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Jul 6, 2002
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#21
Find Me, LLC Named Distributor for Subdermal VeriChip in Louisiana
Friday May 23, 12:35 pm ET
Joyce Bullard - CEO of Find Me, LLC - Will "Get Chipped"(TM) in New Orleans, May 29, 2003, to Kick off Louisiana Marketing Effort http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/030523/235206_1.html

NEW ORLEANS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 23, 2003--- Find Me, LLC, the distributor for VeriChip(TM) in Louisiana is pleased to announce the latest identification technology available to the financial, law enforcement, security and, subject to FDA approval, medical fields.
Joyce Bullard, the CEO of Find Me, LLC, will "Get Chipped" by local physician, Vincent Kidd, M.D., in Metairie on May 29th, 2003, to kick off her company's marketing effort in Louisiana. The subdermal VeriChip is a radio frequency identification (RFID) microchip about the size of a grain of rice. Ms. Bullard became interested in VeriChip and related GPS emergency-location technology after the Baton Rouge serial killer murdered Pam Kinamore, her best friend's sister.

Commenting on the VeriChip technology, Ms. Bullard said: "VeriChip provides an enormous opportunity for many different industries. From curbing identity theft and fraudulent access to banking, aiding control of authorized access to government installations and private-sector buildings, to future developments involving implantable GPS technology that could aid in finding missing children, VeriChip is an amazing breakthrough in identification and personal safeguard technology."

For more information about plans for the May 29th chipping procedure and informational program afterwards, media in the New Orleans area are invited contact Joyce Bullard (Tel: 504-858-0946; Email: [email protected]) or Jennifer Ansardi, LeBlanc & Schuster Public Relations (Tel: 504-833-5703; Email: [email protected]). For more information about Find Me, LLC, visit www.findmellc.com.

About VeriChip(TM)

VeriChip is a miniaturized, radio frequency identification (RFID) device that can be used in a variety of security, financial, emergency identification and other applications. About the size of a grain of rice, each VeriChip product contains a unique verification number and will be available in several formats, some of which will be insertable under the skin. The verification number is captured by briefly passing a proprietary scanner over the VeriChip. A small amount of radio frequency energy passes from the scanner energizing the dormant VeriChip, which then emits a radio frequency signal transmitting the verification number. In October 2002, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) ruled that VeriChip was not a regulated device with regard to its security, financial, personal identification/safety applications but that VeriChip's healthcare information applications are regulated by the FDA. VeriChip Corporation is a wholly owned subsidiary of Applied Digital Solutions (Nasdaq: ADSX - News). For more information about VeriChip, visit www.adsx.com.

About Find Me, LLC

Find Me, LLC is the distributor for VeriChip in Louisiana. VeriChip is the latest identification technology available to the medical, law enforcement, and security fields. Joyce Bullard, CEO of FindMe, LLC, became interested in this technology after the Baton Rouge Serial Killer selected her friend to be one of his victims. After several months of researching similar technology used in animals and GPS tracking systems, Find Me, LLC was founded. For more information about Find Me, LLC, contact Joyce Bullard at 504-858-0946 or visit www.findmellc.com.
 
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#22
New Body Art: Chip Implants

http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,50769,00.html

02:00 AM Mar. 11, 2002 PT

A Canadian artist has implanted microchips in her hands in a quest to explore the relationship between identity and technology in an era when life is increasingly regulated by gadgets and machines.

The creation of a biochip that can be implanted into people to transmit their personal information has been fantasy fodder for technophiles as well as being an Orwellian omen for others.
These are some of the issues Nancy Nisbet hopes to explore.

"I am expecting the merger between human and machines to proceed whether we want it to or not," said Nisbet. "If I adopt it and make it my own, I will have a better understanding of this type of technology and the potential threats and benefits it represents."

Nisbet, 34, purchased the chips from a veterinary clinic -- they are commonly used to identify livestock and pets. And after several rejections, she finally found a doctor willing to implant them in her body. (Microchips haven't been approved for human use in either the United States or Canada.)

Her chips, which emit a read-only 134-kilohertz frequency that is read by a scanner, contain a 12-digit alphanumeric ID. They were injected into the back of her hands, in the fleshy area between the thumb and index finger; the first was implanted in October 2001, the second in February.

She plans to modify her computer mouse to incorporate a scanner to pick up the chips' signals and monitor her Internet use. She'll use one hand to surf when she's working, the other for recreation, then compare her two "identities." And while the chips track her online movements, a webcam and GPS unit will track her physical movements.

"It's a way of connecting physical and virtual space and tracking my relationship with my computer, as well as my identities as I use it," said Nisbet, who teaches fine arts at the University of British Colombia and has degrees in both fine arts and genetics.

She had the chips placed in her hands for a symbolic reason: People use their hands to interact with technology and to identify themselves (think fingerprints or palm prints).

The location Nisbet chose for one of the chips -- the back of the right hand -- is also the precise spot where, according to Biblical lore, the "Mark of the Beast" will be placed during the apocalyptic end of the world detailed in the Book of Revelation.

Indeed, some Christians already believe that the Mark of the Beast is a microchip. When Applied Digital Solutions announced the creation of an implantable microchip for medical and security purposes, fervent believers decried the product as the sign of Satan.

But for Nisbet, the only demonic use of the microchips would be their mandatory implantation.

"The objective of this project is to further question issues of identity and control. By consciously appropriating this technology, I will be able to gain an understanding of its limits and failure while retaining control of what information is being gathered and how it is being used," she said.

Nisbet isn't the first artist to be chipped in an effort to break down the boundaries between biological and digital realms. In 1997, Eduardo Kac inserted a chip into his ankle during a live performance in Sao Paulo, then registered himself in an online pet database as both owner and animal.

After he implanted the device, a collaborator in Chicago read the chip information with a robotic arm controlled over the Internet, in effect making Kac's body a node in the Internet network.

The exercise was "emblematic of the dangers and potentials of what might lay ahead," Kac said. "Just the idea that someone can retrieve information from inside you without you knowing is frightening."
 
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#24
http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,50975,00.html

02:00 AM Mar. 12, 2002 PT

AUSTIN, Texas -- The human body is being broken down, analyzed and reimagined as part of an effort to build a better wearable computer.

Using the contours and movement of the human body to improve technology, the government, private corporations and universities are creating new products -- usually a blend of hardware and software -- that will radically reshape how people interact with themselves and the world around them.
"There's an idea of understanding and appreciating the body, then designing better technologies that are more sympathetic (to how the body moves) and (more) powerful than desktops," said Chris Kasabach, head of product development at Body Media, a company developing medical armbands that patients wear outside of hospitals.

The idea of the wearable computer evokes scary thoughts of sci-fi super-soldiers, intelligent cyborgs and an always-on government tracking its citizens. Kevin Warwick, the professor who embedded a chip in his arm to link him to his research lab, and the Jacobs family who want their medical records implanted, have done little to quell those fears.

But most computers have benign purposes, meant to enhance an individual's experience through the use of technology. College professor Steve Mann has developed devices, which by using a pair of sunglasses and a handheld clicker, enable people to link to the Internet, surf the Web and send e-mail.

Mann is the most extreme case, designing his own prototypes. Consumers can expect to find wearable technology much more user-friendly.

The Wearable Computer GroupM at Carnegie Mellon maps the body, looking for the parts that rarely move no matter what the motion. Then, the group develops an outline shape. New technology is designed to fit within that space, since those places are less likely to disturb the technology. There are pockets in the mid stomach and hamstring area, but the most obvious place is the one that watch makers have known about for years.

"As technology is shrinking, new forms are taking the shape of the wrist watch," said Francine Gemperle, a design researcher at Carnegie Mellon. "Simple technologies need to add function to our body."

One of the most talked-about wearable computers is NTT DoCoMo's cell phone Whisper, which is still in development. The phone vibrates on the inner wrist when there is an incoming call. To answer, people touch their forefinger to their ear and speak. The device uses bone conduction to transmit voices.

Mapping human motion is an evolving science but it has already brought breakthroughs in everyday products. Kinetic maps of divers have led to innovation in wetsuits for surfers and Navy SEALs. The Wright Patterson Air Force Base is home to new three-dimensional imaging projects that show how well equipment handles body contours.

While the entertainment usages are fun, medical care could be the biggest beneficiary of wearable computers. Joint and cochlear implants, prosthetics and tooth replacements are being refined and experimented at medical facilities. Right now, doctors have the ability to monitor their patients once they leave the office, using devices that monitor various body functions.

"In the case of medical technology, (wearable computers) means prolonging and changing the quality of life," Gemperle said.
 
Jul 6, 2002
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#25
Part Man, Part Film, All Mann

http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,50976,00.html

02:00 AM Mar. 12, 2002 PT


"If we think of technology as a runaway monster, we can think of this as a way to tame the beast with a piece of itself." -- Steve Mann, inventor of wearable computers, in Cyberman.

AUSTIN, Texas -- Steve Mann was never comfortable being a human being, so he spent his life trying to become something else.

That something else is to become the first human cyborg, and that's the subject of Cyberman, a documentary film that had its U.S. première at Austin's South by Southwest (SXSW) Film Festival.

The film traces Mann's gut-wrenching and charming 30-year path to merge humans with technology.

Mann, whom many people credit with developing the first wearable computer, never leaves his house without his bag of technological toys. His most prized possession is the "Eye-Tap" sunglasses he began developing during high school in the late '70s.

"There is an idea that the eye is a camera," Mann said during a virtual presentation, which was delivered in real-time using the Eye-Tap glasses and projected onto a large screen. "The idea being that you can come inside my head and see my world."

The Eye-Tap evolution, and the numerous wearable recording devices he developed, got worldwide notice in 1994. Long before webcams, Mann's website attracted 30,000 hits a day when he began broadcasting his life 24 hours a day while a student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

"There were a lot of people, I found, who'd rather watch me live my life than live their own life," Mann said.

He still broadcasts his life today, using a wireless connection and a static IP address to instantly deliver images to his website.

The modern glasses come with a mounted mini-camera for recording and broadcasting live feeds on the Internet. Plus, the right lens of his glasses also operates as a tiny computer screen: a basic DOS type screen, with the ability to do simple commands such as surf the Web, check e-mail and write small programs. A customized hand-clicker, about the size of a mouse, operates the entire system.

The glasses give Mann dual perception. With his left eye, he sees the world like the rest of us. The right lens has a tiny camera, which projects an image onto the lens. Half of his world is Windows Media while the other half is reality. The duality causes Mann to interact with other people as if he has no sight. He torques his head, leaning in as people speak to him, and often appears tentative moving around rooms.

The filmmakers, headed by director Peter Lynch at the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, use that duality to tell their story. They intersperse interviews with three screen shots showing the same scene through 35 mm film, Mann's Internet media and his digital camera.

The film traces his lifelong goal of pushing the limits of where the human being ends and the computer begins.

His experiments have often alienated him from those around him. His best friend in sixth grade, Graham, wasn't allowed to play with him because his mother felt Mann's fascination with electronic gadgets was weird. That stigma followed him through his college years, when MIT students tried to have his live broadcasts shut down.

But Mann continued, undaunted by the criticism and chiding. Through it all, he's constructed devices that allow him to record every moment he sees, connect with the Internet 24 hours a day and develop a legion of followers at the University of Toronto, where he teaches engineering.

Mann is scraggly. He has the look of a mad scientist too concerned with work to care about physical appearance. His thin strands of hair hang just above his shoulders, constantly getting in his way. He has perpetual whiskers and his fingernails get longer throughout the film, as if he's forgotten other people can see him. The oversized Eye-Tap glasses look better suited for a Florida retiree than a university professor.
But there is a gentle humanity to Mann, who evokes an emotional response from nearly everyone he's around. His notions of privacy are met with disdain, something he documented in a real–time streaming experiment called Shooting Back.

"We explored what happened when we'd bring an ordinary handheld camera into places with surveillance," Mann said during a virtual presentation. "I was often told only criminals were afraid of cameras (by store employees), but then I was told that I couldn't record in those stores."

The experiment led to a humorous scene with a trio of Wal-Mart employees.

Mann enters the store with the documentary filmmakers, a handheld digital camera and his Eye-Tap glasses. As he stands under a security camera and the television monitor showing people as they enter and leave the store, two employees tell him he isn't allowed to record anything. He counters that if the store can run surveillance, he should be able to record. The filmmakers are eventually run out when the assistant manager can't explain the difference between taping for security and his Internet media experiment.

He's met with similar reactions from the New York City police department and the Secret Service. In a strange twist of fate, Mann actually missed the Austin screening because airport security wouldn't let him on the plane with his gear.

The Eye-Tap glasses get a real-world test during an anti-poverty demonstration in Canada that erupts into a full-fledged fight between the police (in full riot gear) and the angry mob. Mann broadcasts live footage from the event, along with still photographs, directly to the Internet.

The most poignant moment of the film comes as he recounts his childhood days with his friend Graham, with whom he used to design and build circuit boards. Eventually, Graham's mother thinks Mann's fascination with electrical equipment is unhealthy and forbids the boys from playing together anymore.

It's a theme that is repeated throughout his life. However, Mann continues to press forward with his work, teaching a new generation of students how to create technologies that blur the line between reality and cyberspace.

written by Brad King
 
Jul 6, 2002
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#26
Hitachi Unveils Smallest RFID Chip

Hitachi Unveils Smallest RFID Chip
The Japanese chipmaker recently showed off an RFID microchip that is just 0.3 square millimeter square.

March 14, 2003 - Hitachi, the Japanese semiconductor company, has unveiled a prototype for the next generation of its µ-Chip (pronounced mu-chip). The chip is just 0.3 millimeters square, roughly half the size of the smallest RFID chip on the market.

The decrease in size was achieved by employing semiconductor fabrication processes that creates structures on the wafer that are just 0.18 microns. Most existing RFID chips use older 0.35 micron processes. The prototype of the mu-chip was shown at the International Solid-State Circuits Conference held in San Francisco, Calif., last month.

Mu-chips get smaller

The chip operates at 2.45 GHz and stores a 128-bit number based on the "mu-chip ID number criterion" developed by Hitachi, which issues the numbers. The number is written to the chip during the silicon fabrication process and cannot be changed. The current mu-chip can be read from about a foot away (30 cm). The new version is expected to maintain the same performance standards.

Another innovation in the new mu chip involves the electrodes, where the ends of the coiled antenna are attached. These are usually on the top of the chip, but on the new mu-chip, one is on the top and one is on the bottom. Hitachi says this will dramatically improve its ability to mass-produce RFID tags with mu-chips.

With very small chips, it becomes difficult to attach the antenna using conventional flip chip technology, in which the electrodes are coated with adhesive, and then the chip is turned over and pressed onto the antenna. Hitachi decline to describe the mass production technique it uses to attach the antennas for competitive reasons.

Hitachi currently sells RFID inlets (the chip with an antenna attached, on a substrate) for 50 yen (43 US cents) for orders of 70,000 or more. Readers currently cost about $1,500. The company has not established pricing for the new chip, but a spokesperson for Hitachi told RFID Journal that the company plans to sell complete systems -- tags, readers, software and networking infrastructure -- in 2005.

Hitachi sees the mu-chip as an attractive alternative to applications where a bar code isn't suitable and more conventional RFID tags are too expensive. Among the markets it is targeting are supply chain management, product tracability, and security applications.

A number of Hitachi divisions are already using the mu-chip. And Marubeni-Itochu Steel has purchased tags for tracking items. The mu-chip doesn't conform to any international standards, so it is currently being used in closed-loop applications.
 
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#27
Are Leading Right Wing Evangelists

Are Leading Right Wing Evangelists
Working For The NWO?
http://www.rense.com/general33/nwoo.htm
By Eric Jewell
[email protected]
www.endtimezwarriorz.com
1-14-3

For those who avoid religious articles, let me assure you I avoid most of them, too and this is not a religious or doctrinal writing. This article offers facts and begs the question, "Is the religious right being duped into accepting the NWO and luring millions in turn to "getting chipped"?

The story begins about a year ago when I began to uncover and expose the relationship between Tim Lahaye, co-author with Jerry Jenkins of the 'Left Behind' Christian fiction series, the Reverend Sun Myung Moon, and U.S. Intelligence agencies. What resulted from this was the 4 part series "Christianity and NWO - An Unholy Alliance".

During this time, Mr. Jenkins frequented Tyndale publishing's official 'Left Behind' message board. For various reasons I had several debates with him in his "author's forum". There was the discussion of Lahaye's relationship with Rev. Moon and intelligence personnel, which was at first denied until I began to publicly produce the evidence of these relationships, and then little by little individual facts were acknowledged while still denying the relationship.

This was only part of the story however, and as Paul Harvey would say, and now for... the rest of the story.

While in the process of discussing and debating the merits of Lahaye's relationship with US intelligence and the cult leader Rev. Moon, a second debate arose. This second debate could very well shed more light on the agenda of the authors and many conservative/Christian religious leaders of the right wing and their strange relationships with a man claiming to be messiah and their involvement in the intelligence community.

The Chang Scenario

Introduced into the series of books by Lahaye and Jenkins we see a character by the name of Chang. According to the authors, Chang associates with the hated Christians. At the same time however, he is living in a society, which is administering the Mark of the Beast and imprisoning, torturing, and killing those who have confessed Christ. He rides the fence and though he had not as yet received the mark, neither had he confessed Christ. The reason he gives for not receiving the mark is that it looks "painful". His father takes him to a medical facility where he is given the mark. Feeling doomed, he then finds his Christian friends who inform him that since he had been marked first by God, (???) the mark of God overcame the mark of the beast and he was now bearing both marks. Being familiar with the basic teachings of evangelical christianity, this certainly struck me as a strange scenario coming from 2 men who assume the roles of Christian teachers.

The same Bible that Lahaye and Jenkins claim to be teaching is very clear concerning the mark of the beast and the fate of those receiving the mark. It is the book of Revelation, chapter 13 that warns:

[16] 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:
[17] And that no man might buy or sell, save he that had the mark, or the name of the beast, or the number of his name.
[18] Here is wisdom. Let him that hath understanding count the number of the beast: for it is the number of a man; and his number is Six hundred threescore and six. (666)

It is this very passage to which even non-Christians refer concerning VeriChip and Digital Angel, warning that this will indeed progress until it becomes mandatory, thereby becoming the mark of the beast.

Though Lahaye is closely associated with Rev Moon and US intelligence through the organizations he founded such as the CNP, he is also a political activist and helped co-found the Pre-Trib Research Center (PTRC). He is hailed by many Christians as a scholar of prophecy, so ignorance of the scriptures cannot be an excuse for leading the Christian right into such justification for taking the mark or "getting Chipped". Could it be that the Bible he claims to believe is vague concerning this issue? Again -- and this is why so many are raising their voices about VeriChip -- His Bible and mine are very clear concerning the fate of those who will be "chipped".

http://www.hti.umich.edu/cgi/k/kjv/kjv-idx?type=DIV2&byte=5418365

Rev.14

[9] And the third angel followed them, saying with a loud voice, If any man worship the beast and his image, and receive his mark in his forehead, or in his hand,

[10] The same shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God, which is poured out without mixture into the cup of his indignation; and he shall be tormented with fire and brimstone in the presence of the holy angels, and in the presence of the Lamb:

[11] And the smoke of their torment ascendeth up for ever and ever: and they have no rest day nor night, who worship the beast and his image, and whosoever receiveth the mark of his name.

There are several other passages as well which are just as descriptive.

Has this premise effected the church?

Five years ago, if anyone in the church had been asked if they could bear both the mark of the beast and the mark of God, I would have felt confident that no one in the church who knew anything about the book of Revelation would have endorsed such an idea. The sad truth is however that there are now many on Tyndale's 'Left Behind' message board who have began to accept the idea that if they or someone "left behind" (ie, not taken by Christ in the 'rapture' as the belief goes) are chipped they will be just fine because they were marked by God first. Given the popularity of the series in the western world, it could be conjectured that the Church is indeed being primed to accept that they can be "chipped" and still be spiritually safe because they were marked by God first. As strange as it may sound coming from such men Jenkins has actually stated this. (Email me for a portion of the actual discussion.)

The questions I am raising here are not theological. Even many people of other religions are warning about VeriChip. The questions I am raising are more of the conspiratorial nature. Let's examine a few points that few will argue against.

#1 There are people of many differing belief systems who would agree that we are living in what is commonly called "the last days".

#2 There are many who believe that the worlds leaders, including and especially our own, have sold out constituency and have been knowingly leading us into a New World Order.

#3 In order to usher in a one world government it is absolutely necessary to bring in as many individuals as possible from every segment of society.

For instance, if only Republicans were bringing in the N.W.O., the Democrats would rebel against it and there would be quite a scrap and too much time, effort and expense would make it a fruitless effort that in the end, even many N.W.O. pundits would condemn. It is necessary for republicans, democrats, and independents to back entering into the N.W.O. If it only included the non-religious, then the religious would rebel on a large scale and likely prolong its ushering in, if not completely defeating it. So yes, especially taking into account that much of the western world calls itself Christian, it is an absolute necessity to bring in the Bible believer, as well as a majority from every religion possible for the smoothest of transitions.

Bearing these common sense facts in mind the next logical conclusion is that it is necessary to infiltrate the leadership of the church. From pulpits to seminaries, to councils, to religious writings. The church attendee has for 2000 years been commonly called "sheep" because they follow the teachers of the scriptures. It is necessary to the agenda of the N.W.O. that they be given leaders who practice the art of "appearing" to expound on the teachings of Christianity, while in reality they are leading them into acceptance of a one world government and the acceptance of "getting chipped". What is the reward to those who take these leadership positions? Reverend Moon gives gold watches, all expense paid trips, and most formidably hard cash. The left behind series has netted the authors well over 10 million dollars apiece, and this figure was a few books ago. Since then Lahaye and Jenkins have renegotiated their contract with Tyndale, and you can be assured it wasn't because they felt they were receiving too much money.

A fresh look at members of Lahaye's CNP will reveal more strange bed fellows.

Sen. Jesse Helms

Endorses the Moon owned Washington Times, closely associated with the CIA, and a member of the Council for Foreign Relations (CFR). Member of Tim LaHaye's CNP Board of Governors, Member of the Religious Roundtable, also chaired by LaHaye and several other leading evangelicals. Sen. Helms was also an attendee of several of Rev. Moon's World Anti-Communist League (WACL) conventions; Member of Moon funded 'Heritage Foundation', and American Conservative Union.
 
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#28
Lt. General Daniel Graham

Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, Deputy Director CIA, Military advisor to President Reagan, was with the American Security Council and publicly endorses the Moon owned Washington Times. Also a member of the Moon organization World Anti-Communist League, and board of Directors for Rev. Moon's CAUSA. He founded the U.S. Council of World Freedom, which is a breeding ground for the leadership of Moon's World Anti-Communist League. He was Also associated with the group "Western Goals," a domestic intelligence gathering organization, which was also associated with Ollie North and the Iran/Contra debacle. Graham is a member of the American Freedom Coalition, which was also a Moon Funded group with many evangelicals such as Don Sills and Tim LaHaye. General Graham was Vice Chairman for the U.S. Council for World Freedom, which also is closely related to Moon's CAUSA. A member of the Council of 56, Religious Roundtable, and Board Member to Tim LaHaye's Council of National Policy.

Allan Gottlieb

Board Member of Moon's front group, the American Freedom Coalition. In 1983 the Moon group CAUSA, founded by Bo Hi Pak, former Korean CIA and liaison to the American CIA, and Moon's #1 man, granted Gottleib an all expense paid trip to Jamaica for a CAUSA conference, and he was thereafter associated with CAUSA. Gottlieb was also with the American Conservative Union, and was a CNP Member, and LaHaye/evangelical crony.

J. Peter Grace

Council of Foreign Relations (a breeding ground for the Bilderbergers, actively seeking to bring in the NWO), Knights of Malta, and worked with the CIA to remove classified info concerning former Nazi scientists so that they could immigrate into the U.S., in order to carry on their work (including mind control projects) in the United States.

John Ashbrook

Ashbrook was on the Advisory Board of the Western Goals (U.S. domestic intelligence gathering group), Also a member of Moon's front group "Christian Voice", founded by Bo Hi Pak. He was a member of the American Conservative Union and CNP Board of Governors.

Max Hugel

(CNP Member) Former special assistant CIA Deputy Director for Administration, and Deputy Director for Operations.

United Nations. Kirkpatrick was a chairman for Moon's NicGen Richard Stillwell

Associated with AmeriCares, Chief of Far East Office of Policy Coordination, and was the head of Pentagon Intelligence during Reagan's Administration. Served as undersecretary of Defense for policy, helped to form the Intelligence Support Activity, which was a top secret army espionage unit that operated in El Salvador when that government was toppled and restructured. He was the CIA's contact man in the office of Secretary of Defense.

Edwin Meese

Former Attorney General, former Chief of Staff for the Reagan Administration, and was closely tied with the Bush family.


Jeane Kirkpatrick

U.S. Diplomatic Rep. to the araguan Freedom Fund. She has been a director of the Council of Foreign Relations, (a force pushing the world into its New Order, many of which are Bilderbergers), and has been an honored speaker for Lahaye's CNP.

Maj. General John K. Singlaub

Formerly of the OSS (forerunner of the CIA), Former Deputy Chief CIA in Korea (Moon's homeland), and also at the Chinese desk of the CIA(2), Head of the Joint Unconventional Warfare Task Force, and was with the American Security council. Singlaub denies association with Operation Phoenix, though his Task Force was in charge of it. Operation Phoenix was an assassination organization that was responsible for the death of many thousands of Vietnamese civilians. Chief of Staff of the U.N. Command in Korea, forced to retire under Jimmy Carter. He founded the U.S. Council of World Freedom, which is very tightly associated with Rev. Moon's World Anti-Communist League.

His Council has been a breeding ground for Moon's WACL organization. He met repeatedly with William Casey of the CIA, Elliot Abrams of the State Department, and Oliver North of the NSC between 1980 and 1986, all of which were involved in the "drugs for guns" debacle in Honduras and Nicaragua. He was head of the USCWF, Chairman of Moon's WACL (World Anti-Communist League), Refugee Relief International, board member of Tim Lahaye's Council of National Policy (Singlaub raised at least $100,000 for Moon's WACL from Tim Lahaye's CNP group during just 1 fundraiser. Singlaub has been with Western Goals (a group dedicated to surveillance of American "subversives"), and the British arm of Western Goals.

In an interview for CBS's "60 Minutes" Mike Wallace asked him, "Singlaub has become Ronald Reagan's secret weapon to sidestep a congress that will not permit him to act in the areas where he believes that our (national) security interests are at stake· True?" Singlaub responded "True". His associations with these groups were to effect the toppling and restructuring of governments. He did this largely through LaHaye's CNP and the Council of 56 Religious Roundtable. He has admitted that the Defense Department organized the private aid, which largely included Moon's NFF, WACL, Heritage Foundation, And Tim LaHaye's CNP and The Religious Roundtable.

These men were behind the scenes planning and carrying out the dirty work since the Nixon administration, and their efforts have been untiring. If it can be said that the agenda of the United States is the bringing in of the N.W.O. then it can certainly be said that these men have all been instrumental in it's shaping. Just 1 decade from the time Lahaye formed the ACTV (another conservative religious activist organization) and much less than a decade from the time he helped found the CNP, he teamed with Jenkins to begin the left behind series.

Could this be the reason that when Jenkins was faced with this statement, "It is not my assertion that one with the mark would be lost, it is God's", his reply was "I disagree"?
 
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#32
The "666" is a numerical representation of the imperfection of man. IF you think about it, we already have the number of man assigned to us...What is your social security number? Your bank acount number? If you've been arrested you have a number logged into the system. When people start getting chipped in their hands or foreheads, then the prophesy of St. John as foretold by the Holy Spirit will be fullfilled.

Belleedat!
 
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#35
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070909/ap_on_re_us/chipping_america_ii_2

Chip implants linked to animal tumors By TODD LEWAN, AP National Writer
Sun Sep 9, 7:35 AM ET



When the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved implanting microchips in humans, the manufacturer said it would save lives, letting doctors scan the tiny transponders to access patients' medical records almost instantly. The FDA found "reasonable assurance" the device was safe, and a sub-agency even called it one of 2005's top "innovative technologies."


But neither the company nor the regulators publicly mentioned this: A series of veterinary and toxicology studies, dating to the mid-1990s, stated that chip implants had "induced" malignant tumors in some lab mice and rats.

"The transponders were the cause of the tumors," said Keith Johnson, a retired toxicologic pathologist, explaining in a phone interview the findings of a 1996 study he led at the Dow Chemical Co. in Midland, Mich.

Leading cancer specialists reviewed the research for The Associated Press and, while cautioning that animal test results do not necessarily apply to humans, said the findings troubled them. Some said they would not allow family members to receive implants, and all urged further research before the glass-encased transponders are widely implanted in people.

To date, about 2,000 of the so-called radio frequency identification, or RFID, devices have been implanted in humans worldwide, according to VeriChip Corp. The company, which sees a target market of 45 million Americans for its medical monitoring chips, insists the devices are safe, as does its parent company, Applied Digital Solutions, of Delray Beach, Fla.

"We stand by our implantable products which have been approved by the FDA and/or other U.S. regulatory authorities," Scott Silverman, VeriChip Corp. chairman and chief executive officer, said in a written response to AP questions.

The company was "not aware of any studies that have resulted in malignant tumors in laboratory rats, mice and certainly not dogs or cats," but he added that millions of domestic pets have been implanted with microchips, without reports of significant problems.

"In fact, for more than 15 years we have used our encapsulated glass transponders with FDA approved anti-migration caps and received no complaints regarding malignant tumors caused by our product."

The FDA also stands by its approval of the technology.

Did the agency know of the tumor findings before approving the chip implants? The FDA declined repeated AP requests to specify what studies it reviewed.

The FDA is overseen by the Department of Health and Human Services, which, at the time of VeriChip's approval, was headed by Tommy Thompson. Two weeks after the device's approval took effect on Jan. 10, 2005, Thompson left his Cabinet post, and within five months was a board member of VeriChip Corp. and Applied Digital Solutions. He was compensated in cash and stock options.

Thompson, until recently a candidate for the 2008 Republican presidential nomination, says he had no personal relationship with the company as the VeriChip was being evaluated, nor did he play any role in FDA's approval process of the RFID tag.

"I didn't even know VeriChip before I stepped down from the Department of Health and Human Services," he said in a telephone interview.

Also making no mention of the findings on animal tumors was a June report by the ethics committee of the American Medical Association, which touted the benefits of implantable RFID devices.

Had committee members reviewed the literature on cancer in chipped animals?

No, said Dr. Steven Stack, an AMA board member with knowledge of the committee's review.

Was the AMA aware of the studies?

No, he said.

___

Published in veterinary and toxicology journals between 1996 and 2006, the studies found that lab mice and rats injected with microchips sometimes developed subcutaneous "sarcomas" — malignant tumors, most of them encasing the implants.

• A 1998 study in Ridgefield, Conn., of 177 mice reported cancer incidence to be slightly higher than 10 percent — a result the researchers described as "surprising."

• A 2006 study in France detected tumors in 4.1 percent of 1,260 microchipped mice. This was one of six studies in which the scientists did not set out to find microchip-induced cancer but noticed the growths incidentally. They were testing compounds on behalf of chemical and pharmaceutical companies; but they ruled out the compounds as the tumors' cause. Because researchers only noted the most obvious tumors, the French study said, "These incidences may therefore slightly underestimate the true occurrence" of cancer.

• In 1997, a study in Germany found cancers in 1 percent of 4,279 chipped mice. The tumors "are clearly due to the implanted microchips," the authors wrote.

Caveats accompanied the findings. "Blind leaps from the detection of tumors to the prediction of human health risk should be avoided," one study cautioned. Also, because none of the studies had a control group of animals that did not get chips, the normal rate of tumors cannot be determined and compared to the rate with chips implanted.

Still, after reviewing the research, specialists at some pre-eminent cancer institutions said the findings raised red flags.

"There's no way in the world, having read this information, that I would have one of those chips implanted in my skin, or in one of my family members," said Dr. Robert Benezra, head of the Cancer Biology Genetics Program at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York.

Before microchips are implanted on a large scale in humans, he said, testing should be done on larger animals, such as dogs or monkeys. "I mean, these are bad diseases. They are life-threatening. And given the preliminary animal data, it looks to me that there's definitely cause for concern."

Dr. George Demetri, director of the Center for Sarcoma and Bone Oncology at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, agreed. Even though the tumor incidences were "reasonably small," in his view, the research underscored "certainly real risks" in RFID implants.

In humans, sarcomas, which strike connective tissues, can range from the highly curable to "tumors that are incredibly aggressive and can kill people in three to six months," he said.

At the Jackson Laboratory in Maine, a leader in mouse genetics research and the initiation of cancer, Dr. Oded Foreman, a forensic pathologist, also reviewed the studies at the AP's request.

At first he was skeptical, suggesting that chemicals administered in some of the studies could have caused the cancers and skewed the results. But he took a different view after seeing that control mice, which received no chemicals, also developed the cancers. "That might be a little hint that something real is happening here," he said. He, too, recommended further study, using mice, dogs or non-human primates.

Dr. Cheryl London, a veterinarian oncologist at Ohio State University, noted: "It's much easier to cause cancer in mice than it is in people. So it may be that what you're seeing in mice represents an exaggerated phenomenon of what may occur in people."

Tens of thousands of dogs have been chipped, she said, and veterinary pathologists haven't reported outbreaks of related sarcomas in the area of the neck, where canine implants are often done. (Published reports detailing malignant tumors in two chipped dogs turned up in AP's four-month examination of research on chips and health. In one dog, the researchers said cancer appeared linked to the presence of the embedded chip; in the other, the cancer's cause was uncertain.)

Nonetheless, London saw a need for a 20-year study of chipped canines "to see if you have a biological effect." Dr. Chand Khanna, a veterinary oncologist at the National Cancer Institute, also backed such a study, saying current evidence "does suggest some reason to be concerned about tumor formations."

Meanwhile, the animal study findings should be disclosed to anyone considering a chip implant, the cancer specialists agreed.

To date, however, that hasn't happened.

___

The product that VeriChip Corp. won approval for use in humans is an electronic capsule the size of two grains of rice. Generally, it is implanted with a syringe into an anesthetized portion of the upper arm.

When prompted by an electromagnetic scanner, the chip transmits a unique code. With the code, hospital staff can go on the Internet and access a patient's medical profile that is maintained in a database by VeriChip Corp. for an annual fee.

VeriChip Corp., whose parent company has been marketing radio tags for animals for more than a decade, sees an initial market of diabetics and people with heart conditions or Alzheimer's disease, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing.

The company is spending millions to assemble a national network of hospitals equipped to scan chipped patients.

But in its SEC filings, product labels and press releases, VeriChip Corp. has not mentioned the existence of research linking embedded transponders to tumors in test animals.

When the FDA approved the device, it noted some Verichip risks: The capsules could migrate around the body, making them difficult to extract; they might interfere with defibrillators, or be incompatible with MRI scans, causing burns. While also warning that the chips could cause "adverse tissue reaction," FDA made no reference to malignant growths in animal studies.

Did the agency review literature on microchip implants and animal cancer?

Dr. Katherine Albrecht, a privacy advocate and RFID expert, asked shortly after VeriChip's approval what evidence the agency had reviewed. When FDA declined to provide information, she filed a Freedom of Information Act request. More than a year later, she received a letter stating there were no documents matching her request.

"The public relies on the FDA to evaluate all the data and make sure the devices it approves are safe," she says, "but if they're not doing that, who's covering our backs?"

Late last year, Albrecht unearthed at the Harvard medical library three studies noting cancerous tumors in some chipped mice and rats, plus a reference in another study to a chipped dog with a tumor. She forwarded them to the AP, which subsequently found three additional mice studies with similar findings, plus another report of a chipped dog with a tumor.

Asked if it had taken these studies into account, the FDA said VeriChip documents were being kept confidential to protect trade secrets. After AP filed a FOIA request, the FDA made available for a phone interview Anthony Watson, who was in charge of the VeriChip approval process.

"At the time we reviewed this, I don't remember seeing anything like that," he said of animal studies linking microchips to cancer. A literature search "didn't turn up anything that would be of concern."

In general, Watson said, companies are expected to provide safety-and-effectiveness data during the approval process, "even if it's adverse information."

Watson added: "The few articles from the literature that did discuss adverse tissue reactions similar to those in the articles you provided, describe the responses as foreign body reactions that are typical of other implantable devices. The balance of the data provided in the submission supported approval of the device."

Another implantable device could be a pacemaker, and indeed, tumors have in some cases attached to foreign bodies inside humans. But Dr. Neil Lipman, director of the Research Animal Resource Center at Memorial Sloan-Kettering, said it's not the same. The microchip isn't like a pacemaker that's vital to keeping someone alive, he added, "so at this stage, the payoff doesn't justify the risks."

Silverman, VeriChip Corp.'s chief executive, disagreed. "Each month pet microchips reunite over 8,000 dogs and cats with their owners," he said. "We believe the VeriMed Patient Identification System will provide similar positive benefits for at-risk patients who are unable to communicate for themselves in an emergency."

___

And what of former HHS secretary Thompson?

When asked what role, if any, he played in VeriChip's approval, Thompson replied: "I had nothing to do with it. And if you look back at my record, you will find that there has never been any improprieties whatsoever."

FDA's Watson said: "I have no recollection of him being involved in it at all." VeriChip Corp. declined comment.

Thompson vigorously campaigned for electronic medical records and healthcare technology both as governor of Wisconsin and at HHS. While in President Bush's Cabinet, he formed a "medical innovation" task force that worked to partner FDA with companies developing medical information technologies.

At a "Medical Innovation Summit" on Oct. 20, 2004, Lester Crawford, the FDA's acting commissioner, thanked the secretary for getting the agency "deeply involved in the use of new information technology to help prevent medication error." One notable example he cited: "the implantable chips and scanners of the VeriChip system our agency approved last week."

After leaving the Cabinet and joining the company board, Thompson received options on 166,667 shares of VeriChip Corp. stock, and options on an additional 100,000 shares of stock from its parent company, Applied Digital Solutions, according to SEC records. He also received $40,000 in cash in 2005 and again in 2006, the filings show.

The Project on Government Oversight called Thompson's actions "unacceptable" even though they did not violate what the independent watchdog group calls weak conflict-of-interest laws.

"A decade ago, people would be embarrassed to cash in on their government connections. But now it's like the Wild West," said the group's executive director, Danielle Brian.

Thompson is a partner at Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP, a Washington law firm that was paid $1.2 million for legal services it provided the chip maker in 2005 and 2006, according to SEC filings.

He stepped down as a VeriChip Corp. director in March to seek the GOP presidential nomination, and records show that the company gave his campaign $7,400 before he bowed out of the race in August.

In a TV interview while still on the board, Thompson was explaining the benefits — and the ease — of being chipped when an interviewer interrupted:

"I'm sorry, sir. Did you just say you would get one implanted in your arm?"

"Absolutely," Thompson replied. "Without a doubt."

"No concerns at all?"

"No."

But to date, Thompson has yet to be chipped himself.

___

On the Web:

http://www.verichipcorp.com

http://www.antichips.com

http://www.fda.gov/cdrh/
 
Nov 21, 2005
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www.revver.com
#38
Man fuck microchips...

If anyone is dumb enough to believe.. a device which will give them tumors.. will save their lives.. then.. they DESERVE to be slaves....

I said it before.. and I'll say it again....

Vote for RON PAUL... or you can kiss life, liberty, and happiness goodbye..

personally I'd rather shoot myself than take one of these things into my body..

i mean they put these is FUCKING ANIMALS.. I am above any animals....

Plus they plan to put these chips in people WORLD WIDE...

it will take them a long time... many years to reach this goal..

and the NWO has stated the resistance is MUCH greater than anything they could have imagined.. and it will only grow....

In the words... of Patrick Henry...

GIVE ME LIBERTY.... OR GIVE ME DEATH!!!

Fuck microchips... David Rockefeller.. can take his microchips.. and pound straight up.. his hunchback ass!!!

Ron Paul for Prez!!! Down with the new world order!!!