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Originally posted by XXXN3O
reply to post by ThichHeaded
Tracking individuals (e.g. children, government officials) through an implanted RFID microchip. VeriChip's implantable microchip does not have the capabilities to offer such service since it does not have built-in Global Positioning System (GPS) support or long-range wireless communications.
Source www.verichipcorp.com...
[edit on 15-10-2009 by XXXN3O]
Originally posted by Foppezao
This is how they introduce the mark of the beast, with all the courtesy and love, and we want it...it scares me
[edit on 15-10-2009 by Foppezao]
Originally posted by xelamental
Originally posted by Foppezao
This is how they introduce the mark of the beast, with all the courtesy and love, and we want it...it scares me
[edit on 15-10-2009 by Foppezao]
I remember when the fundies said that money cards were the mark of the beast. They seem to have gotten over that. Now it's RFID?
Originally posted by TheOracle
You guys dont really get it.
The chips arent really made for us.
Of course they know for many, hell needs to freeze over before they are getting chipped. They have their eyes on our children and next generations. For kids it will be cool to have a chip and have no need to carry cash or ID. They will carry on using it and, in turn, give it to their children. Eventually having a chip will be common sense, even mandatory like today's bank accounts.
Unless a revolution happens, we are doomed to slavery by our 'masters'. They have the power, the means and the time to do to us whatever they feel like doing.
Originally posted by Parallex
reply to post by XXXN3O
Seriously Neo - you do post some good things, but your constant religious drivel irks me something chronic. Save it for people who want to hear it, at Church, where preaching normally happens.
This advert is good stuff - we need to beat them to it in the upcoming PR campaign about these chips. Get everyone informed, and ALWAYS, ALWAYS attach it to the Rockefeller quote with some added context. That way, noone in their right mind will touch these bad boys.
The Para.
Originally posted by MajesticJax
Can you imagine HOW drug dealers, terrorists, criminals in general, would OPERATE without this?
This would ELIMINATE an IMMENSE amount of crime, OVERNIGHT, if these were implanted, and used for all transactions.
That's how TPTB are gonna sell this demon to us. It's ALWAYS problem=reaction=solution to get what they want.
With the introduction of AFIS technology, the files were split into computerized criminal files and manually maintained civil files. Many of the manual files were duplicates though, the records actually represented somewhere in the neighborhood of 25 to 30 million criminals, and an unknown number of individuals in the civil files.
2004
The FBI's Integrated AFIS (IAFIS) in Clarksburg, WVhas more than 46 million individual computerized fingerprint records for known criminals. Old paper fingerprint cards for the civil files are still manually maintained in a warehouse facility (rented shopping center space) in Fairmont, WV, though most enlisted military service member fingerprint cards received after 1990, and all military-related fingerprint cards received after 19 May 2000, have now been computerized and can be searched internally by the FBI. In some future build of IAFIS, the FBI may make such civil file AFIS searches available to other federal crime laboratories.
Military DNA Registry Used in Criminal Case
Biotech
Privacy
Posted by michael on Fri Jul 18, '03 12:25 PM
from the blood-will-tell dept.
bubblegoose writes "The Reading Eagle has a story about a man sought in a Reading, PA. murder who was arrested Thursday in Puerto Rico. This is the first time anyone has been apprehended in a criminal case based on DNA collected by the military. Apparently the DNA registry has a stringent set of rules that must be met for a blood sample to be released and those were satisfied." The DNA registry catalogs DNA samples from all US armed forces, ostensibly for identifying remains (although if that were the only reason, the samples would be automatically destroyed at the end of the servicemember's contract.)
Keying in on Faces
How Facial Recognition Software Finds Faces
By Paul Eng
July 6 — Your face may not launch a thousand ships, but it may soon launch your online purchases, and prevent someone from stealing your identity. “Facial recognition” software, available since the early 1990s, helps spot patterns of a person’s face — the distance between the eyes and the shape of the nostrils, for example — and then compares themagainst digital photos stored in a computer database. And as computers have become more powerful, they’ve moved out of university and government labs and into real use — and could soon find much wider application.
Most recently, police in Florida have installed a public surveillance system that uses facial recognition to spot criminals in a crowd. Tampa police had previously tested a similar system during the Super Bowl last January. That setup, by Littleton, Mass.-based Viisage Technology, matched 19 people to their mugshots out of the estimated 100,000 people who stepped through the turnstiles.