The Injectable ID Chip is Ready; Are You?
by Robert Lederman
robert.leder...@worldnet.att.net
http://baltech.org/lederman/
Is part of the agenda behind a variety of recent public health scares an
injectable I.D. chip? Such chips are no longer a science fiction fantasy.
They
exist and are already being marketed for human use.
Recent threats to public health from Anthrax, West Nile Virus, Hepatitis B,
Smallpox and AIDs share something in common. In their current
genetically-modified forms each originated with the U.S. Federal government
and it's bio-warfare programs and for each disease experimental vaccines are
being promoted for widespread use by the American public.
Below you'll find an excerpt from an engineering and technology publication
on
the new injectable I.D. chip. Following that are excerpts from mainstream
media articles about the Bush administration's plans for a mandatory Federal
vaccination program. During a declared emergency if you refuse the shots you
will be quarantined. Media clips that follow detail the intimate
relationship
between the Bush administration and vaccine manufacturers and at the end
there's a great article from Vaccine Liberation titled, "20 Reasons Not To
Take the New Smallpox Vaccine".
Just connect the dots.
These diseases have all been the subject of extensive experimentation by
U.S.
military scientists for use as weapons. Each disease has apparently been
released upon the public by our own government rather than by a foreign
enemy.
Each has been exploited by the corporate media to generate a sense of panic.
And for each there's a newly-developed vaccine which the government and the
vaccine manufacturers connected to the Bush administration would very much
like us all to take.
One can imagine the difficulty of getting the entire population of the U.S.
to
voluntarily submit to an injectable I.D. To start with, millions of
Christians
would likely view it as the "mark of the beast" described in Revelations.
Tens
of millions of health food consumers would question the possible physical
side-effects. Civil-libertarians would strenuously object to the basic
premise
behind such a device.
One solution to this problem for the government - other than simply forcing
everyone to accept an implated chip at gunpoint - would be to get us all to
willingly submit to a vaccine which includes an injectable chip without our
knowledge.
For background of the eugenics origins of these programs and their links to
the Bush family, the U.S. pharmaceutical industry and to 9/11 see
http://baltech.org/lederman/
FROM:
http://eetimes.com/story/OEG20020104S0044
Injectable chip opens door to 'human bar code'
By Charles J. Murray 01/04/02
"Radio-frequency identification chips, which have found a home in
applications
ranging from toll road passes to smart retail shelves, may be close to
taking
up residence in the human body.
A Florida-based company has introduced a passive RFID chip that is
compatible
with human tissue, and the developer is proposing the chip for use on
implantable pacemakers, defibrillators and artificial joints. The company,
Applied Digital Solutions (Palm Beach, Fla.), also said that the chip could
be
injected through a syringe and used as a sort of "human bar code" in
security
applications.
Called the VeriChip, the device could open up a broad new segment for the
$900
million-a-year RFID business, especially if society embraces the idea of
using
microchips for human identification. Applied Digital executives ultimately
believe that the worldwide market for such implantable chips could reach $70
billion per year. "The human market for this technology could be huge," said
Keith Bolton, senior vice president of technology development at the
company...The announcement of the chip's availability created a media stir,
however - not because of its potential use with pacemakers but because of
its
science-fiction-like potential application in human identification systems.
Because the microchip and its antenna measure just 11.1 x 2.1 mm, Applied
Digital Solutions said the assembly can be injected through a syringe and
implanted in various locations within the body.
The tube-shaped VeriChip includes a memory that holds 128 characters of
information, an electromagnetic coil for transmitting data and a tuning
capacitor, all encapsulated within a silicone-and-glass enclosure. The
passive
RF unit, which operates at 125 kHz, is activated by moving a
company-designed
scanner within about a foot of the chip. Doing so excites the coil and
"wakes
up" the chip, enabling it to transmit data.
The chips are said to be similar to those that are already implanted in
about
a million dogs and cats nationwide to enable pet owners to identify and
reclaim animals that have been temporarily lost. Applied Digital Solutions,
which has made the pet-tracking chips for several years, says that the human
chips differ mainly in the biocompatible coating that's used to keep the
body
from rejecting the implanted chip. The VeriChip is believed to be the first
such chip designed for human identification.
Inspired by Sept. 11
In September, Applied Digital Solutions implanted its first human chip when
a
New Jersey surgeon, Richard Seelig, injected two of the chips into himself.
He
placed one chip in his left forearm and the other near the artificial hip in
his right leg.
"He was motivated after he saw firefighters at the World Trade Center in
September writing their Social Security numbers on their forearms with Magic
Markers," Bolton said. "He thought that there had to be a more sophisticated
way of doing an identification."
Applied Digital said Seelig, who serves as a medical consultant to the
company, has now had the chips implanted in him for three months with no
signs
of rejection or infection...Applied Digital's executives said the ability to
inject the chips opens up a variety of RFID applications in high-security
situations, as well other types of human identification systems. The chips,
they said, could be implanted in young children or in adults with
Alzheimer's
disease, to help officials identify people who can't identify themselves...
A consortium of major manufacturers has sought to push the technology as a
replacement for bar codes in everyday products ranging from cereal boxes to
shaving cream cans, but the cost hasn't dropped low enough to make that
feasible. More recently, a group led by the European Central Bank began work
on embedding RFID chips in the euro bank note, but the chip category has yet
to find its killer app...Some engineers suggested the technology might
ultimately be scaled down, making the chip's acceptance more likely. At
Alien
Technology Corp. (Morgan Hill, Calif.), engineers have already discussed
using
that company's ultrasmall RFID chips in human applications. Alien, which
uses
a process known as fluidic self-assembly to create chips measuring 350 x 350
microns, has demonstrated its 900-MHz technology on everyday products such
as
soap and shampoo bottles. The coded information can be detected and read
across distances measuring almost 3 feet. "There are companies making RFID
tags that are much smaller than a couple of millimeters," said Andy Holman,
director of business development for Alien Technology. Analysts also
suggested
that human identification technology would be more likely to be popularized
when engineers are able to integrate more memory and other features, such as
global-positioning satellite units and induction-based power-recharging
techniques. GPS might help find lost children and adults, they said, while
larger memories would enable doctors to store vital patient information. The
concept "goes all the way back to the 1960s," said Jerry Krasner, vice
president of market intelligence for American Technology International
Inc.'s
Embedded Forecasters Group. "What's new is the ability to store a lot of
data.
"As soon as you can do that, you'll see more applications for this type of
technology," he said."
From CNN.com
CDC releases draft of public health law October 31, 2001
"ATLANTA, Georgia (AP) -- A model law drafted for states at the request of
the
federal government would give authorities broad powers to close buildings,
take over hospitals and order quarantines during a biological attack. The
draft, commissioned by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and
made
public Tuesday, provides a template for states to respond to the release of
a
deadly agent like smallpox or Ebola. Whether to adopt such a law is up to
state legislatures. If any did, state officials could take drastic steps --
including controlling the sale of food and gas and condemning contaminated
buildings -- to prevent mass casualties from an outbreak. "The current laws
are hopelessly antiquated," said Lawrence Gostin, a professor of law and
public health at Georgetown University and the draft's principal author.
"They
predated all of the modern threats to the public health. Many of them are
probably unconstitutional."
Even before September 11, the federal government wanted states to update
their
public health laws, some of which date to the 19th century. The CDC asked
public health and law specialists at Johns Hopkins and Georgetown
universities, who were writing the draft, to put it on a fast track because
of
the terrorist attacks and the anthrax outbreak. The 40-page draft would
allow
state public health officials to purchase as many drugs as they see fit and
ration them without getting approval from other branches of government.
It also would give state authorities the right to mandate medical testing of
its citizens, to isolate people deemed a threat to the public health and to
order private doctors to do the testing. In a bioterrorism emergency, states
could seize hospitals, other property and "communication devices" they
believe
are necessary to stop a biological attack from killing huge numbers of
people.
The draft tries to head off the concerns of civil liberties
...
read more »