Jeffrey Tobasky isn't into conspiracy theories. He doesn't care about the grassy knoll. Thinks people who claim they were abducted by UFOs are full of it and doesn't ever scan the horizon looking for the four horsemen of the Apocalypse.
But waiting in line at Dunkin' Donuts in Dorchester this week, he raised an eyebrow when handed a US$20 bill folded to show a bizarrely accurate image of the burning World Trade Center towers. Tobasky pursed his lips: "Damn, that's weird. I mean, that really is weird."
The US$20 bill trick -- if that's the right word for it -- is also being done, to a lesser extent, with US$10 and US$50 bills, and has been spreading by word of mouth and over the Internet for at least a month. Whether coincidence or conspiracy, it's become something of a comment on the American psyche since the Sept. 11 attacks.
The trick goes back at least as far as a party in Melbourne, Florida, last month. Warren Dodd, who designs commercial Web sites, got together with about 20 friends on a Saturday to watch a NASCAR race on television. After a few laps, the race was rained out and Dodd walked out to the porch with a few friends. One of them pulled out a twenty, folded it lengthwise to hide the face of Andrew Jackson. Then, she folded the bill diagonally from the center point on the crease so it looked like an arrow -- or an airplane -- and there, clear as day, were the smoking Trade Center towers. Dodd turned the folded bill over and there was an image resembling the blown up Pentagon.
"I was really amazed," said Dodd, 47. "I mean, what are the odds?"
He showed a few friends and they were equally intrigued, so he decided to put it on a commercial Web site (www.allbrevard.net) to show friends out of state. After he posted it, he mentioned it on a computer user group. The next day, his site had 35,000 hits. The day after that it doubled to 70,000 and then doubled again and again, until it was getting about 250,000 hits a day. Since the posting about a month ago, the site has received more than 2 million hits, some from as far away as China and Israel. "It's gotten about the same exposure as a Super Bowl ad," Dodd said.
The responses on the site break down into three basic categories of roughly equal proportions: The people who, like Dodd and Tobasky, think the image is just a weird coincidence; those who think it's a sign that the government -- or God -- knew the attacks were coming; and those who think posting the image is sacreligious, wrong or at the very least, in bad taste. Tens of thousands also ask the question: "Who figured this out?" And thousands more have answered: "Someone with too much time on their hands."
Apocolypse now
Chip Berlet, a senior analyst at Political Research Associates in Somerville, Massachusetts and an expert on conspiracy theories, isn't at all surprised the image has spread so far so fast.
The roots of apocalyptic thinking in America, he said, go back to the 17th century. Whenever fear mixes with uncertainty, huge numbers of Americans fall back on simple stories of good versus evil. Unrelated objects and dates -- like Y2K or the fall of the Soviet Union -- are transposed into powerful end-of-the-world symbols.
The World Trade Center image is just the latest incarnation of this phenomena, Berlet says. Secret messages have been "discovered" in US currency for decades. When the Treasury Department redesigned paper money six years ago, "The 700 Club," a cable show led by televangelist Pat Robertson, reported that the government secretly implanted bills with the numbers 666, the so-called mark of the beast, Berlet said.



