We Are Change Holland
March 18, 2011
One of the goals to be reached before a national state can be completely controlled, is the implementation of computer chips in every product, every animal and every human being. What? Chips in all humans, animals and products? It is a scenario that most people actually can not yet imagine, but the shocking truth is that the target almost all realized: for instance, every pet is required to be chipped and many products such as clothing and food packages already have a chip.
A step toward chipping man too, seems finally made; Advert Buddi is a new GPS tracking system that can be used, for example, to monitor your old mother and to intervene quickly in emergencies. Under the slogan “Protect your loved ones with Buddi.” The ‘buddy’ in this case is a device that in a purse can indicate grandma’s position. Something like a mobile phone nowadays can also reveal where you are (or were). It also warns Grandma’s loved ones when grandmothers go out of their “security zones”. And to top it all off, it gives a signal as the carrier of the buddy has fallen, probably by a sensor that triggers at a certain speed (to earth in this case). Sounds great, but we know what the next step is, subcutaneous injection of a chip. Because grandma is a little forgetful and sometimes forgets her purse. “Let’s just inject a chip in grandma’s front leg!.” We can already predict the next victims: children, prisoners … and ourselves.
Many new technology is often used first by the army. Sometime later, the technology (in a diluted version then) becomes available to the people. This also applies to the Internet, GPS systems, and finally chipping everything and everyone. Vehicles and soldiers are now equipped with GPS systems. Soldiers still carry a chip on/in their clothing. But the danger of loss or abuse of the chip by the enemy, for example, after killing a soldier, makes the reality to chip the soldiers themselves, a bit closer. One obstacle could be that the costs of such operations are too high.
In 2002, A family in America was the first family in the world who had a VeriChip implanted. The reasons were the unstable health of man and the fear that arose after 9/11. Now I will be the last person who would ban a chip to take it when his/her health or safety can benefit from it. But when will the governments, banks and insurance companies impose on the masses? Under the disguise of bringing down the cost of medical care, economic facilities, or the occurrence of hysteria? It is also not known what the effects of a continuous chip is or can be.
But also companies are starting to consider chipping their employees, also chipping in the nightlife seems to be a trend with such a chip to pay. As in the Baja Beach club in Rotterdam.
This payment option is now offered with the iPhone and Web browser. IBM will make it especially easy for the consumer or as another way to put it: for the benefit of the buyer (Arent they nice, IBM, the inventors of the Holleriths Gascamp Jew Registration system)
At several schools in England and America children already pay with a type of chip system. And let’s not forget: the Colleges in the Netherlands, were you can only pay with a “chipknip” this is to condition everyone (young and young adults) to the idea that electronic payment is normal. That the youngsters are being pushed toward electronic payment, is obvious. In Belgium, at some childcare centre’s its only possible to enter, after having your fingerprint scanned.
The history of marking people
Wanting to register and mark all humans is older than the road to Rome. A road to totalitarian control or just for prosperity and ease? That remains to be seen. But people have always been branded or maimed to make their status or the being-in-service-of (slavery) clear.
For many people, the Holocaust is know as one of the most extreme forms of registration. The Jewish prisoner workers were marked with a code on their arms. This code fits a system created by IBM. Although IBM denies any involvement or to have known anything of the purpose for which their registration system was used, the facts show something else.
However you put it, the Nazis could have never tracked down, devide and execute the Jews so fast without computer giant IBM. But IBM was not unique in their special collaboration with the Nazis. So you can also include steel Krups, IG Farben, Shell and people like seniors Prescott Bush and Rothschild. Why IBM was not subsequently prosecuted? For example, during the Nuremberg trials. Well just because they were part of the elite that the war had supported and encouraged. The fact is that many companies were pardoned after the war. The fact that they were wrong was concealed. Perhaps one reason that IBM has been slipping thrue the hoops of the law is, the fact that they had invented a simultaneous translation system, in which the Nuremberg trials could be conducted in a language understood by all, yet. The same company (IBM) and other companies are now on the eve of a further Executive system: the chipping of humans. IBM has used the latest techniques in creating a system that not only can track someone’s every move, but it can also predict it, then secretly send that information to company’s for use, for example, by giving you ads based on a given profile.
Author Edwin Black, known for the book “IBM and the Holocaust”, presents his findings in the next documentary about IBM and the Holocaust. Ask yourself why you never had this taught in schools? The system IBM has made is actually still used today. Only then smarter, faster and more unnoticed in driving an authoritarian totalitarian state. The coding system that IBM then used, is today among the people known as the barcode. The barcode has already been replaced by the RFID-chip: a chip where all data can be stored and can be read remotely. Is this a danger, or are the people who are against the chip are afraid of change? A common defense by too gullible people. VeriChip is one of the biggest driving forces behind the chipping of humans. They propagate the chip under the banner of freedom, human rights and free will. But what’s behind? Quite the opposite. The reversal technique: war is peace, love is hate, truth is falsehood. Any technique which can help people in their progress may, in the wrong hands, bring total tyranny and misery
Part 2 Part 3 Part 4 Part 5
The dangers of the VeriChip.
Animals have already been chipped so that their owners are easy to trace back: by loss or for veterinary medical information needs. But how safe are these chips and what after studies have been done? You would expect from the Dutch Party for the Animals, to be strongly against this, given that the animal eventually will be severely suffering. From an extensive research in the U.S, where the research was blocked by the manufacturer VeriChip, chipping of animals has serious implications for the health of the animal, such as: an increased risk of cancer. But ofcourse there is little to be found about this on their website. The people of the Party for the Animals, apparently know nothing of such. Maybe time for an email? The leak of the investigation (by an employee) was in fact almost the bankruptcy of Verichip. Ultimately, the company was taken over and they put their deceptive activity’s under the name “PositiveID.” Exactly people, everything is positive and will benefit your convenience and sense of security……..
In response to the abuses during the Second World War, many European countries changed their national legislation accordingly. There were provisions in the legislation that everyone has the right of self-determination over their own bodies. But with this there is already a discussion about co-compulsory vaccinations, abortion and donor registration. There are already several websites and organizations engaged on this issue. We will therefore approach and support in every way imaginable. One such organization is “We the People Will Not be chipped”. Another important step is to inform people early before the authority’s and their
propaganda deceptions are being unleashed upon us.
FLASHBACK TO 2006
March 18, 2011
One of the goals to be reached before a national state can be completely controlled, is the implementation of computer chips in every product, every animal and every human being. What? Chips in all humans, animals and products? It is a scenario that most people actually can not yet imagine, but the shocking truth is that the target almost all realized: for instance, every pet is required to be chipped and many products such as clothing and food packages already have a chip.
A step toward chipping man too, seems finally made; Advert Buddi is a new GPS tracking system that can be used, for example, to monitor your old mother and to intervene quickly in emergencies. Under the slogan “Protect your loved ones with Buddi.” The ‘buddy’ in this case is a device that in a purse can indicate grandma’s position. Something like a mobile phone nowadays can also reveal where you are (or were). It also warns Grandma’s loved ones when grandmothers go out of their “security zones”. And to top it all off, it gives a signal as the carrier of the buddy has fallen, probably by a sensor that triggers at a certain speed (to earth in this case). Sounds great, but we know what the next step is, subcutaneous injection of a chip. Because grandma is a little forgetful and sometimes forgets her purse. “Let’s just inject a chip in grandma’s front leg!.” We can already predict the next victims: children, prisoners … and ourselves.
Many new technology is often used first by the army. Sometime later, the technology (in a diluted version then) becomes available to the people. This also applies to the Internet, GPS systems, and finally chipping everything and everyone. Vehicles and soldiers are now equipped with GPS systems. Soldiers still carry a chip on/in their clothing. But the danger of loss or abuse of the chip by the enemy, for example, after killing a soldier, makes the reality to chip the soldiers themselves, a bit closer. One obstacle could be that the costs of such operations are too high.
In 2002, A family in America was the first family in the world who had a VeriChip implanted. The reasons were the unstable health of man and the fear that arose after 9/11. Now I will be the last person who would ban a chip to take it when his/her health or safety can benefit from it. But when will the governments, banks and insurance companies impose on the masses? Under the disguise of bringing down the cost of medical care, economic facilities, or the occurrence of hysteria? It is also not known what the effects of a continuous chip is or can be.
But also companies are starting to consider chipping their employees, also chipping in the nightlife seems to be a trend with such a chip to pay. As in the Baja Beach club in Rotterdam.
This payment option is now offered with the iPhone and Web browser. IBM will make it especially easy for the consumer or as another way to put it: for the benefit of the buyer (Arent they nice, IBM, the inventors of the Holleriths Gascamp Jew Registration system)
At several schools in England and America children already pay with a type of chip system. And let’s not forget: the Colleges in the Netherlands, were you can only pay with a “chipknip” this is to condition everyone (young and young adults) to the idea that electronic payment is normal. That the youngsters are being pushed toward electronic payment, is obvious. In Belgium, at some childcare centre’s its only possible to enter, after having your fingerprint scanned.
Wanting to register and mark all humans is older than the road to Rome. A road to totalitarian control or just for prosperity and ease? That remains to be seen. But people have always been branded or maimed to make their status or the being-in-service-of (slavery) clear.
For many people, the Holocaust is know as one of the most extreme forms of registration. The Jewish prisoner workers were marked with a code on their arms. This code fits a system created by IBM. Although IBM denies any involvement or to have known anything of the purpose for which their registration system was used, the facts show something else.
However you put it, the Nazis could have never tracked down, devide and execute the Jews so fast without computer giant IBM. But IBM was not unique in their special collaboration with the Nazis. So you can also include steel Krups, IG Farben, Shell and people like seniors Prescott Bush and Rothschild. Why IBM was not subsequently prosecuted? For example, during the Nuremberg trials. Well just because they were part of the elite that the war had supported and encouraged. The fact is that many companies were pardoned after the war. The fact that they were wrong was concealed. Perhaps one reason that IBM has been slipping thrue the hoops of the law is, the fact that they had invented a simultaneous translation system, in which the Nuremberg trials could be conducted in a language understood by all, yet. The same company (IBM) and other companies are now on the eve of a further Executive system: the chipping of humans. IBM has used the latest techniques in creating a system that not only can track someone’s every move, but it can also predict it, then secretly send that information to company’s for use, for example, by giving you ads based on a given profile.
Author Edwin Black, known for the book “IBM and the Holocaust”, presents his findings in the next documentary about IBM and the Holocaust. Ask yourself why you never had this taught in schools? The system IBM has made is actually still used today. Only then smarter, faster and more unnoticed in driving an authoritarian totalitarian state. The coding system that IBM then used, is today among the people known as the barcode. The barcode has already been replaced by the RFID-chip: a chip where all data can be stored and can be read remotely. Is this a danger, or are the people who are against the chip are afraid of change? A common defense by too gullible people. VeriChip is one of the biggest driving forces behind the chipping of humans. They propagate the chip under the banner of freedom, human rights and free will. But what’s behind? Quite the opposite. The reversal technique: war is peace, love is hate, truth is falsehood. Any technique which can help people in their progress may, in the wrong hands, bring total tyranny and misery
Part 2 Part 3 Part 4 Part 5
The dangers of the VeriChip.
Animals have already been chipped so that their owners are easy to trace back: by loss or for veterinary medical information needs. But how safe are these chips and what after studies have been done? You would expect from the Dutch Party for the Animals, to be strongly against this, given that the animal eventually will be severely suffering. From an extensive research in the U.S, where the research was blocked by the manufacturer VeriChip, chipping of animals has serious implications for the health of the animal, such as: an increased risk of cancer. But ofcourse there is little to be found about this on their website. The people of the Party for the Animals, apparently know nothing of such. Maybe time for an email? The leak of the investigation (by an employee) was in fact almost the bankruptcy of Verichip. Ultimately, the company was taken over and they put their deceptive activity’s under the name “PositiveID.” Exactly people, everything is positive and will benefit your convenience and sense of security……..
In response to the abuses during the Second World War, many European countries changed their national legislation accordingly. There were provisions in the legislation that everyone has the right of self-determination over their own bodies. But with this there is already a discussion about co-compulsory vaccinations, abortion and donor registration. There are already several websites and organizations engaged on this issue. We will therefore approach and support in every way imaginable. One such organization is “We the People Will Not be chipped”. Another important step is to inform people early before the authority’s and their
propaganda deceptions are being unleashed upon us.
FLASHBACK TO 2006
RFID Passports: Ready or not here they come
The State Department expresses confidence in "e-Passports" while technologists fret about their security risks.
CNNMoney.com | July 13 2006
By Christian Zappone
The State Department expresses confidence in "e-Passports" while technologists fret about their security risks.
CNNMoney.com | July 13 2006
By Christian Zappone
NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) --
Imagine being overseas and your identity being available for the taking -
your nationality, your name, your passport number. Everything.
That's the fear of privacy and
security specialists now that the State Department plans to issue
"e-Passports" to American travelers beginning in late August.
passport_rfid.03.jpg
Radio Frequency Identification technology, indicated by the symbol, is to be standard in U.S. passports by August 2006.
passport_rfid.03.jpg
Radio Frequency Identification technology, indicated by the symbol, is to be standard in U.S. passports by August 2006.
They'll have radio frequency
identification (RFID) tags and are meant to cut down on human error of
immigration officials, speed the processing of visitors and safeguard
against counterfeit passports.
Yet critics are concerned that
the security benefit of RFID technology, which combines silicon chips
with antennas to make data accessible via radio waves, could be vastly
outweighed by security threats to the passport holder.
"Basically, you've given
everybody a little radio-frequency doodad that silently declares 'Hey,
I'm a foreigner,'" says author and futurist Bruce Sterling, who lectures
on the future of RFID technology. "If nobody bothers to listen, great.
If people figure out they can listen to passport IDs, there will be a
lot of strange and inventive ways to exploit that for criminal
purposes."
RFID chips are used in
security passes many companies issue to employees. They don't have to be
touched to a reader-machine, only waved near it. Following initial
objections by security and privacy experts, the State Department added
several security precautions.
But experts still fear the data could be "skimmed," or read remotely without the bearer's knowledge.
Kidnappers, identity thieves
and terrorists could all conceivably commit "contactless" crimes against
victims who wouldn't know they've been violated until after the fact.
"The basic problem with RFID
is surreptitious access to ID," said Bruce Schneier security
technologist, author and chief technology officer of Counterpane
Internet Security, a technology security consultancy. "The odds are zero
that RFID passport technology won't be hackable."
The State Department argues
the concerns are overstated. "We wouldn't be issuing the passports to
ourselves if we didn't think they're secure," said Deputy Assistant
Secretary of State for Passport Services Frank Moss, who noted that RFID
passports have already been issued to core State Department personnel,
including himself. "We're our own test population."
How skimming works
How skimming works
The equipment needed to skim
an RFID chip neither has to be large nor expensive. Nokia sells cell
phones capable of reading RFID chips. Texas Instruments sells kits to do
the same thing.
In May, researchers at the
University of Tel Aviv created a skimmer from electronics hobbyist kits
costing less than $110. The equipment was small enough to fit into a
briefcase or be disguised in any manner of luggage or clothes that could
hide the 15-inch copper tube antenna.
The antenna boosts the
read-range from a few inches to a few feet. To extend the range of
surreptitious access much further, a second piece of equipment is needed
to fake the RFID reader into sending a "read" signal, which is then
relayed via radio waves to the skimmer's reader near the targeted RFID
chip.
In 2005, a researcher at
Cambridge extended the range to about 160 feet while successfully
accessing a contactless smart card's details.
ID thieves who figure out a
way around the security precaution on RFID passports, which includes
anti-skimming material in the cover, can use this method in a crowded
airport terminal or hotel lobby to conceivably "borrow" someone's ID
data and spoof it to another official reader, effectively cloaking
themselves in another's persons ID.
Or they could learn a person's nationality, or confirm the identity of someone they were searching for to harm.
"It's a great way for
unfriendly elements to set up their own RFID scanning systems and pick
Americans right out of a crowd...If you put an RFID scanner in a doorway
or maybe a lamp-post," said Sterling, "you can just sit there
automatically counting the passing passports."
Even if the skimmed data is
encrypted -- as e-Passport information would be -- skilled hackers could
potentially save the information and crack it elsewhere.
Researchers at the Dutch
security test lab Riscure cracked the encryption on a mocked up RFID
passport in two hours using a PC in 2005.
U.S. passports are issued for
ten years, which means the RFID chip technology of those passports,
along with their vulnerabilities, will be floating around for a decade.
Technology would have to "stop cold" Schneier of Counterpane says for
improvements in skimming and hacking equipment not to occur.
Moss said the State Department
"recognizes that technology will change during the 10 year life cycle
of US passports" and that's why it's focusing on more than one
technology to protect data.
Sterling, however, compares
RFID passports to a "nice yellow armband" -- a big sign on your body
announcing your identity. "Would you pay anything for that device?"
Sterling asks. "Would you buy it in a travel store because you thought
it made you feel safer? Or would you conclude that this technology
existed so that you could be treated like a can on a grocery-food
shelf?"
Schneier says there are a
number of ways to improve the security of RFID passports but the best
trick is to not create RFID passports at all. "Someone in the government
got it in their head to make it RFID. Yes, its cool technology," said
Schneier, "but don't do it because it's cool."
RFID Passports Raise Safety Concerns
CurtMonash writes "CNNMoney.com features a skeptical article about the US State Department's plans to soon issue RFID passports
(currently being tested on State Department employees). One fear is
that they can be hacked for information about you. And even if they
can't, carrying around a little transmitter saying 'I'm an American! I'm
an American!' isn't a fun and safe thing to do in all parts of the
world." From the article: "Basically, you've given everybody a little
radio-frequency doodad that silently declares 'Hey, I'm a foreigner,'
says author and futurist Bruce Sterling, who lectures on the future of
RFID technology. 'If nobody bothers to listen, great. If people figure
out they can listen to passport IDs, there will be a lot of strange and
inventive ways to exploit that for criminal purposes.'"
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