The Global Elite have been working on this project for many years. In April of 1998 the feature article ofTime Magazinereported that, "in the future, money will be stored in the laptop, in the debit card and even (in the not-so-distant future) in a chip implanted under the skin." This technology is now available and is already being applied on human beings around the world.
Patrick Redmond, author of the book,New Technologies – A Hidden Danger, who worked for IBM until 2007, explains the RFID chips: "They are Radio Frequency Identification devices. An RFID is a microchip with an attached antenna. The microchip contains stored information which can be transmitted to a reader and then to a computer. RFID’s can be passive, semi-passive or active.
"Active RFID’s have an internal power source such as a battery. This allows the tag to send signals back to the reader, so if I have a RFID on me and it has a battery, I can just send a signal to a reader wherever it is. They can receive and store data and be read at a further distance than the passive RFID’s. The batteries used can only last a short while. But the current batteries in the RFID’s can last for over a hundred years, because of their self-generating power."
In 2007, Hitachi introduced the world’s smallest RFID chips which measure just 0.05 x 0.05 millimeters. Compare this with the new powder-type RFID tags which measure about sixty times smaller. These ‘’powder" RFID’s, like their predecesser, have a 128-bit ROM for storing a unique 38 digit number.
According to Mr. Redmond, "The chip in the National ID card has not only a number, but also a person’s work history, education, religion, ethnicity, police record and reproductive history."
Wal-Mart, Best Buy, the U.S. Military and many other agencies around the world, are already implementing the use of RFID chips. In London, police authorities announced that they were putting RFID chips on the entire police force. In Shenzhen, Southern China they are implementing RFID readers to track the movements of citizens: "all citizens have an ID card with a chip so that they can identify who is in what part of the city at any point in time."
Patrick Redmond, author of the book,New Technologies – A Hidden Danger, who worked for IBM until 2007, explains the RFID chips: "They are Radio Frequency Identification devices. An RFID is a microchip with an attached antenna. The microchip contains stored information which can be transmitted to a reader and then to a computer. RFID’s can be passive, semi-passive or active.
"Active RFID’s have an internal power source such as a battery. This allows the tag to send signals back to the reader, so if I have a RFID on me and it has a battery, I can just send a signal to a reader wherever it is. They can receive and store data and be read at a further distance than the passive RFID’s. The batteries used can only last a short while. But the current batteries in the RFID’s can last for over a hundred years, because of their self-generating power."
In 2007, Hitachi introduced the world’s smallest RFID chips which measure just 0.05 x 0.05 millimeters. Compare this with the new powder-type RFID tags which measure about sixty times smaller. These ‘’powder" RFID’s, like their predecesser, have a 128-bit ROM for storing a unique 38 digit number.
According to Mr. Redmond, "The chip in the National ID card has not only a number, but also a person’s work history, education, religion, ethnicity, police record and reproductive history."
Wal-Mart, Best Buy, the U.S. Military and many other agencies around the world, are already implementing the use of RFID chips. In London, police authorities announced that they were putting RFID chips on the entire police force. In Shenzhen, Southern China they are implementing RFID readers to track the movements of citizens: "all citizens have an ID card with a chip so that they can identify who is in what part of the city at any point in time."