Friday, November 22, 2013

SECRETS of NEW $100 DOLLAR BILL - Hidden Elite NUCLEAR ATTACK AGENDA Revealed & EXPOSED

A video blogger claims that there are hidden messages in the new $100 dollar bill which warn of future nuclear devastation in the United States.

Back in 2002, it emerged that when a $20 dollar bill was folded in a certain way it revealed images that resembled the 9/11 attacks, a story that caused quite a stir at the time since the notes were issued three years beforehand in 1998.

Are the hidden images in the new $100 bill a chilling prophecy of future events, or just another example of how people are obsessed with doomsday fantasies that require a huge leap in imagination and logic to believe?




New $100 bill+ $10 bill = NYC Nuke. The New $100 Bill has finally been released to the public. This new bill finishes the story that the $10 Bill started with the missile launch and tidal wave. The two bills together tell the story of a nuclear event taking place on the East Coast promulgated by the US Government.......

"For our struggle is not against [a]flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the powers, against the world forces of this darkness, against the spiritual forces of wickedness in the heavenly places." EPHESIANS 6:12

The government shutdown is forcing Lake Mead residents out of their homes because they sit on federal land, a Las Vegas television station reported.

Joyce Spencer, 77, and her husband, Ralph, 80, were given 24 hours to vacate their home on Thursday.

SEE ALSO: House approves retroactive pay for furloughed government workers

"I had to go to town today and buy Ralph undershirts and jeans because I forgot his pants," Mrs. Spencer told KTNV.

The couple has been living in the family ice cream store, and they're not allowed home until the government reopens, the station said.

"I had to be sure and get his walker and his scooter that he has to go in," Mrs. Spencer said. "We're not hurt in any way except it might cost me if I have to go buy more pants."

The Lake Mead properties are considered vacation homes, and one of the lease requirements is people must have an alternative residence, the station said.

There are about $900 billion worth of hundred-dollar bills in circulation, and most of them are overseas.

2. About half to two-thirds of Benjamins are held internationally. The Federal Reserve is overseeing the introduction of the new bill and targeting much of its messaging to foreign countries. Judging from the list of languages its marketing materials are translated into, major holders of hundreds include Azerbaijan, Russia, Vietnam, Indonesia and Korea.

3. The Benjamin is the second banana to the Washington.

There were 8.6 billion hundreds in circulation at the end of 2012. That makes them the second most-circulated bill after the dollar. But the $100 bill is the fastest-growing: The number in circulation has quintupled over the past two decades.
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4. Currency is cyclical.

The Fed has stockpiled 3.5 billion new $100 bills at its 28 reserve bank cash offices. They will circulate them among the 9,000 banks they do business with directly starting Tuesday. The number of bills requested varies daily but tends to run in cycles. Demand spikes around Christmas and the Lunar New Year, for example, when consumers are on the lookout for crisp bills to give as gifts.

5. Hundred-dollar bills are built to last.

The estimated "life span" of a $100 bill is 15 years, the longest of any denomination. The $10 bill has the shortest life span, clocking in at just 4.2 years. Still, money is made to endure: A regular piece of paper can be folded 400 times before it breaks, says Peter Hopkins, a consultant to Crane & Co., which makes the paper on which our currency is printed. A U.S. bill is designed to withstand 8,000 folds.

6. One company has provided the paper for the nation's currency since 1879.

That would be the aforementioned Crane & Co., based in Dalton, Mass. The company's roots date back even further — to 1776, when Paul Revere was looking for a paper mill to help him issue notes to pay soldiers during the American Revolution. The name of paper mill owner Stephen Crane's burgeoning business? The Liberty Paper Mill.

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