Have you noticed strange stuff on dollar bills? A friend of mine told me about the owl on the dollar bill (for those who have never seen it, it’s located on the George Washington side of the bill perched on the crest encircling the 1 in the top right corner. The owl is sitting on the top left corner of the crest.
Is this perhaps proof of the Illuminati watching us through our currency?
What other strange stuff have you seen on dollar bills (or any other kinds of bills - like $5, $10, $20, or $100 bills)?
“I never lie, but I don’t always say what I’m thinking.”
I don’t know about any owl, but there is a microchip that registers the brain waves of the person closest to the bill and transmits the data to the trilateral commission’s secret hideout, deep underneath the arctic ice sheet.
fnord
Look at the 1 in the top right corner of the bill on the side with George Washington’s face.
Look at the odd-shaped crest encircling the 1.
On the top left corner of the crest, there is a tiny owl. It might take a little time, but you can see it. Look just to the right of the leaf closest to the crest.
(But beware, because the secret society tracks you with the owl )
“I never lie, but I don’t always say what I’m thinking.”
That “owl” is actually just part of the intricate lacework pattern worked into the border of the bill. If you look carefully along the top, you’ll see that little tip show up a couple of times. It’s just an interesting juxtaposition of the pattern and the shield bearing the “1” in that corner.
I was always told that the shape was a spider that wove the intricate web along the border of the bill, not an owl–not that it really matters. Anyway, what about the digits 3172 on the bushes to the left of the Lincoln Memorial on the back of the $5? (The 3 requires a little imagination).
That’s part of George Washington’s Archie Andrews-style bow-tie. See, George was REALLY hung over that morning, and he tied his bow-tie on the wrong side of his neck.
Sticking out from the back of George’s coat is the end of the bow (hair-tie) that would have held his braid together. While not quite Jamaican mon, single large braids and ribbons were quite common, and even can be seen today on the hairpieces (technical term) that British barristers wear from time to time.
Chuck L.
“The intellectuals’ chief cause of anguish are one another’s works.”
Jacques Barzun
Cheers! CAL
No contest, Uke. Yours, of course!! It’s surely the more plausible of the two…
And Uncle, you taught me a new word in English (peruke), borrowed directly from us Frenchies, to boot!! Always thought you simply called it a “wig”. Shows you how much this translator knows!
All right, I give up…where is the naked chick? All I see in the picture on the back of the $10 bill is the Treasury building, the street corner with people and lampposts, one Model T in the foreground and some other vintage cars in the back on the right…where’s the “naked chick”–standing in a second-floor window on the Treasury building? Huh???
Look at the bushes just above and to the left of the first car. Pay particular attention to how the upper edge of the bushes looks against the building to the left of the lamppost.
Dr. Fidelius, Charlatan
Associate Curator Anomalous Paleontology, Miskatonic University
“You cannot reason a man out of a position he did not reach through reason.”
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