New U$5 Bank Note:
Careful where you point that thing!
A trusted County Notary in the USA sent me this advice in a recent email: “Thomas McFadden says that the new FIVE DOLLAR BILL is printed using HIGHLY Magnetic Ink and circulated to Reduce Your Physical Strength. Take an older FIVE DOLLAR BILL and hold it your stronger arm/hand and hold it straight-out in front of you and have someone push down on your hand - and see how much effort is required to push your hand down,,, then do the same thing with a NEW FIVE DOLLAR BILL and you will see that your strength is being drained from you,,, and it will be easier for you to lower your hand yourself....
Do not carry them around - in your front pocket. Seriously, do NOT carry the new FIVE DOLLAR BILL around and do the same exercise with ALL NEW ISSUES of any other denominations.....US, Canadian, Australian, New Zealand, Europe, UK and all other countries.”
Sounds a little alarmist so some further investigation is necessary first……
Banknotes: How they’re made
Most banknotes are made of heavy paper, sometimes with cotton fibres for strength and durability. In some cases linen or forensic fibres are added to give the paper added individuality and protect against counterfeiting. Some countries including Australia, New Zealand, Singapore and Israel produce polymer banknotes in order to improve wear and tear and permit the inclusion of a small transparent window a few millimetres in size as a security feature that makes it extremely difficult for common counterfeiting techniques to reproduce.
Magnetic Ink
Most banknotes nowadays feature magnetic ink. Take the new Euro €20 note: The church window furthest right is magnetic, as well as the large zero above it.

The Technical Bit
After magnetic field treatment has been carried out, the banknote has the ability to retain magnetism. The main component of magnetic ink is magnetic paint:
● iron oxide black pigment (Fe3O4)
● brown iron oxide (Fe2O3)
Paint pigments are tiny needle-shaped crystals; the particle size and shape makes them easy to arrange in an even magnetic field that has relatively high residual magnetism.
Poor Plants and Fish!
Magnetic fields can bring about altered states to an organized structure causing such conditions as cell dysfunction and (at high magnitudes) spontaneous mutation to water-borne bacilli. Magnetic fields can and will alter the molecular structures of chemicals, Dr. Wolfgang Pose of Hamburg tested a random magnetic field strength of 2,000 Gauss on hundreds of plants and several tanks of fish. The plants and the fish exposed to the magnetic field all died.
Understanding ‘Gauss readings’:
● the earth’s magnetic field is 0.5 Gauss
● Small NIB magnet (pictured) is 2,000 Gauss
● Strong lab magnet is 100,000 Gauss
If this is correct, I would spend all my $5 notes (and possibly other denominations) before they expend me!
Whilst this is by no means ‘proper’ scientific research, it opens us up to possibilities!
The scientifically minded amongst us will want this claim tested objectively using EMF monitoring equipment, yet kinesiology has often given me the real answers I need. The US Government seems hell-bent on destroying the economy, the environment and the livelihood of its populations. If the bank notes don’t get you the economy will!
On another subject…..a Cheque Book Exercise
Get your cheque book out and look very CLOSELY at the straight black line under where you sign. You’ll need a strong magnifying glass or even a microscope. If not there look elsewhere on the cheque book for this as it could be on another line. They HAVE been found on several cheque books.
What are you looking for? What you believe to be a straight line is in fact tiny writing that legally binds you into a hidden contract. We’ve found the microscopic writing on a few UK bank cheques but not all of them. Just check your own out and ask your ‘lovely’ bank manager about it. I’ll bet he hasn’t been told.
Putting it in Perspective:
Old Banker Joke: A man is stuck in traffic. He asks a police officer about the hold-up and he replies: "The head of the Bank of England is so depressed about the economy he's stopped his car and is threatening to douse himself with petrol and set himself on fire. So we're taking up a collection for him." The man asks: "How much have you got so far?" The policeman replies: "About 40 gallons, but a lot of people are still siphoning."
Graeme Dinnen
www.resourcesforlife.net