56
S C A T T E R B R A I N E D
the two letters began to lie on top of one another. When, fi -
nally, we reached
the peak of our laziness, the hump of the
P
disappeared
into the curve of the
S
and we were left with
$.
✖ ✖ ✖
Th
e largest number of U.S. dollars
owned by any one entity is
the property not of Bill Gates, but
of the United States gov-
ernment, which has borrowed over two trillion dollars from
itself. If you’re
confused, you probably should be. When the
United States runs out
of money, we just ask for the money
from the treasury and give them an IOU (Treasury bill). Th
e
treasury then prints the money
and gives it to the govern-
ment to use.
The Cost of Money
If you’ve ever wondered how
much a dollar is really worth, it costs the
U.S. mint around six cents to print each of the 37
million bills it prints per
year. The mint saves some money by making sure that old bills, when
practicable, get recycled—and that brings us to environmentalism. . . .