And keep Grover on it. Put a new Ford class super carrier on the back, just to let our enemies know there's an ass kicking out there should they need it.
With the inflation the Fed is facilitating, it's really not a crazy amount of money.
We used to have a battleship, the carrier of it's day, on the back of the two dollar bill, so there's precedent.
That was the tiny first step toward a cashless society. Their excuse was that drug lords were the only ones using them. I don't believe it.
ReplyDeleteCashless society can never be allowed. That would be a nightmare of government control over everything and a huge subtraction of freedom. Maybe Bitcoin as a rescue?
DeleteBB 34 USS New York
ReplyDeleteBB 35 USS Texas
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nk9B57RfqDo
I like the idea of a $1,000 bill with Grover on it, and maybe the Trump Presidential Library on the reverse.
ReplyDeleteA Barack Obama $3 bill was floated, and you can buy simulations on amazon.com in the form of novelty toilet paper.
"...the carrier of it is day...?"
ReplyDeletePossession. It's meant to communicate possession. Is that so wrong?
DeleteRe: "
ReplyDeletec w swansonJuly 19, 2018 at 4:54 AM
Possession. It's meant to communicate possession. Is that so wrong"
It's [i.e.it is] a question of its use as a possessive pronoun versus the contraction of subject with verb ["it's"].
Exactamundo.
DeleteAnother (less elegant, I grant you) explanation regards recognizing "it" as a pronoun - and then pointing out the clumsiness of employing "our's," "her's," or "their's" in a like manner.
Re: the clumsiness of employing "our's," "her's," or "their's"
ReplyDeleteThe high intellect of us'n in the South fixed that problem with:
our'n, her'n, their'n