1992 3 Pesos (Che Guevara)

Discussion in 'World Coins' started by Teran, Feb 5, 2021.

  1. Paddy54

    Paddy54 Well-Known Member

    Late 1930's and 1940's Europe was under Fascist regime not socialism! Google both no way Nazism was socialist ....two very different schools of goverment.
    If Nazi's were socialist Russia would never of fought Germany.

    And again one's patriot depends what side you are on.....and what ideology you follow.
    Playing the devil's advocate here not condoneing any actions or acts.....by any goverment, as people in glass houses shouldn't throw stones.
    And if one is a student of history there is an abundances of actions buy every goverment world wide who have made bad choices in trying to put their ideology on others.
    And that pratice can be traced back to the begining of time!
     
    Last edited: Feb 6, 2021
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. Teran

    Teran Active Member

    Interesting!
     
    Paddy54 likes this.
  4. Paddy54

    Paddy54 Well-Known Member

    I hope you don't mind, i will apologise if you do, knowlege is power....sharing it makes others think! Thanks for starting this thread...as it has give us a platform to share.
     
  5. expat

    expat Remember you are unique, just like everyone else Supporter

    Hate to appear picky, but Plata is Spanish for Silver, Oro is Spanish for gold
     
    Jim Dale, spirityoda and Paddy54 like this.
  6. Paddy54

    Paddy54 Well-Known Member

    20210206_113806.jpg 20210206_101429.jpg
    Another 20 peso note.... again date, and who printed the note, and Che' signature on the note.
    What is simply amazing to me is most all of these notes were part of my life time my segment of history that I lived though. Even thought I was in my childhood years I can still recall moments in that time that throught a childs eyes were of concern, but not enough to stop me from enjoying life thought the eyes of a child.
     
  7. Paddy54

    Paddy54 Well-Known Member

    I stand corrected, and yes you are correct....Spanish is a lanuage I have studied years ago..not used daily today....plus the meds....lol..tend to play tricks on the mind.
     
    expat likes this.
  8. expat

    expat Remember you are unique, just like everyone else Supporter

    As they say, use it or lose it. Happens to me too but what the heck, every morning you wake up breathing is a good day, lol
     
    spirityoda and Paddy54 like this.
  9. Paddy54

    Paddy54 Well-Known Member

    What I have issues with is in Catholic grade school they taught French, At 12 years old I worked in an Italian bakery with old world bakers....in H.S. I took Spanish...since all of the above was a lifetime ago...I somehow get words and phrases mixed up.
    Yeah I can cherry pick some words being spoken to me....but when trying to a answer someone it could be a mixture of all of the above, and some South Baltimoreese....accent.
    Sometimes it all works out....sometimes at my age finding the bath room ends up behinde a tree lol. J/k
     
  10. Mr.Q

    Mr.Q Well-Known Member

    Thanks for the stream spirityoda. He was a great strategist and very well educated. He certainly deserves his place in history. Thanks for the post Teran
     
    expat, Paddy54 and spirityoda like this.
  11. Jim Dale

    Jim Dale Well-Known Member

    I was wondering if someone would correct the Spanish word for gold. Thank you. I was a missionary for our church in Uruguay 1966-1968. Our church had foreign language classes for countries back then. They have perfected their language training. When I returned from Uruguay, I had a pocket full of coins and several 10 Peso bills. My ex through away my coins, but I preserved the bills. I have 10 of the 10 Peso bills that the serial number is in numerical order. They are dated 1967. The marks on one bill is tape. (So sue me. I was 20.) I have eight more. I've been told they aren't worth much, but they are to me because that was 53 years ago. I'm not sure but I think Che came to Uruguay and was immediately ousted. It was the 50th anniversary of the Russian overthrow.
     

    Attached Files:

    expat likes this.
  12. spirityoda

    spirityoda Coin Junky

    The spanish word for gold is Oro. For silver it is plata.
     
    Paddy54 likes this.
  13. Paddy54

    Paddy54 Well-Known Member

    LoL @spirtyoda
    Re read the first sentence...as I made the same mistake thinking my orginial error mixing up Plata and oro using the words incorrectly someone was asking for clarification.
    No they were wondering if someone was going to call me out on my error. Mea Culpa
     
    spirityoda likes this.
  14. Jim Dale

    Jim Dale Well-Known Member

    You quoted me, but I was not the one that made the SNAFU.
     
  15. john65999

    john65999 Well-Known Member

    JUST CHECKED, ALL THAT COMES UP IS CUBAN JEWELRY
     
  16. spirityoda

    spirityoda Coin Junky

    Try typing Caribe, 40 centavos, 10 centavos, I got hits on those. I wish I could afford that 40 centavos at $300 they are rare in higher grades.
     
    Bradley Trotter likes this.
  17. taktak77

    taktak77 New Member

    Just to amuse you as student of history. Full name of Hitlers party is national-socialist, they call themselves genosse (comrad); they call their leader as fuhrer, the same as Russian bolshevik, but in local translation; German banners of this period is red ones, the same as Soviet, different symbol. Very interesting similarity in banknotes theme: all for the "working people" - super interesting topic.
    Before they start fighting in 1941, they divided Europe in 1939 and start World War II as alliants. The only difference is that both of them thought of themselves only as "true socialist". Yes, system of government was different because of different cultural perception, but not the idea: to drag people to a "brighter future" that only they know how and when.
    And just to add to the pile - Mussolini was a socialist ... .
    Nothing new ...
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page