explicit
02.06.06, 18:47
Na poczatek imigrantow ,...
uklony
16 I sprawia, że wszyscy:
mali i wielcy,
bogaci i biedni,
wolni i niewolnicy
otrzymują znamię na prawą rękę lub na czoło
17 i że nikt nie może kupić ni sprzedać,
kto nie ma znamienia -
imienia Bestii
lub liczby jej imienia.
18 Tu jest [potrzebna] mądrość.
Kto ma rozum, niech liczbę Bestii przeliczy:
liczba to bowiem człowieka.
A liczba jego: sześćset sześćdziesiąt sześć.
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LIFE WITH BIG BROTHER
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GOP star to get chip implant - Tommy Thompson signs up with VeriChip
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LIFE WITH BIG BROTHER
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Chip-maker wants to implant immigrants
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Says could be used to register guest workers, ID at workplace - June 1, 2006
The maker of the controversial radio-frequency tracking chip suggests
implanting the device in immigrants and guest workers.
Scott Silverman, chairman of the board of VeriChip Corp., was responding to
the Bush administration's call to know "who is in our country and why they
are here."
In an interview with "Fox & Friends" on the Fox News Channel, Silverman
suggested the RFID – radio frequency identification device – implants could
be used to register workers at the border and then verify their identities in
the workplace.
"We have talked to many people in Washington about using it," he told Fox
News, according to LiveScience.com.
The VeriChip tag, about the size of a large grain of rice, can be injected
directly into the body. Its special coating allows it to bond with living
tissue.
The device receives a signal from an RFID reader, which translates the data.
The tags have been used for decades to identify animals, including livestock,
laboratory animals and pets.
Privacy advocates have objected to its use in human beings.
LiveScience.com pointed out Colombian President Alvaro Uribe allegedly told
visiting U.S. senators Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., and Arlen Specter R-Pa., that
microchips could be used to track seasonal workers.
"President Uribe said he would consider having Colombian workers have
microchips implanted in their bodies before they are permitted to enter the
U.S. for seasonal work," Specter told Congress April 25.
As WorldNetDaily reported in February, a Cincinnati company is requiring any
employee who works in its secure data center to be implanted with an RFID
tag.
When Former Secretary of Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson
joined the VeriChip Corp. board of directors, he pledged to get chipped and
encouraged Americans to do the same so their electronic medical records would
be available in emergencies.
But VeriChip spokesman John Procter said Thompson had been "too busy" to
undergo the procedure, adding that he had no clear plans to do so.