Microchips for Everyone! News Report Suggests Children, Adults Get Chipped
What if inserting microchips into children and adults became a way of everyday life? Given the public’s trance-like state, it is scary to realize just how easily it could happen.
Social conditioning to accept the idea is already well underway. A recent news report from WFLA-TV Channel 8 in Tampa, Fla. compared human microchips to something as casual as driving down the street, or buying a product with a bar code.
“Someday, someone is going to pull this off and we could see those microchips in everyone,” reporter Melanie Michael said in her report for Channel 8.
Michael kicks off her report by noting that microchips are already used to track family pets, so why not children?
“Before you say, ‘No way, I would never do that,’ hear one mom’s story,” she said.
The story plays on parents’ fears of turning around at a store or other public place and realizing their child is missing.
“If it’ll save my kid, there’s no step that’s too extreme,” parent Steffany Rodriguez-Neely said in the interview. She has a special needs child that is “prone to wander off and trust strangers.”
But that idea is too extreme for parent Kerri Levey.
“You’re putting a battery in your kid, you’re putting a chip in your kid; where does it stop?” said Levey in the report.
Mainstream media has pushing the idea of microchips for some time. It’s all part of the social engineering designed to get the public to accept it.
In 2014, NBC reporter Brian Jennings predicted that by the year 2017, people could have microchips inserted. The report promoted the idea as a good way to store your information in case of a medical emergency.
But what other uses or intentions might the chips have? The Infosec Institute suggests the chips could be used by “governments to locate fugitives, witnesses of crimes and missing persons.”
It’s all for our “safety,” of course, just like every other Big Brother technology ever invented.
But the chips could also be hacked or cloned. Then there’s the whole “Mark of the Beast” thing. Christians are understandably freaked out by the idea of sticking a microchip in their hand.
The FDA in 2004 noted some potential health risk associated with a microchip called VeriChip. The FDA stated the chip could cause “adverse tissue reaction; migration of implanted transponder; compromised information security; failure of implanted transponder; failure of inserter; failure of electronic scanner; electromagnetic interference; electrical hazards; magnetic resonance imaging incompatibility; and needle stick.”
Production of VeriChip has since stopped.
Still, some people can hardly wait to see microchips for everyone.
The Channel 8 report cites “longtime engineer” Stuart Lipoff of Boston as an electronics industry expert.
“It’s not a matter of if it will happen, but when.” Lipoff said.
“People should be aware that testing is being done right now,” he said. “The military is not only testing this out, but already utilizes its properties.”
He dismissed microchips as commonplace – something we use every time we drive a car, for example.
The Infosec Institute seems to agree, yet goes a step beyond by offering a word of caution. In order to avoid unexpected surprises, individuals wishing to implant RFID chips need to evaluate carefully the various implications of such chips,” the Institute noted.
“The convergence of various scientific fields, such as artificial intelligence, biotechnology, cognitive science, information technology, and robotics will probably increase the application of human-implanted microchips, including RFID chips,” its website states.
It could provide people with “opportunities for new business and social interactions.”
“However, they will introduce challenging legal, security, medical, ethical, and religious questions.”
And that’s putting it mildly.
Sources:
http://wfla.com/2016/05/13/tracking-kids-via-microchip/
http://resources.infosecinstitute.com/human-implanted-rfid-chips/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4xBQyuGNDKM
Microchips now come in a variety of flavors, kettle has some of the wildest chips.
All white goods will need wifi-connections within about five years but it will be like my Epson printer that self destructs 2 weeks after the guarantee runs out.
External Seagate NAT drives now need access to the internet and mine keeps trying to call HP.Com even when i installed it without wanting to “Share my Files” with other internet come CIA users.
They are calling it “The internet of things” and any implant from the government or google or microsoft just makes you a “thing” to be recorded and played with.