Author Topic: New $100 bill. Illuminati R' US  (Read 12734 times)

El Diablo Blanco

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Re: New $100 bill. Illuminati R' US
« Reply #25 on: October 09, 2013, 10:52:06 AM »
^^^^

Finally someone saw it.  The gold inkwell was so obvious and no one mentioned it.  There is a lot more on the back of the bill as well.

avxo

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Re: New $100 bill. Illuminati R' US
« Reply #26 on: October 09, 2013, 11:11:26 AM »
Come on? Really? Also, for the record: anyone who believes a return to the gold standard is happening is just flat out crazy.

El Diablo Blanco

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Re: New $100 bill. Illuminati R' US
« Reply #27 on: October 09, 2013, 11:15:50 AM »
Come on? Really? Also, for the record: anyone who believes a return to the gold standard is happening is just flat out crazy.

9/11 was a diversion to get the gold from the vaults and move it without a trace.  It's pretty obvious

avxo

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Re: New $100 bill. Illuminati R' US
« Reply #28 on: October 09, 2013, 12:42:28 PM »
9/11 was a diversion to get the gold from the vaults and move it without a trace.  It's pretty obvious

I don't think "obvious" means what you think it means. But even if what you say were true, how does this even remotely suggest the US is going back on the gold standard? Anyone who says this is a realistic possibility is either stupid or insane.

arce1988

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Re: New $100 bill. Illuminati R' US
« Reply #29 on: October 09, 2013, 12:45:57 PM »
  Walter, what do you think?

The Ugly

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Re: New $100 bill. Illuminati R' US
« Reply #30 on: October 09, 2013, 12:49:47 PM »
9/11 was a diversion to get the gold from the vaults and move it without a trace.  It's pretty obvious

Too obvious. Why didn't they come up with something sneakier?

jude2

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Re: New $100 bill. Illuminati R' US
« Reply #31 on: October 09, 2013, 06:25:03 PM »
Wider than Heath
I think he might be the only guy not wider.

Nails

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Re: New $100 bill. Illuminati R' US
« Reply #32 on: October 11, 2013, 10:10:08 AM »
i got a hold of a few hundred dollar bills yesterday, and man does that 3d watermark make you fucking dizzy, just staring at it makes you hypnotized , its really trippy

Marty Champions

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Re: New $100 bill. Illuminati R' US
« Reply #33 on: October 11, 2013, 03:42:19 PM »
i got a hold of a few hundred dollar bills yesterday, and man does that 3d watermark make you fucking dizzy, just staring at it makes you hypnotized , its really trippy
;D
A

avxo

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Re: New $100 bill. Illuminati R' US
« Reply #34 on: October 11, 2013, 05:37:35 PM »
i got a hold of a few hundred dollar bills yesterday, and man does that 3d watermark make you fucking dizzy, just staring at it makes you hypnotized , its really trippy

Queue the conspiracy theory:

"The dizziness is a side-effect of the reprogramming performed by the NWO chip that is embedded into the bill. Once the bill completes its operation and your brain reboots, you will no longer feel dizzy citizen 169-24-4945-7378."

thebrink

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Re: New $100 bill. Illuminati R' US
« Reply #35 on: October 12, 2013, 03:19:20 PM »
Queue the conspiracy theory:

"The dizziness is a side-effect of the reprogramming performed by the NWO chip that is embedded into the bill. Once the bill completes its operation and your brain reboots, you will no longer feel dizzy citizen 169-24-4945-7378."

 :D :D

Marty Champions

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Re: New $100 bill. Illuminati R' US
« Reply #36 on: October 12, 2013, 03:42:40 PM »
our iphones will be able to install the "scale app" where we can weigh our mg's of gold
A

The Abdominal Snoman

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Re: New $100 bill. Illuminati R' US
« Reply #37 on: October 12, 2013, 09:00:14 PM »
There's a nano chip in the hundred dollar bill's ink...

avxo

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Re: New $100 bill. Illuminati R' US
« Reply #38 on: October 12, 2013, 09:55:06 PM »
There's a nano chip in the hundred dollar bill's ink...

What's that? What does it do? How does it work?

The Abdominal Snoman

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Re: New $100 bill. Illuminati R' US
« Reply #39 on: October 13, 2013, 12:20:17 PM »
What's that? What does it do? How does it work?

They are gonna be able to track large amounts(or any amount) of money at anytime with nano tracking in the money. No more burying large sums of money in the backyard. Any drug dealer in the neighborhood will have to think twice about putting his/her money in the walls. It starts with $100's and will move to $20 bills...If you have over $5000(or what ever number "they" feel we should have) sitting in your house/car/person, you may be asked to explain it.


avxo

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Re: New $100 bill. Illuminati R' US
« Reply #40 on: October 13, 2013, 01:12:57 PM »
They are gonna be able to track large amounts(or any amount) of money at anytime with nano tracking in the money. No more burying large sums of money in the backyard. Any drug dealer in the neighborhood will have to think twice about putting his/her money in the walls. It starts with $100's and will move to $20 bills...If you have over $5000(or what ever number "they" feel we should have) sitting in your house/car/person, you may be asked to explain it.

It's much more likely that our sun will go nova before December 31st, 2013 than it is that the $100 contains "nanochips" to facilitate "nano tracking". Sorry to be blunt, but you don't even know what you're talking about.

The Abdominal Snoman

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Re: New $100 bill. Illuminati R' US
« Reply #41 on: October 13, 2013, 05:38:53 PM »
It's much more likely that our sun will go nova before December 31st, 2013 than it is that the $100 contains "nanochips" to facilitate "nano tracking". Sorry to be blunt, but you don't even know what you're talking about.

Here's a story from over a decade ago

Radio ID chips may track banknotes
By Kim Yong-Young
Special to CNET News.com


RFID tags: Big Brother in small packages
January 13, 2003
Major retailers to test 'smart shelves'
January 8, 2003
Radio tags the size of a grain of sand could be embedded in the euro note if a reported deal between the European Central Bank (ECB) and Japanese electronics maker Hitachi is signed.
Japanese news agency Kyodo was reportedly told by Hitachi that the ECB has started talks with the company about the use of its radio chip in the banknote.
The ECB is deeply concerned about counterfeiting and money-laundering and is said to be looking at radio-tag technology.
Last year, Greek authorities were confronted with 2,411 counterfeiting cases and seized 4,776 counterfeit banknotes, while authorities in Poland nabbed a gang suspected of making more than a million fake euros and putting them into circulation.
To add to the problem, businesses also find it hard to judge a note's authenticity, as current equipment cannot tell between bogus currency and old notes with worn-out security marks. Among the security features in the current euro are threads visible under ultraviolet light.
"The main objective is to determine the authenticity of money and to stop counterfeits," Frost and Sullivan analyst Prianka Chopra said in a report published in March.
"RFID (radio frequency identification) tags also have the ability of recording information such as details of the transactions the paper note has been involved in. It would, therefore, also prevent money-laundering, make it possible to track illegal transactions and even prevent kidnappers demanding unmarked bills," Chopra said.
RFID tags are microchips half the size of a grain of sand. They listen for a radio query and respond by transmitting their unique ID code. Most RFID tags have no batteries: They use the power from the initial radio signal to transmit their response.
Besides acting as a digital watermark, the use of radio chips could speed up routine bank processes such as counting. With such tags, a stack of notes can be passed through a reader and the sum added in a split second, similar to how inventory is tracked in an RFID-based system.
The euro came into circulation on Jan.1 last year, with 12 countries adopting it as standard currency: Austria, Belgium, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Portugal and Spain.
If the ECB-Hitachi deal comes about, the project could involve the use of tiny radio tags, a feat that Hitachi claims to have already achieved.
In February, the Japanese firm said it had successfully operated the world's smallest noncontact chip, which measured only one-third of a millimeter across.
Hitachi said its "mu-chip" is capable of wirelessly transmitting a 128-bit number when radio signals are beamed at it.
In a euro note, the number could contain a serial code, as well as details such as place of origin and denomination.
Data can only be written on the chip's ROM during production, and not after it is out "in the wild," according to Hitachi.
The minuscule chip has been selected for use in admission tickets for Japan's international expo, which will be held in the country's Aichi Prefecture in 2005.
CNETAsia's Winston Chai reported from Singapore.

thebrink

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Re: New $100 bill. Illuminati R' US
« Reply #42 on: October 13, 2013, 05:55:30 PM »
unless cnn says so its not true.

avxo

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Re: New $100 bill. Illuminati R' US
« Reply #43 on: October 13, 2013, 08:21:41 PM »
Here's a story from over a decade ago

Radio ID chips may track banknotes
By Kim Yong-Young
Special to CNET News.com


RFID tags: Big Brother in small packages
January 13, 2003
Major retailers to test 'smart shelves'
January 8, 2003
Radio tags the size of a grain of sand could be embedded in the euro note if a reported deal between the European Central Bank (ECB) and Japanese electronics maker Hitachi is signed.
Japanese news agency Kyodo was reportedly told by Hitachi that the ECB has started talks with the company about the use of its radio chip in the banknote.
The ECB is deeply concerned about counterfeiting and money-laundering and is said to be looking at radio-tag technology.
Last year, Greek authorities were confronted with 2,411 counterfeiting cases and seized 4,776 counterfeit banknotes, while authorities in Poland nabbed a gang suspected of making more than a million fake euros and putting them into circulation.
To add to the problem, businesses also find it hard to judge a note's authenticity, as current equipment cannot tell between bogus currency and old notes with worn-out security marks. Among the security features in the current euro are threads visible under ultraviolet light.
"The main objective is to determine the authenticity of money and to stop counterfeits," Frost and Sullivan analyst Prianka Chopra said in a report published in March.
"RFID (radio frequency identification) tags also have the ability of recording information such as details of the transactions the paper note has been involved in. It would, therefore, also prevent money-laundering, make it possible to track illegal transactions and even prevent kidnappers demanding unmarked bills," Chopra said.
RFID tags are microchips half the size of a grain of sand. They listen for a radio query and respond by transmitting their unique ID code. Most RFID tags have no batteries: They use the power from the initial radio signal to transmit their response.
Besides acting as a digital watermark, the use of radio chips could speed up routine bank processes such as counting. With such tags, a stack of notes can be passed through a reader and the sum added in a split second, similar to how inventory is tracked in an RFID-based system.
The euro came into circulation on Jan.1 last year, with 12 countries adopting it as standard currency: Austria, Belgium, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Portugal and Spain.
If the ECB-Hitachi deal comes about, the project could involve the use of tiny radio tags, a feat that Hitachi claims to have already achieved.
In February, the Japanese firm said it had successfully operated the world's smallest noncontact chip, which measured only one-third of a millimeter across.
Hitachi said its "mu-chip" is capable of wirelessly transmitting a 128-bit number when radio signals are beamed at it.
In a euro note, the number could contain a serial code, as well as details such as place of origin and denomination.
Data can only be written on the chip's ROM during production, and not after it is out "in the wild," according to Hitachi.
The minuscule chip has been selected for use in admission tickets for Japan's international expo, which will be held in the country's Aichi Prefecture in 2005.
CNETAsia's Winston Chai reported from Singapore.

It's true that there are such chips - most pets have one. Most aren't quite as small as this (ancient) article describes, but let's ignore that. The μ-chip, which is mentioned, was indeed impressive. Much smaller passive chips exist today. But they don't include an antenna and even with one the read range is at best 2 millimeters - or 0.0787 inches... I wouldn't worry. Remember too, it's a fact that the $100 doesn't have such chips.

But if it did, and the chips were active RFID chips (which would need a battery, that could be a problem), all it would take to disable them would be a second or two in your trusty microwave. Yeah, that's right. The New World Order's plan to track all bills can be thwarted by a device that you already have in your kitchen.

Ahh, you may say, what if they were passive RFID chips, what then? Well, no problem. Use the RFID Zapper and it's all good - it's the same principle as the microwave but you can read all about it here: https://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2006/01/rfid_zapper.html.

I must say; it's amazing how all these smart NWO people can't come up with a plan that isn't trivially thwartable. I mean, they running a shadow government after all, they should be excellent at this sort of thing already, no?

Besides, if chips do end up on money (they will, eventually, although not for tracking but for anti-counterfeiting) you can bet it won't be the NWO folks who'll orchestrate that introduction. They'll be busy painting their helicopters white and putting the finishing touches on the plan to take over the world using frozen minced meat pies. How can they possibly fail?

ProudVirgin69

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Re: New $100 bill. Illuminati R' US
« Reply #44 on: October 13, 2013, 08:38:00 PM »
Avxo laying the smackdown in this thread.

I can't wait to see how your logic is explained away by wiggs & co

The Abdominal Snoman

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Re: New $100 bill. Illuminati R' US
« Reply #45 on: October 14, 2013, 08:18:01 AM »
It's true that there are such chips - most pets have one. Most aren't quite as small as this (ancient) article describes, but let's ignore that. The μ-chip, which is mentioned, was indeed impressive. Much smaller passive chips exist today. But they don't include an antenna and even with one the read range is at best 2 millimeters - or 0.0787 inches... I wouldn't worry. Remember too, it's a fact that the $100 doesn't have such chips.

But if it did, and the chips were active RFID chips (which would need a battery, that could be a problem), all it would take to disable them would be a second or two in your trusty microwave. Yeah, that's right. The New World Order's plan to track all bills can be thwarted by a device that you already have in your kitchen.

Ahh, you may say, what if they were passive RFID chips, what then? Well, no problem. Use the RFID Zapper and it's all good - it's the same principle as the microwave but you can read all about it here: https://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2006/01/rfid_zapper.html.

I must say; it's amazing how all these smart NWO people can't come up with a plan that isn't trivially thwartable. I mean, they running a shadow government after all, they should be excellent at this sort of thing already, no?

Besides, if chips do end up on money (they will, eventually, although not for tracking but for anti-counterfeiting) you can bet it won't be the NWO folks who'll orchestrate that introduction. They'll be busy painting their helicopters white and putting the finishing touches on the plan to take over the world using frozen minced meat pies. How can they possibly fail?


I don't believe it will be RFID chips because of the cost. But nanotechnology is moving at a rapid pace. We are already seeing it in paints and inks. I do agree that it's main purpose will be for anti-counterfeiting but if it can be used for other purposes, it will be imop...


The Abdominal Snoman

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Re: New $100 bill. Illuminati R' US
« Reply #46 on: October 14, 2013, 08:26:08 AM »
Interesting article posted a half decade ago about nano/counterfeiters


Nanotechnology Seen as Answer to Counterfeiters
by ADAM DAVIDSON
February 27, 2007 6:00 AM

The money in your pocket is going to start looking and acting — yes, acting — quite strange in a few years. That's according to a government report, just released, which argues that the only way for the U.S. government to stay ahead of counterfeiters is to use nanotechnology. If this happens, our money will no longer be a printed piece of paper. It will become a very thin, very high-tech machine.

Robert Schafrik sees the result of his work every time he looks at the cash in his wallet.

In 1993, he was in charge of the committee that recommended security changes, like color-shifting ink, a security strip and making the portraits bigger and off-center.

You've probably noticed these changes, which appear to have worked. Counterfeiting is not a big problem in this country. But Schafrik, who led this year's National Research Council study on currency, said that counterfeiting is likely to explode if the U.S. doesn't make some radical changes to our paper bills.

Within five to 10 years, he says, "the software will be so easy to use that anyone will be able to use it, even the casual counterfeiter."

Forget global crime syndicates or foreign pariah states. In a few years, with even the cheapest printer, you'll be able to counterfeit money. The pizza delivery comes, you're short $10. No problem. Scan the $10 bill you do have into a computer, hit print, and you've got a perfect fidelity bill. In short, the United States will not be able to stop counterfeiting by making paper currency more and more intricate. Printers will reproduce any image.

"The future is not going to be in more color, or more finely printed images," says Alan Goldstein, a molecular engineering professor at Alfred University. "The future is going to be in the materials from which the bill, itself, is made."

Goldstein was on Schafrik's committee to deter counterfeiting. He says nanotechnology will save our currency. By manipulating the molecules inside the bill itself, engineers can make currency do amazing things, including change its shape and texture.

"Say you snap a dollar bill between your fingers and the edges become rigid," he says. "And then you pull on them and the edges become normal currency handled every day."

Currency could have dynamic images, too. Squeeze Ben Franklin's face and he might smile or wink or turn purple. Within a decade, Goldstein says, we could use incredibly strong molecules that feel and act like paper, but cannot be cut with scissors.

Then the test becomes easy:

"If you can cut it with a pair of scissors, then it's counterfeit," Goldstein says. "And if you can't, then it's the real deal."

Goldstein says these nanotechnology solutions are not wild fantasies. They're already being used in medicine and defense. Within a decade, they'll be cheap enough to put in currency.

But they won't be too cheap, Goldstein says. The whole point would be to use technology that's too expensive for the home user to duplicate. The report says nanotechnology should keep paper currency safe from rampant counterfeiting for at least another 100 years.

The Abdominal Snoman

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Re: New $100 bill. Illuminati R' US
« Reply #47 on: October 14, 2013, 08:40:43 AM »
Some interesting info about the new $100 bill is that it was supposed to be released in Feb 2011. But 30% were deemed useless because of some kind of manufacturing flaw. Which pushed back it's release about 3 years...3 Fukcing years because of a manufacturing flaw? Or did nanotechnology progress more rapidly that they scraped their initial plan?

Pasted

The Series 2009 $100 bill redesign was unveiled on April 21, 2010, and was to be issued to the public on February 11, 2011,[4][5] but production was shut down in December 2010 because as many as 30% were unusable due to a manufacturing flaw. A vertical crease in the paper reveals a blank space on the bill when pulled out.[6] Specifically, during initial production it was noticed that occasionally a sheet of notes (32 banknotes per sheet) would crease. In their replacement, and continuing the high demand of this denomination, the Series 2006A was issued retaining the previous design (1996-generation).