
Mac Slavo
While the FDA says growing your own food is against your best
interests, consuming raw milk is dangerous, and alternative medicines
need to be controlled by large pharmaceutical companies, subcutaneous
passive microchip implants capable of tracking and logging everything
from your medical and financial history to your day-to-day movements
around the city are perfectly acceptable:
The Food and Drug Administration said that Applied Digital Solutions of Delray Beach, Fla., could market the VeriChip, an implantable computer chip about the size of a grain of rice, for medical purposes.
With the pinch of a syringe, the microchip is inserted under the skin in a procedure that takes less than 20 minutes and leaves no stitches. Silently and invisibly, the dormant chip stores a code that releases patient-specific information when a scanner passes over it.
Think UPC code. The identifier, emblazoned on a food item, brings up its name and price on the cashier’s screen.
…
The microchips have already been implanted in 1 million pets. But the chip’s possible dual use for tracking people’s movements — as well as speeding delivery of their medical information to emergency rooms — has raised alarm.
Source: MSNBC
We can fully expect the new human tracking chips to be progressively
integrated into our society over the next decade. Americans have already
implanted the chips into one million of their pets. And what are we as
citizens if not pets of the government? As such, we’ll be treated much
the same way.