Tuesday, May 08, 2007

The freakout over the new Canadian coin

By one of our intelligence agencies exposes more than their doofus clown suits and red noses. The fear that the odd little flower was a new nano-tech device indicates extreme envy as well. (Why the hell hasn't the CIA thought of that?!! Bugging the money!)

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Chester at Vanity Press has more:
WASHINGTON -- An odd-looking Canadian coin with a bright red flower was the culprit behind the U.S. Defense Department's false espionage warning earlier this year, The Associated Press has learned.

The odd-looking -- but harmless -- "poppy coin" was so unfamiliar to suspicious U.S. Army contractors traveling in Canada that they filed confidential espionage accounts about them. The worried contractors described the coins as "anomalous" and "filled with something man-made that looked like nano-technology," according to once-classified U.S. government reports and e-mails obtained by the AP.

The silver-colored 25-cent piece features the red image of a poppy -- Canada's flower of remembrance - inlaid over a maple leaf. The unorthodox quarter is identical to the coins pictured and described as suspicious in the contractors' accounts.

The supposed nano-technology actually was a conventional protective coating the Royal Canadian Mint applied to prevent the poppy's red color from rubbing off. The mint produced nearly 30 million such quarters in 2004 commemorating Canada's 117,000 war dead.

We gotta keep an eye on those sneaky Canadians. They must hate us for our freedoms....

4 comments:

JJ said...

LOL, busted! Damn, now we won't be able to implement our evil plan of socialized healthcare and hockey on TV 24/7...

ellroon said...

Dammit! I can already say 'aboot' and 'eh' with the best of them, and was dusting off my old French textbooks....

Steve Bates said...

What a beautiful coin. Thanks for posting the picture.

Many of my contracts over the past 12 years or so were for a company that runs one of the major online exchanges for graded rare coins, so I know a few "coin guys" (yes, over 90 percent of them are guys). Sober bunch though they are (metaphorically; I'm sure they drink plenty), they're bound to be smiling about this, because they surely knew what the thing was long before DoD did.

DoD should simply have asked any of my former clients; they have a good attitude about security matters, and they keep track of coins. But noooo...

ellroon said...

Amazing how you can tell the mindset of the intelligence group by how they react to stupid stuff....