Posted on 11/28/2006 6:43:14 PM PST by Elyse
I've read this a couple of times now and I'm still amazed at it. In my experience, the blind people I've seen handling money do it with relative ease. The bills are folded different ways so they know which denomination is which or they have someone with them that can see.
My question is how much is this going to cost the taxpayer? Seems to me printing bills all the same size saves money. Having to set up new print plates in different sizes would cost more than plates of one size, right?
It's time to start aborting Lawyers. They just grow up to be Judges and Politicians.
tell the judge he can pay for the changeover in paper stocks from his salary and see how fast he backtracks
You may fly to Stockholm to correct your prize...
...except, of course, that I'm in Brooklyn, so that would be silly.
We sick puppies have to stick together. :)
Where does this judge get the AUTHORITY to order anyone to do anything?
I don't understand this.
Well, this "idiot" knows very well that federal agencies such as the Federal Reserve are subject to the Americans with Disabilities Act.
Look at the Americans with Disabilities Act. Obviously, printing and issueing the current legal tender is an "activity" that discriminates blind people.
8-)
TS
Last Christmas I received a new wallet, made by Dockers. It's very nice, but just isn't long enough to hold U.S. currency without extra effort stuffing it in. I've been wondering if Chinese money is smaller than ours or what.
In mainland China the smaller denomination bills (1,5,10,20,50) are smaller , but the larger ones over 100 are longer and wider than US bills.
In Hong Kong the paper money is really freaky. Three separate banks can officially print money in any style they want, so any given denomination can be in 3 different sizes and colors.
Different denominations of U. S. paper money used to be different sizes, until the new designs of the past few years.
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