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...Nightmares or not it's all worth knowing.
Originally posted by crimvelvet
reply to post by SpartanKingLeonidas
...Nightmares or not it's all worth knowing.
Yes, but I will read it during the DAY and save the fun novels for bedtime.
A steady diet of all the maneuvering by the elite gets very depressing.
You cannot stop a citizen from knowing what his Government is doing when they do it legally.
Through intelligent means.
And without breaking the laws.
Research, cross-reference, and dig down deep, read, read, read, never crossing that certain line.
Going To Your Public Library, Gathering Open Source Intelligence, and Surviving
And above all, honor, no matter the cost, because certain costs are just too much.
VeriMed, a human-implantable VeriChip RFID chip about the size of a rice grain, is being studied by U.S. Navy and Air Force generals. The VeriMed chip will have an encrypted 16-digit identification number.
Apparently the US military has already experimented with using RDIF tags in the place of dog tags....
2006-07-19
Hackensack University Medical Center and Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey are recruiting volunteers to have an RFID device implanted under the skin.
The chips, made by VeriChip Corporation, will contain a 16-digit identifying number that can be used to bring up medical and family contact information stored electronically in a database.
The chips will be tested in patients with chronic conditions who are more likely to need care in hospital emergency rooms.
In the two-year trial, the insurance company will pay about $200 for the chips to be implanted, plus $80 a month for a subscription fee, according to reports in the RFID Journal.
Horizon will then assess whether the devices lower health care costs by reducing duplicate lab tests, drug interactions or misdiagnoses..... www.eweek.com...
The Codex Alimentarius Commission (CAC) will be meeting here in Rome for a week-long conclave from 4 to 9 July, and one of the agenda points is the final approval of new world-wide vitamin guidelines that are expected to restrict availability of nutrient-containing supplements to consumers the world over....
Should the Codex Commission approve the Draft Guidelines for Vitamin and Mineral Supplements on its agenda, 300 of the 420 basic vitamin and mineral products commonly used by European consumers will be banned from manufacture and trade inside the European Community.
www.thenhf.com...
Originally posted by crimvelvet
reply to post by SpartanKingLeonidas
Thanks for the link. Way back at the start of my career as a chemist, I used to do research in the University library, in English, German and French, for my employer. This is BEFORE copy machines so everything had to be hand copied!
It is very sad that basic research is no longer taught. Every one just uses a search engine and regurgitates what they read (if they even bother to read it) instead of actually thinking about it and comparing different sources.
Quote from : Wikipedia : Proximity Card
Proximity card (or prox card)is a generic name for contactless integrated circuit devices used for security access or payment systems.
It can refer to the older 125 kHz devices or the newer 13.56 MHz contactless RFID cards, most commonly known as contactless smartcards.
Modern proximity cards are covered by the ISO/IEC 14443 (proximity card) standard.
There is also a related ISO/IEC 15693 (vicinity card) standard. Proximity cards are powered by resonant energy transfer and have a range of 0-3 inches in most instances.
The user will usually be able to leave the card inside a wallet or purse.
The price of the cards is also low, usually US$2–$5, allowing them to be used in applications such as identification cards, keycards, payment cards and public transit fare cards.
Proximity cards use resonant energy transfer via an LC circuit.
An IC, capacitor, and coil are connected in parallel.
The card reader presents a field that excites the coil and charges the capacitor, which in turn energizes and powers the IC.
The IC then transmits the card number via the coil to the card reader.
The card readers communicate in Wiegand protocol that consists of a data 0 and a data 1 circuit (or binary or simple on/off (digital) type circuit).
The earliest cards were 26 bit.
As demand has increased bit size has increased to continue to provide unique numbers.
Often, the first several bits can be made identical; these are called facility or site code.
The idea is that company Alice has a facility code of xn and a card set of 0001 through 1000 and company Bob has a facility code of yn and a card set also of 0001 through 1000.