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Notes -
Something that looks enough like a hundred dollar bill to be accepted as legal tender is a hundred dollar bill.
How would they send people to prison for making them if they are hundred dollar bills, and if fake hundred dollar bills aren't accepted as legal tender, why bother criminalizing them?
If the note was real enough to be universally accepted as legal tender, the forgery would never have been identified and reported, and nobody would go to prison. The history of paper money is full of examples of new security measures designed to combat the genuinely successful and broadly undetectable forging of notes.
However, as I note above, we’re a very long way from this being true in this situation.
If it was relatively inexpensive though nontrivial to switch sex - some kind of sci-fi lab grown body tier shit - what would happen? What would happen if it cost three months' wages to switch sex? That would be a hell of an interesting thing and an interesting environment to be in.
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The issue is that's how likely something is going to be accepted is a question of how closely you look. A fake bill is no less a fake because someone accepted it.
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We eventually found the Superdollars that most likely North Korea was producing, but those were good enough to remain in circullation until the Treasury drastically changed the look of the $100 bill.
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