To do so could be a critical poke in the eye to a world monetary system that is rigged to make the rich richer, and richer, and richer still, by keeping the rest of the human race in perpetual debt.
Let's go back to Arthur Banks (Blog 16). What would his community look like if Arthur continued to issue his generous little gift slips? Let's say they averaged 20 transactions before they got back to him, and that some of them never did come back to him. What would his neighbourhood look like?
I would say, very prosperous.
There would be more money to do more things with - like buy better food, see more movies, have more toys, repair more potholes. Now, wait a minute, you say. Repairing potholes is the town government's job. Yes, so suppose the town government accepted Arthurnotes for tax payments, and then used the Arthurnotes to pay its employees for repairing the potholes. Would that work?
In fact, there many such local currencies - hey are sometimes called L.E.T.S., Local Exchange Token Systems. Look up the "Hours" of Ithaca, New York, which has been a local currency operating since the early 1990's. An Ithaca "hour" was valued at ten American dollars. Or look into Argentine's monetary collapse, when the LETS carried the ball and kept the local economies functioning.
So lets cheer Greece on. When pushed to the wall, lets see it go it alone with its own internal currency. Without debt charges eating up the nation's sustenance, Greece has a lot going for it: tourism, agriculture, its strategic location between the oil of the east and the vehicles of the west. For a more exciting read on this point, check out the very compelling article by David Olive in the Toronto Star (July 10th. I think), "What does Greece need? The last thing it's getting."
Most great historic movements have started with a single impetus.
Which reminds me - am planning to visit Iceland soon. Will tell you about it.