THE ONE
DOLLAR
BILL
Take out
a one
dollar
bill.
The one
dollar
bill
you're
looking
at first
came off
the
presses
in 1957
in its
present
design.
This
so-called
paper
money is
in fact
a cotton
and
linen
blend,
with red
and blue
minute
silk
fibers
running
through
it. It
is
actually
material.
We've
all
washed
it
without
it
falling
apart. A
special
blend of
ink is
used,
the
contents
we will
never
know. It
is
overprinted
with
symbols
and then
it is
starched
to make
it water
resistant
and
pressed
to give
it that
nice
crisp
look.
If you
look on
the
front of
the
bill,
you will
see the
United
States
Treasury
Seal. On
the top
you will
see the
scales
for a
balanced
budget.
In the
center
you have
a
carpenter's
square,
a tool
used for
an even
cut.
Underneath
is the
Key to
the
United
States
Treasury.
That's
all
pretty
easy to
figure
out, but
what is
on the
back of
that
dollar
bill is
something
we
should
all
know.
If you
turn the
bill
over,
you will
see two
circles.
Both
circles,
together,
comprise
the
Great
Seal of
the
United
States.
The
First
Continental
Congress
requested
that
Benjamin
Franklin
and a
group of
men come
up with
a Seal.
It took
them
four
years to
accomplish
this
task and
another
two
years to
get it
approved.
If you
look at
the
left-hand
circle,
you will
see a
Pyramid.
Notice
the face
is
lighted,
and the
western
side is
dark.
This
country
was just
beginning.
We had
not
begun to
explore
the West
or
decided
what we
could do
for
Western
Civilization.
The
Pyramid
is
un-capped,
again
signifying
that we
were not
even
close to
being
finished.
Inside
the
capstone
you have
the
all-seeing
eye, an
ancient
symbol
for
divinity.
It was
Franklin's
belief
that one
man
couldn't
do it
alone,
but a
group of
men,
with the
help of
God,
could do
anything.
"IN GOD
WE
TRUST"
is on
this
currency.
The
Latin
above
the
pyramid,
ANNUIT
COEPTIS,
means,
"God has
favored
our
undertaking."
The
Latin
below
the
pyramid,
NOVUS
ORDO
SECLORUM,
means,
"a new
order
has
begun."
At the
base of
the
pyramid
is the
Roman
Numeral
for
1776.
If
you look
at the
right-hand
circle,
and
check it
carefully,
you will
learn
that it
is on
every
National
Cemetery
in the
United
States.
It is
also on
the
Parade
of Flags
Walkway
at the
Bushnell,
Florida
National
Cemetery,
and is
the
centerpiece
of most
hero's
monuments.
Slightly
modified,
it is
the seal
of the
President
of the
United
States,
and it
is
always
visible
whenever
he
speaks,
yet very
few
people
know
what the
symbols
mean.
The Bald
Eagle
was
selected
as a
symbol
for
victory
for two
reasons:
First,
he is
not
afraid
of a
storm;
he is
strong,
and he
is smart
enough
to soar
above
it.
Secondly,
he wears
no
material
crown.
We had
just
broken
from the
King of
England.
Also,
notice
the
shield
is
unsupported.
This
country
can now
stand on
its own.
At the
top of
that
shield
you have
a white
bar
signifying
congress,
a
unifying
factor.
We were
coming
together
as one
nation.
In the
Eagle's
beak you
will
read, "E
PLURIBUS
UNUM",
meaning,
"one
nation
from
many
people".
Above
the
Eagle,
you have
thirteen
stars,
representing
the
thirteen
original
colonies,
and any
clouds
of
misunderstanding
rolling
away.
Again,
we were
coming
together
as one.
Notice
what the
Eagle
holds in
his
talons.
He holds
an olive
branch
and
arrows.
This
country
wants
peace,
but we
will
never be
afraid
to fight
to
preserve
peace.
The
Eagle
always
wants to
face the
olive
branch,
but in
time of
war, his
gaze
turns
toward
the
arrows.
They say
that the
number
13 is an
unlucky
number.
This is
almost a
worldwide
belief.
You will
usually
never
see a
room
numbered
13, or
any
hotels
or
motels
with a
13th
floor.
But
think
about
this: 13
original
colonies,
13
signers
of the
Declaration
of
Independence,
13
stripes
on our
flag, 13
steps on
the
Pyramid,
13
letters
in the
Latin
above,
13
letters
in "E
Pluribus
Unum",
13 stars
above
the
Eagle,
13 bars
on that
shield,
13
leaves
on the
olive
branch,
13
fruits,
and if
you look
closely,
13
arrows.
And, for
minorities:
the 13th
Amendment.
I always
ask
people,
"Why
don't
you know
this?"
Your
children
don't
know
this,
and
their
history
teachers
don't
know
this.
Too many
veterans
have
given up
too much
to ever
let the
meaning
fade.
Many
veterans
remember
coming
home to
an
America
that
didn't
care.
Too many
veterans
never
came
home at
all.
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