IT'S AS BAD AS YOU THINK... AND THEY'RE OUT TO GET YOU
Since my mid teens I've been fuming about an approaching phenomenon I've come to call Great Gulag, the Prison Planet. Here are some snippets that should render you sufficiently disturbed. Please note some of this is old news.
The BIOCHIP
has been in use for tracking animals for years now (the New Jersey Center for Pet Identification, et al), but it has also been used in humans. In Florida, senior citizens are being injected because the Biochip can easily be scanned to check medical information such as required dosages of medication. It is also being forced upon some foreign exchange students as a condition of entering into the United States. In England, panic over a missing child spurred Brits in droves to demand that the Biochip be made available to inject into their infants. An increasing number of organizations, including a number or large companies, now require members or employees to be injected with the BioChip. Immediately after NYC cab drivers thwarted the installation of GPS devices in their vehicles, it was announced that property inspectors, and soon all manner of official vehicles, would be permanently tracked. New developments show cab drivers have lost this case, and will now be permanently tracked. Other drivers are not immune, as plans are in the works to replace toll booths with cashless - and therefore more efficient - camera systems that will photograph license plates of all passing cars. Doubtless there will be an 'option' to have tolls directly deducted from drivers' debit accounts. OnStar can be used to seize control of a driver’s car, lock in all vehicle occupants, slow the vehicle, and bring it to a halt. School and city buses are being outfitted with GPS devices, and the MTA will install surveillance cameras systemwide on buses and subways. The footage from this surveillance, recorded and transmitted digitally, will NEVER be deleted. In addition, more neighborhoods in New York City will follow other major metropolitan areas with the deployment of hundreds of marked and unmarked security cameras in 'sensitive areas' like ghettoes or financial districts. Soon these cameras will be "smart": able to pick up on abnormalities in behavior, or certain human features and modes of dress. Currently being unveiled in Britain is the T5000, which can see under an individual's clothes from up to 80 feet away. Recently added have been SkyWatch surveillance towers which too closely resemble guardtowers at prison camps. whether manned or unmanned, cameras within these towers are constantly recording activity on the street below. At street level, police in New York have requested all enforcement firearms be outfitted with realtime digital video cameras. In addition, within the confines of the MTA and elsewhere, police have been randomly stopping and frisking 'random' individuals, ostensibly keeping their personal information for up to one year, against any future possible crimes.
HR418, bundled in with the immigration reform bill as part of the
Real ID Act of 2005, cloaks blueprints for implementing a National ID Cardas early as January 1, 2008, similar to those implemented in other countries, to institute a permanent national DNA database as a waystation for requiring the BioChip for all travel and commerce.
Then there's the increasing confluence of technology, in the name of greater efficiency and convenience. In Texas, supermarket chain Krogers has been offering the 'option' of paying at the cashier by thumbprint. The technology, known as BIOPAY, is now sweeping the world. And Walmart has announced it will no longer be issuing paychecks, but will pay all of its workers electronically. Meanwhile, an increasing number of high profile
retailers in the US are accepting the euro as currency. In Japan, the latest craze is Wireless Wallets, which will soon be made available here by Motorola. The US has one upped the japanese by introducing credit cards (smart cards) that need only be waved near a countertop reader to be scanned. There is no need to swipe and sign, and though cards can be stolen, the BioChip cannot. Similar cards are in the works for Mass Transit in major cities, since MetroCards and the like, though able to track any individual's movements throughout the system for as long as the user is in possession of the cards, are still disposable. Currently more Metrocard Vending machines require the input of the buyer's zip code when buying with a credit or debit card. This virtual pin number, also used by an increasing number of retailers, serves to lull commuters into giving up more of their personal information simply to get on the subway. In fact, a tiny RFID (Radio Frequency ID) "fob" issued by CitiBank and others, small enough to fit on a keychain, will eventually replace the Metrocard altogether as funds are deducted directly from the user's bank account with every swipe. Not only will this bring us one step closer to a post cash society (Mastercard's latest selling point is its "campaign to relpace cash and checks"), but those who believe this to be benign need only realize the RFID chip is constantly emitting the user's unique ID number to anyone within range. In addition, anyone with access to one's credit records can use them to trace one's movements as charges are matched to the individual code of each turnstyle. And since you already carry a permanent RFID chip on your keyring wherever you go, why NOT have one implanted? Aiports are also touting the convenience of Clear Card, which requires travellers to have their fingerprints kept on record, ostensibly for quicker security clearance. Tickets to the 2008 Olympics opening and closing ceremonies will be imbedded with a RFID microchip which will store the personal information and photo of every single ticketholder.
Wireless Wallets use a modification to CELL phones that allows consumers to pay simply by waving their CELL phones at a scanner. This is possible due to technology already implemented in California and elsewhere, which offers higher quality CELL phone reception at the cost of accepting a new phone with an onboard data card with all of the subscriber's personal information, which can be swapped out to a new phone so CELL mates (How many Bars on your CELL?)never have to change their number. This in turn is possible because of the necessary increase of the number of available area codes and the requirement in recent years of entering '1' plus the area code and number for ANY number one is dialing, regardless of whether one is calling within the same area codes. Put two and two together, and you have a scannable wireless GPS enabled permant personal record. A simple handheld device, available to the general public, is able to retrieve deleted text messages from any SIM Card. In addition, all messages received on the Motorola Sidekick are immediately backed up on the carrier's server. Expect a crackdown soon on the availability of disposable CELL phones (WHICH CANNOT BE TRACKED), ostensibly to combat their use in treasonous or criminal acts, but in truth to ensure every CELL phone user can instantly be pinpointed. And don't forget THE AGENCY FOR AUTOMATIC IDENTIFICATION AND MOBILITY.
Sexual offenders in the US have their whereabouts entered into a nationwide database, and in an increasing number of states are required to wear GPS devices for the rest of their lives. Recently, certain states have extended this to include violators of Orders of Protection. But what of OTHER violent criminals? And what of parolees? Military personnel? Welfare or Medicare recipients? Members of the Armed Forces? Government employees? All candidates for the Biochip, now that lifetime global tracking has been so widely accepted. In New York, the governor is lobbying for all convicted felons to have DNA samples taken and held permanently against future possible crimes, but current plans are more comprehensive: to obtain DNA samples from any individual convicted of any offense, however minor. We are truly moving towards what I referred to at age 15 as 'the Criminalization of the Individual'.
Think for a minute about Voice Over IP, or that handy cable modem. Package deals of phone service, cable TV and internet from the same provider are a hiccup away from one mainline to the Information Superhighway. Convenient, yes. But for whom? Google is ready to introduce televisions with direct internet connectivity, first, with text input through remote keypads, but later, with full size keyboards. In this way, any and all media consumption can be closely monitored. With Personal GPS you'll never get lost again! All the better to see you with...
Draw your own conclusions. Me? I'm just paranoid. But no worry. Propranolol and LIQUID TRUST will cure that.
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