March 23, 2016

The Security In Microchipping?


Silicon micro chip on human finger's tip

This week I wish to further our conversation regarding the arrival of the Orwellian age. My recent blog on privacy received this comment from Shelley, “GWEN towers, HARP, Apple (not the phone), ‘The Scent of Fear’, Marketing, Subliminal Messaging in the media, fluoride in the water and nobody seems too concerned about anything that our Government is doing. Our children are being force fed stimulant drugs and I don’t think it is a coincidence that during project MKUltra we discovered that stimulants made people more susceptible to hypnotic suggestion. What the hell is going on and why is it only very few people seem to be concerned?”

Who Is Listening?

These are matters, among many others, that I discuss in depth, in my new book, “Gotcha! The Subordination of Free Will.” I dedicated nearly five years to seeing this book published, as I believed that if people really knew what’s going on, they’d do something about it. Is that a fair assumption? What do you think?

This week I reviewed some of the data I have been collecting that provide further proof of the direction we are headed in and I had to pause when I turned over an article on RFIDs. In case you don’t recognize the term, RFID stands for radio frequency identification: a technology that uses electronic tags placed on objects, people, or animals to relay identifying information to a central data center.

Medical Microchips

Okay, many of us have implanted RFID chips in our animal friends. All three of our dogs have chips just in case they get lost. So this technology seems friendly enough, should it be of any real concern? As I discuss in Gotcha, the Affordable Care Act calls for medical id implants on the basis that this would prevent medical errors. Your personal RFID would access your complete medical record and therefore any allergies or other medical concerns such as difficult intubation would immediately be available. This could save lives and certainly seems like a judicious way to prevent unnecessary mistakes that may lead to the loss of life.

Oh—but that surgeon’s scalpel metaphor returns. When there is a threat, we seem to quickly accept invasive technologies and other means used in the name of safety. This past Tuesday we saw the city of Brussels, the Capital of Europe and home of NATO, come under absolute Marshall law. A total lockdown of the city—imagine that in the USA—a stay in your home order!

National Security

National security is absolutely important and we Americans have already accepted the loss of some of our freedoms in the name of security. As such, it’s not at all far fetched to conceive of the idea that there may be another catastrophic failure of some kind that leads to fear and panic and consequently additional levels of protection. In this kind of situation, if our pattern holds, we will accept whatever is deemed appropriate by those in power to keep us safe.

Okay, what has this got to do with RFIDs? Well what if we were to have a major banking collapse? What if this created the sort of financial crisis that put our savings, our paychecks, our credit cards and so forth all at risk? Think of some computer invasion that raids accounts at random where the system has sufficiently collapsed and is therefore unable to defend against such a cyber attack. Well why not utilize this RFID technology to do more than protect us from medical mistakes. Why not use it for our entire ID needs, driver’s license, permits, banking, etc.? Now our RFID implant, perhaps in our right hand, pays for our purchases, obtains cash for our needs, and so on? This certainly seems more convenient than carrying all of those cards. With one microchip our complete identity is available so whether it’s checking out library books or picking up a prescription, one hand scan does it all.

The Beast?

You should also know that RFID chips can be easily tracked and some already incorporate GPS technology. Theoretically, the technology also exists to use the chip as a receiver for small jolts of electricity and more, perhaps to remind you to take your medicine. I hope, as you begin to think this through, that you are also beginning to question the value of your own personal RFID. Now add this, there are many, especially among certain Christians, who believe that one day RFIDs will be necessary to access money in any form. So in short, we will all have these implants. They see this as the mark of the beast. Quoting for a minute from the last book in the Bible, the book of Revelations, “And he causeth all, both small and great, rich and poor, free and bond, to receive a mark in their right hand, or in their foreheads, and that no man might buy or sell, save he that had the mark of the name of the beast, or the number of his name.” 1

As always, thanks for the read and I appreciate your feedback.

Eldon Taylor

Eldon Taylor

Eldon Taylor
Provocative Enlightenment
NY Time Bestselling Author of Choices and Illusions
www.eldontaylor.com

Sources:

1 Bible, Revelation 13:16-17 King James Version