Redesigned $100 bill to enter circulation in October


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WASHINGTON ? The Federal Reserve announced Wednesday that it will begin circulating a redesigned $100 bill this fall, more than two years after its initial target.

The Fed has set a new target date of Oct. 8. The redesigned note incorporates added security features, such as a blue, 3-D security ribbon and a disappearing Liberty Bell in an inkwell. The features are designed to thwart counterfeiters.

The revamped bill had been expected to go into circulation in February 2011. But in December 2010, officials announced an indefinite delay. They said they needed more time to fix production issues that left unwanted creases in many of the notes.

"We made numerous process changes to address the creasing issue and we are back in full production," said Dawn Haley, a spokeswoman for the Bureau of Engraving and Printing.

Haley said those changes included modifying the paper feeder on the printing presses to accommodate variations in the paper associated with the 3-D security ribbon. The blue security ribbon is composed of thousands of tiny lenses. Those lenses magnify the objects underneath them to make them appear to be moving in the opposite direction from the way the bill is being moved.

Benjamin Franklin portrait will remain on the $100 bill, the highest value denomination in general circulation. It is also the most frequent target of counterfeiters.

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Was wondering what happened to these. Look pretty cool, looking forward to seeing them in person. I see hundreds of hundreds every day at work, so hopefully the new security features cut down on the time our employees spend detecting counterfeits leaving them with more time to be productive ;)

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as there seperation between state & religion, why theres it still mention 'God' in the notes ?

Church and State have never been separate. They're supposed to be, but they aren't.

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Church and State have never been separate. They're supposed to be, but they aren't.

They're not supposed to be in the sense you're saying it. The State was supposed to be separate from any official Church or organized religion, yes.

But that doesn't mean any concept shared by religion is forbidden in the government. Non-religious people have also used the concept of God in a deistic sense, to refer to an abstract concept like Fate, Providence, and so on. The Supreme Court has ruled references to God to be "ceremonial deism," with no real religious content to it.

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