Are Mandatory Microchip Implants Fact or Fiction?

On this page we not only have the famous Total Recall chip video but also that piece from an intelligent writer.  He makes a strong point in how far we actually have gone into total surveillance as a society.  Is this really a good thing?

Technologies designed specifically to track and monitor human beings have been in development for at least two decades.
In the virtual realm, software programs are now capable of watching us in real time, going so far as to make predictions about our future behaviors and sending alerts to the appropriate monitoring station depending on how a computer algorithm flags your activities. That is in and of itself a scary proposition.

What may be even scarier, however, is what’s happening in the physical realm. According to researches working on human-embedded microchips it’s only a matter of time before these systems achieve widespread acceptance. Your initial reaction to this idea may be one of disbelief. There’s no way society would accept such a device. Why would anyone want to implant this in their body?

Consider for a moment where we are right now. For decades Americans rejected the notion that they would submit to being tracked or recorded.
Yet, just about every American now carries a mobile phone. They’re so prevalent, in fact, that many consider it a “right,” prompting the government to actually provide subsidies to those who can’t afford one on their own.

Embedded in every one of those phones is an RFID chip that can track our every movement via GPS or cell tower triangulation. Moreover, those microphones and cameras that come standard on every phone can be remotely activated by law enforcement surveillance systems, a capability that has existed since the early 2000′s.

But as intrusive as these devices are, they are accepted as the norm by billions of people world wide. Not only that, but no one had to “force” them on us. We are, it seems, the masters of our own enslavement. And we pay top dollar to have the best tracking device money can buy!

Feel free to form your own opinions.  If nothing else, the writer makes a darn good point if you really think about it.  Smart phone apps can already track everywhere you’ve been.  Money is going cashless through apps and swipe systems.  And if you’ve read anything by Edward Snowden the NSA knows these things too.

Awesome writeup with full article by SHTFPlan

 

photo by fdecomite

 

 



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