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Reason: None provided.

It is possible that Ben Franklin was a double-agent of some sort. Using his family name and ties to infiltrate the cabal and Freemasonry organizations while still working to create a Republic as competition for the Power of the British Throne which he understood keenly.


Note the people on the $1, $2, $5, $10, $20, $50 bills were all enemies of the cabal and the Central Bank. Franklin (on the $100) is the only one that his "crimes against the cabal" are not easily identified. Maybe they viewed him as a secret society traitor? It seems to be a pattern that the cabal/Central Bank puts its enemies on its bills, at least in the U.S. It is a kind of an ironic back-handed honorific, imo. Usually it is for something they did against the bankers.


$ 1 George Washington (opposition to foreign banks and entanglements)

$ 2 Thomas Jefferson (opposition to cabal and its centralization of power)

$ 5 Abraham Lincoln (shortened Civil War and no-debt Greenback)

$ 10 Alexander Hamilton (double-agent? limited scope/term of Bank?)

$ 20 Andrew Jackson (got rid of 2nd Central Bank)

$ 50 Ulysses Grant (countered cabal and prevented 3rd Central Bank 1870s)

$ 100 Benjamin Franklin (double-agent? Supported provisions limiting power?)

$ 500 William McKinley (assassinated by cabal for "free silver" currency)

$1000 Grover Cleveland (2nd term stolen by cabal, blocked Central Bank)

https://www.thoughtco.com/faces-on-us-currency-4153995

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

It is possible that Ben Franklin was a double-agent of some sort. Using his family name and ties to infiltrate the cabal and Freemasonry organizations while still working to create a Republic as competition for the Power of the British Throne which he understood keenly.


Note the people on the $1, $2, $5, $10, $20, $50 bills were all enemies of the cabal and the Central Bank. Franklin (on the $100) is the only one that his "crimes against the cabal" are not easily identified. Maybe they viewed him as a secret society traitor? It seems to be a pattern that the cabal/Central Bank puts its enemies on its bills, at least in the U.S. It is a kind of back-handed honorific, imo.


$ 1 George Washington (opposition to foreign banks and entanglements)

$ 2 Thomas Jefferson (opposition to cabal and its centralization of power)

$ 5 Abraham Lincoln (shortened Civil War and no-debt Greenback)

$ 10 Alexander Hamilton (double-agent? limited scope/term of Bank?)

$ 20 Andrew Jackson (got rid of 2nd Central Bank)

$ 50 Ulysses Grant (countered cabal and prevented 3rd Central Bank 1870s)

$ 100 Benjamin Franklin (double-agent? Supported provisions limiting power?)

$ 500 William McKinley (assassinated by cabal for "free silver" currency)

$1000 Grover Cleveland (2nd term stolen by cabal, blocked Central Bank)

https://www.thoughtco.com/faces-on-us-currency-4153995

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

It is possible that Ben Franklin was a double-agent of some sort. Using his family name and ties to infiltrate the cabal and Freemasonry organizations while still working to create a Republic as competition for the Power of the British Throne which he understood keenly.


Note the people on the $1, $2, $5, $10, $20, $50 bills were all enemies of the cabal and the Central Bank. Franklin (on the $100) is the only one that his "crimes against the cabal" are not easily identified. Maybe they viewed him as a secret society traitor? It seems to be a pattern that the cabal/Central Bank puts its enemies on its bills, at least in the U.S. It is a kind of back-handed honorific, imo.


$ 1 George Washington (opposition to foreign banks and entanglements)

$ 2 Thomas Jefferson (opposition to cabal and its centralization of power)

$ 5 Abraham Lincoln (shortened Civil War and no-debt Greenback)

$ 10 Alexander Hamilton (double-agent? limited scope of Bank?)

$ 20 Andrew Jackson (got rid of 2nd Central Bank)

$ 50 Ulysses Grant (countered cabal and prevented 3rd Central Bank 1870s)

$ 100 Benjamin Franklin (double-agent? Supported provisions limiting power?)

$ 500 William McKinley (assassinated by cabal for "free silver" currency)

$1000 Grover Cleveland (2nd term stolen by cabal, blocked Central Bank)

https://www.thoughtco.com/faces-on-us-currency-4153995

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

It is possible that Ben Franklin was a double-agent of some sort. Using his family name and ties to infiltrate the cabal and Freemasonry organizations while still working to create a Republic as competition for the Power of the British Throne.


Note the people on the $1, $2, $5, $10, $20, $50 bills were all enemies of the cabal and the Central Bank. Franklin (on the $100) is the only one that his "crimes against the cabal" are not easily identified. Maybe they viewed him as a secret society traitor? It seems to be a pattern that the cabal/Central Bank puts its enemies on its bills, at least in the U.S. It is a kind of back-handed honorific, imo.


$ 1 George Washington (opposition to foreign banks and entanglements)

$ 2 Thomas Jefferson (opposition to cabal and its centralization of power)

$ 5 Abraham Lincoln (shortened Civil War and no-debt Greenback)

$ 10 Alexander Hamilton (double-agent? limited scope of Bank?)

$ 20 Andrew Jackson (got rid of 2nd Central Bank)

$ 50 Ulysses Grant (countered cabal and prevented 3rd Central Bank 1870s)

$ 100 Benjamin Franklin (double-agent? Supported provisions limiting power?)

$ 500 William McKinley (assassinated by cabal for "free silver" currency)

$1000 Grover Cleveland (2nd term stolen by cabal, blocked Central Bank)

https://www.thoughtco.com/faces-on-us-currency-4153995

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: Original

It is possible that Ben Franklin was a double-agent of some sort. Using his family name and ties to infiltrate the cabal and Freemasonry organizations while still working to create a Republic as competition for the Power of the British Throne.


Note the people on the $1, $2, $5, $10, $20, $50 bills were all enemies of the cabal and the Central Bank. Franklin (on the $100) is the only one that his "crimes against the cabal" are not easily identified. Maybe they viewed him as a secret society traitor? It seems to be a pattern that the cabal/Central Bank puts its enemies on its bills, at least in the U.S. It is a kind of back-handed honorific, imo.


$ 1 George Washington (opposition to foreign banks and entanglements)

$ 2 Thomas Jefferson (opposition to cabal and centralization of power)

$ 5 Abraham Lincoln (shortened Civil War and no-debt Greenback)

$ 10 Alexander Hamilton (double-agent? limited scope of Bank?)

$ 20 Andrew Jackson (got rid of 2nd Central Bank)

$ 50 Ulysses Grant (countered cabal and prevented 3rd Central Bank 1870s)

$ 100 Benjamin Franklin (double-agent? Supported provisions limiting power?)

$ 500 William McKinley (assassinated by cabal for "free silver" currency)

$1000 Grover Cleveland (2nd term stolen by cabal, blocked Central Bank)

https://www.thoughtco.com/faces-on-us-currency-4153995

1 year ago
1 score