Lord_Silverkey

Lord_Silverkey t1_ix2r03q wrote

My cousin has been going through this recently. He had to have most of his cheek removed from cancer in his mouth. He had "luckily" accidentally injured his cheek minorly at work, which then wouldn't heal, which caused the doctors to find the cancer.

My understanding is that they've replaced the cheek with a deep piece of tissue from his thigh, and then replaced the deep tissue on his thigh with thin tissue from his forearm.

He started chemo this past Friday. I believe it's to try to ensure that if any cancer spread further it'll be more effectively killed off and won't return as easily. He'll be getting doses 5 days a week until the new year.

It's pretty rough to see him go through it.

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Lord_Silverkey t1_isy4bbz wrote

I've been in some people's homes where they had litterally hundreds of silver coins.

There was a common belief amongst some people at the time that the government decided to switch to nickel because the price of silver was going to skyrocket. In response a lot of people would habitually remove any silver coins from their change and store them at home, hoping to cash in later.

Stemming from that, the Canadian government started minting a massive amount of new quarters to replace the old ones which were being removed by the general populace. You can check out the minting numbers here.

The number of half dollars that they minted at that point also went up, but not anywhere near to the level that quarters were being minted.

When the dust settled after that change, we got hit with a major recession in the 80s. The combined inflation between 1980 and 1987 was ~64%.

Before that date of 1987 half dollars were minted at numbers comparable to the number of full dollar coins. But at that point the government cut production of half dollar coins by -90% per year, and pumped out 500,000,000 million loonies by the end of 1990 only 3 years later. For reference, the total number of 1 dollar coins in circulation in 1985 was something like 100,000,000, so they literally multiplied the total number of Canadian one dollar coins in existence by a factor of 6 in only 3 years.

At that point half dollars unofficially became collectors items rather than legal tender, even if they still could be used as the latter.

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