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Mike Kleinsmith

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  1. I understand that the mint produces a different amount of each coin, each year, and at each mint produces a different coin total for any given year. Then each mints total amount are added together to arrive at the total number of coins produce for that one year, but what I don't understand is how that number is held as accurate the following year, because even as new to this as I am I can clearly see the mint simply pulls the coins from every prior year and just stamps the next year over the last. It doest take a rocket scientist to figure out the whole reason behind the small/ large date on coins was to make this less noticeable. So my question is why is there no deduction in coins produced for any year if the mint deducts from that very number and I'm sure starts doing do almost immediately and again im sure countinues doing so the entire year, in doing so wouldn't that drop that very number significantly, yet coin collectors stay true to that number as the year in which it was made up, I meant minted up without question. It just seems coin collecting for anyone just starting off like myself Is about as rigged as the federal reserve.