United States Notes continued to be produced, in 14 total series, until 1972, and the stock was not fully burned by Treasury until 1996. Even now, Treasury estimates there are $239 million of them in circulation (including the $5 note I showed you last night, which cost twice face value on eBay). U.S. Notes were our longest-lasting form of currency.
6. According to the Treasury Department, United States Notes CANNOT legally be used to pay down the debt, going back to Lincoln, so they are not subject to the debt ceiling - see:
"Monthly Statement of the Public Debt of the United States"
and this is a feature, not a bug,
because....
7. Trillions in United States Notes, or their electronic equivalent,
could be issued to produce FDR-scale public works projects, creating real,
good, middle class jobs to, for example, rebuild our crumbling infrastructure.
(Note: You can view every article as one long page if you sign up as an Advocate Member, or higher).