. . [thus] render[ing] the penny unnecessary” (Source A). While this law may reduce the amount of pennies produce and thus reduce the amount of copper manufactured for pennies each year, Kolbe’s proposition has the ability to lead into an endless peril of ridding the economy of the lowest-value coins. If the penny is not used, will the nickel then be banned in a few decades? Then the dime? The quarter? Introducing such a system of currency would prove far too strenuous to Kolbe regardless, given the fact that fifty-nine percent of Americans aged eighteen and over oppose abolishing the penny, compared to twenty-three Americans favoring the abolition of the penny with eighteen percent of citizens having no official opinion (Source E). The time and money spent to conduct polls and attempt to persuade two-thirds of the American population to forfeit their pocket change proves fatal; it would be a waste of time and evidently a waste of money (including pennies!). Even our neighbors in Great Britain, Canada, Japan, and the U.S. have “the penny or penny-equivalent” coins (Source
. . [thus] render[ing] the penny unnecessary” (Source A). While this law may reduce the amount of pennies produce and thus reduce the amount of copper manufactured for pennies each year, Kolbe’s proposition has the ability to lead into an endless peril of ridding the economy of the lowest-value coins. If the penny is not used, will the nickel then be banned in a few decades? Then the dime? The quarter? Introducing such a system of currency would prove far too strenuous to Kolbe regardless, given the fact that fifty-nine percent of Americans aged eighteen and over oppose abolishing the penny, compared to twenty-three Americans favoring the abolition of the penny with eighteen percent of citizens having no official opinion (Source E). The time and money spent to conduct polls and attempt to persuade two-thirds of the American population to forfeit their pocket change proves fatal; it would be a waste of time and evidently a waste of money (including pennies!). Even our neighbors in Great Britain, Canada, Japan, and the U.S. have “the penny or penny-equivalent” coins (Source