< class="pagetitle">Posts Tagged “Microchips”
Submission of The United States of America PURPOSE The following post, with supporting documentation and data, outlines why individuals must REFUSE the microchip and must be aware of RFID tags that have been placed in a vast number of clothing, boot and shoe products that are purchased today from any retail establishment. Recent (9-21-09) patents by VeriChip to develop implantable virus detection microchips, cell phones with GPS and RFID capability, recent recommendations from the Secret

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Thirty-three years ago, some college acquaintances told me how someday the government was going to impose a Universal Bar Code tattoo on every person to keep track of us in order to control us. At the time, I thought they were nuts. Well, thirty-three years later I guess I’m also a nut—a “conspiracy” nut, that is: MICROCHIP IMPLANT TO LINK YOUR HEALTH RECORDS, CREDIT HISTORY, SOCIAL SECURITY Novartis and Proteus Biomedical are not the only companies hoping to implant microchips into patients

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Jim Edwards BNet October 11, 2009 A d v e r t i s e m e n t Novartis and Proteus Biomedical are not the only companies hoping to implant microchips into patients so that their pill-popping habits can be monitored. VeriChip of Delray Beach, Fl., has an even bolder idea: an implanted chip that links to an online database containing all your medical records, credit history and your social security ID. As this presentation to investors makes clear, the chip and its database could form

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Source: BNet Novartis and Proteus Biomedical are not the only companies hoping to implant microchips into patients so that their pill-popping habits can be monitored. VeriChip of Delray Beach, Fl., has an even bolder idea: an implanted chip that links to an online database containing all your medical records, credit history and your social security ID. As this presentation to investors makes clear, the chip and its database could form the basis of a new national identity databa

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By Jim Edwards Industry.Bnet.com Novartis and Proteus Biomedical are not the only companies hoping to implant microchips into patients so that their pill-popping habits can be monitored. VeriChip of Delray Beach, Fl., has an even bolder idea: an implanted chip that links to an online database containing all your medical records, credit history and your social security ID. As this presentation to investors makes clear, the chip and its database could form the basis of a new national ide

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VeriChip Corporation Agrees to Acquire Steel Vault Corporation to Form PositiveID Corporation IndustrialLasers.com September 8, 2009 -- VeriChip Corporation (NASDAQ: CHIP) ("VeriChip"), a provider of radio frequency identification (RFID) systems for healthcare and patient-related needs, and Steel Vault Corporation (OTCBB: SVUL) ("Steel Vault"), a premier provider of identity security products and services, ...

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by DefendUSx August 04, 2009 12:27 by Rev. Richard Skaff of Global Research In this era of enhanced foods, enhanced bioweapons and WMDs, enhanced vaccines, enhanced military strategies, and enhanced interrogations, come enhanced driving licenses. Many of us have sincerely hoped that these technological advancements and alleged enhancements would eventually rub off on ethics in government and business. We also hoped that the Obama administration would create a new government division l

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Microchips in ID cards raise privacy fears Climbing into his Volvo, outfitted with a Matrics antenna and a Motorola reader he’d bought on eBay for $190, Chris Paget cruised the streets of San Francisco with this objective: To read the identity cards of strangers, wirelessly, without ever leaving his car. It took him 20 minutes to strike hacker’s gold. Zipping past Fisherman’s Wharf, his scanner downloaded to his laptop the unique serial numbers of two pedestrians’ electronic U.S. passport

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The implantable RFID chip—just one version of the technology—would allow airport personnel to know who you are instantly and help people keep an eye on children, the elderly, and prisoners. straight.com | Jul 23, 2009 By Erin Millar Imagine you’re at the grocery store and you take some tortellini from the cooler. Embedded in the packaging is a microchip that emits radio waves. The next thing you know, an ad for a high-end pasta sauce is flashing on a screen mounted on your shopping car

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For generations, ranchers have tracked their cattle by their brand. Every year, they corral and rope the calves, and burn the ranch's mark onto them. Now the federal government would like to add a step to the process. Agriculture officials want ranchers to start tracking their animals electronically, using microchips. The National Animal Identification System, which is currently a voluntary program, would follow a cow's every move. But for people like 64-year-old Culver rancher Marilyn Kasch, tr

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Will Your ID Soon Be a Microchip Under Your Skin? Drew Halley Singularity Hub July 3, 2009 Yet another sci-fi milestone is upon us: microchips implanted under your skin and used to identify you. The VeriChip is the first radio-frequency identification (RFID) microchip that’s been approved by the Food and Drug Administration for use in humans. The chip is the size of a long grain of rice, and can be implanted pretty much anywhere in the body (most commonly along the tricep). Depend

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Yet another sci-fi milestone is upon us: microchips implanted under your skin that identify you. The VeriChip is the first radio-frequency identification (RFID) microchip that's been approved by the Food and Drug Administration for use in humans. The chip is the size of a long grain of rice, and can be implanted pretty much anywhere in the body (most commonly along the tricep). Depending on how it's used, the chip could do anything from telling doctors your medical background to buying you a rou

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by Drew Halley Yet another sci-fi milestone is upon us: microchips implanted under your skin and used to identify you. The VeriChip is the first radio-frequency identification (RFID) microchip that’s been approved by the Food and Drug Administration for use in humans. The chip is the size of a long grain of rice, and can be implanted pretty much anywhere in the body (most commonly along the tricep). Depending on how it’s used, the chip could do anything from telling doctors your medical bac

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Yet another sci-fi milestone is upon us: microchips implanted under your skin and used to identify you. The VeriChip implant. Photo: Business Week The VeriChip is the first radio-frequency identification (RFID) microchip that’s been approved by the Food and Drug Administration for use in humans. The chip is the size of a long grain of rice, and can be implanted pretty much anywhere in the body (most commonly along the tricep). Depending on how it’s used, the chip could do anything from

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What they were emphatically not doing, said Jay Platt, the third-generation proprietor of the ranch, was abiding by a federally recommended livestock identification plan, intended to speed the tracing of animal diseases, that has caused an uproar among ranchers. They were not attaching the recommended tags with microchips that would allow the computerized recording of livestock movements from birth to the slaughterhouse. “This plan is expensive, it’s intrusive, and there’s no need for it,” Mr.

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MTV Star Heidi Montag: Over My Dead Body Would I Take A Microchip Paul Joseph Watson Prison Planet.com Tuesday, June 30, 2009 Star of MTV’s The Hills Heidi Montag appeared on The Alex Jones Show today with her fellow co-star husband Spencer Pratt to discuss how some nightclubs are introducing implantable identification microchips to allow customers to access VIP areas. Montag told Jones, “You would have to kill me before I get a chip.” Montag said that as a Christian she had a

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The Hills actor tells The Alex Jones Show why the implantable microchip represents the “mark of the beast” By Paul Joseph Watson Prison Planet | Star of MTV’s The Hills Heidi Montag appeared on The Alex Jones Show today with her fellow co-star husband Spencer Pratt to discuss how some nightclubs are introducing implantable identification microchips to allow customers to access VIP areas. Montag told Jones, “You would have to kill me before I get a chip.” Montag said that as a C

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