666 Mark Of the Beast Indoctrination for Kids Continues....

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Pastor Dale Morgan

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Feb 9, 2008, 2:56:25 AM2/9/08
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*Big Brother and The Mark Of The Beast

666 Mark Of the Beast Indoctrination for Kids Continues....*

Fingerprints pay for lunch, track what kids are eating

Tuesday, January 22 2008

Students at Juan Diego High School, Draper, Utah, can pay for their
lunch by placing a finger on a scanner, and parents can also see what
their children are having for the mid-day meal as well. The biometric
payment system is from Altoona, Pa.-based FSS Inc.

To begin, parents went online and entered payment information to fund
the account. Students were enrolled in the fingerprint system a couple
of weeks before the new payments system was rolled out in the cafeteria.

Now when a student is going through the cafeteria line they place a
finger on a scanner and their picture pop up on the cashier’s display.
The cashier enters what the student is having for lunch and the money is
deducted from the account. The school deployed the system to speed up
cafeteria lines, according to a letter on the Juan Diego High School Web
site. School officials also wanted to enable parents to go online and
then see what their child is having for lunch.
*
Utah school implements high-tech 666 based lunch system*

Reported by: Annie Cutler

DRAPER, Utah (ABC 4 News) - Lunch monitoring at one Utah school just got
a lot more high tech.

Juan Diego Catholic High School is the first school in the state to have
finger scanning systems, which monitor and track students' lunch
accounts and exactly what they're eating. All of that information is
then available to parents at home.

Whether it's a grilled cheese sandwich, french fries, or a salad, the
new lunch system at Juan Diego Catholic High School will be able to
track it all with the touch of a finger.

“It's just like the cop shows you see where it puts the points on the
finger and we only store those points,” said systems administrator Eric
Browning.

It's the newest way the school and parents are keeping tabs on students,
and promoting their continuing effort to foster healthier eating.

“It's a minor intrusion for better parental supervision of your
children’s eating habits,” Browning said.

Once students get what they want for lunch, they place an index finger
on the scanner. Their picture and student information appear on the
computer screen, and lunch supervisors input the food the students have
on their trays. School officials believe this will be quicker and more
efficient than the school's old system of inputting ID numbers. Many of
the students agree and said they like the added security as well.

“It seems to be working pretty good. It seems to be slow at first but
once you start to move in the line it works pretty good," said student
Jori Valerio.

But what about their parents knowing about the french fries and sodas?

“That's tough. You have to watch what you eat now but it's fun,” Jordan
Cox said.

School officials say parents don't need to worry about these
fingerprints being used outside of school.

“There is no forensic value to the fingerprint, which means we cannot
use it on anything else but this system,” Browning said.

On Monday the school had 1,000 students go through the scanners and only
22 of them had issues with their prints.

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