NOVOS ORDO MUNDI: Make of it what you will….
Is this the New Money of the North American Union? If so, when will it hit the street? When will you be required to exchange the old notes for the new ones - and at what rate? A reader took note that instead of saying NOVOS ORDO SECLOREUM, it says, NOVOS ORDO MUNDI. ( In Spanish, “MUNDO” means world.) She did not have a Latin Dictionary, so that is close enough. Or does the word, “MUNDI” rhyme with “MONEY”, and it is all someones idea of a joke?
Who is Charles S. Hamlin? We don’t know, but judging by the celluloid collar, he goes back 100 years. We are waiting to see Obama in a full NAZI military uniform on the new money…THAT we could believe!!!
Is this for real, or is it Photo Shop work? Who knows? Sheesh - it’s a good thing that Hal Turner has been outed!
Thanks Elaine…
For information regarding the little known, Charles S. Hamlin, CLICK HERE
Thanks to another reader and frequent contributor to the Federal Observer for having been - observant - and forwarding us the link about Hamlin.


btw, I completely disagree that there will be a common currency.
Canada has an export-based economy. It wants the Canadian dollar lower than the U.S. dollar to help exports. To that end, the Bank of Canada right now has the prime interest rate at the absolute lowest it can be - 00.25% - keep the Canadian dollar down.
It’s not enough. The dollar is expected to reach par with the U.S. dollar again later this year, and the manufacturers are all panicking. Some are demanding that the Canadian dollar be fixed at 91 cents U.S. - as it was in the 1960s. The Bank of Canada refuses, because it would be giving up too much control of the economy.
Adopting a common currency - at par - just isn’t in the works for Canada.
A good indication of how likely an idea is, is who’s demanding it. With the Canada/US trade deal (and later NAFTA) you could find a great many politicians who wanted it. A great many manufacturers who wanted it. Even a few unions. But with a common currency, *no-one* in the US or Canada seems to want it. No politicians. No manufacturers. No unions. Not one single person in any position of power has come forward to back the idea.
Of course, North America doesn’t have the main reason that made people agree to the EU and the Euro and the integrated economy: The endless cycle of war after war between European states. Not just WWI, WWII and the Napoleonic wars, but “little” wars like the 30 Years War, a third of the population of Germany wiped out.
And finally, a common currency with just the U.S., Canada and Mexico wouldn’t work:
The EU has several major powers, with plenty of smaller powers who can team up. They can hold votes on monetary policy with no one country dominating the rest. North America on the other hand would be totally dominated by the U.S.’s population and economy. Promises by the U.S. to play fair wouldn’t do - the U.S. record for honoring NAFTA is not good at all. Canada would REQUIRE equal say on monetary and economic policy, for if it doesn’t have it, it has no say at all. This in turn would be unfair to Americans. It won’t happen.
In addition to the three small images, there’s also a light image of North America overlaid over the whole thing.
But those could be easily tacked on later. The main front and back images, as well as the heraldry stuff, and the denomination font on each bill, are purely American.
This is why I conclude that these were originally US bills - alternative designs - that someone *ELSE* photoshopped NAU stuff onto.
Thank you Roger - I wanted to see how long it would take someone to nail this sucker on the head, however - if you look closely, there are 3 small images, which do represent the three different nations AND I do believe that there will eventually be a common currency shared by the three nations - HOWEVER - the balance of your observations are spot-on.
Jeff
Fake “amero” coins and notes are created and posted around the net every few months. Hal Turner’s “amero” coin - which you mention - is a good example. In reality it’s a novelty coin produced by DC Coin, and you can buy them on their web site. This particular set of notes (with several denominations) has been around the net for a few months.
These notes are someone’s professionally made alternative US Currency design, that someone ELSE slapped some “North American Union” labels onto. And without much thought either:
Any common Canada/Mexico/US currency would have either country-neutral imagery or a combination of imagery from each country. But THIS set has U.S. imagery ONLY. The people featured on the front are all American. The images featured on the back - the Federal Reserve Act being signed, the Federal Bank building on another denomination, are all American. The seal with the eagle, stars and stripes, the pyramid with the Eye of Providence, even the font for the denomination - those are all strictly American currency imagery.
A common currency would be commonly printed and controlled by all three countries. The Federal Reserve Act would be scrapped and replaced by a new shared institution. Which makes the choice of back-side image for this note - the signing of the original Federal Reserve Act with the title “FEDERAL RESERVE ACT” below - rather silly.
Then there’s the name of this union. There could be more than one common name, but only the official name would be on government documents, let alone the currency. The front of this note says “The United Federation of North America”. The back says “The North American Union”. The small print (visible on the high res link above) says “Union of the North American Republic”. Pick ONE. (And an EU style union is still separate countries. It’s NOT a republic.)
For all the claims about an “Amero by 2007!!!” from the conspiracy theory crowd, they never did identify a single politician in the U.S. or Canada who wants it. Or ANY sign of legislation for it coming down the pipeline in any country. Or credible reasoning why Canada would join it at the best of times, let alone when the U.S. is in the financial mess it’s in.
Since the “NAU” claims started, we’ve done the OPPOSITE of any NAU:
Both the US and Canada rejected lobbying for a “common security perimeter”. Far from the border being more transparent, there are passport requirements and other obstacles on the border for the first time EVER. There’s LESS worker mobility than ever before. People who long travelled across the border to work are no longer able to.
The U.S. has spent $10 Billion beefing up security on the Canadian border. There are four new bases along the border, with new boats, helicopters, and fixed-wing aircraft. The border is now being patrolled by predator drones. Camera towers are being put up on waterways, and a massive wing-shaped balloon camera platform is being tested. There are new electronic sensors all along the border.
Far from heading towards a common tariff, Canada and the U.S. have been signing independent free trade agreements with other countries. Canada is even negotiating a “massive economic integration” with the EU.
The NAU and Amero just aren’t happenning.
If I’m not mistaken, Charles S. Hamlin was one of the people who attended that infamous meeting held on Jekyll Island to foment the Federal Reserve. hb AARP 3%er!
Link for site:
http://www.usavsus.info/AMERO-090803.html
Here is a link for a larger image (1024×958)
http://www.usavsus.info/Images9/AMERO-090803-2L.jpg