*** Forwarded message, originally written by Stevens on 10-May-06 ***

Resistance Is Futile

As more industries point out the advantages of implanting microchips 
under individuals' skin, you have to wonder if the day will come when 
resistance to this new "safer, easier" method of identification really 
will be futile.

Banks are already excited about the prospects of implantable microchips. 
Credit and debit cards can be lost or stolen, putting your money at 
risk. But an implanted microchip can also link you directly to your 
bank account and can never be lost. In addition, it eliminates the need 
to use cash. Why risk using cash, which can be lost or stolen, when a 
more secure microchip implant is available?

Banks also dislike cash, because it doesn't earn money for the bank. 
Governments don't like cash because cash isn't easily tracked. It 
doesn't take much imagination to predict that once implantable 
microchips are widely used for financial transactions, momentum will 
build for cash to be eliminated (as a security and anti-crime measure, 
of course).

A world with most humans living with implantable microchips could evolve 
into the ultimate police state. Microchips would replace all of current 
forms of ID such as passports, driver's licenses, social security and 
credit/debit cards. You might not be able to withdraw money from the 
bank without it, receive benefits from the government without it or buy 
or sell anything without it. The chip would also include data on your 
family history, address, occupation, criminal record, income tax 
information etc.

At the touch of a button, your assets could be frozen, medical treatment 
denied, etc. The ultimate punishment would be to have your chip 
deactivated. In that case, you could no longer exist, since all 
personal and financial interactions would require verification of 
identity and confirmation of sufficient assets to complete a 
transaction.

Yet, most people would probably go along with the system, because of its 
potential to reduce crime, make medical care more accessible, etc. 
"There are enough benefits that outweigh the concerns people have about 
privacy," claims ADS Chairman and CEO Richard Sullivan. It's even 
possible that an advanced microchip could be equipped with a satellite 
modem to allow you to browse the Internet anywhere you are. This 
ability begins to approach the "collective consciousness" achieved by 
the fictional Borg.

Proponents of implantable microchips deny such a nightmare scenario 
could come to pass, because their use is "voluntary." But "voluntary" 
is not an appropriate word to describe something that might one day be 
required to merely exist as a human being. I have the option of eating 
at different times of the day, but it cannot be said that for me eating 
is "voluntary."

An example of how "voluntary" is actually "involuntary" recently emerged 
from Great Britain, where the Tory party has proposed that pedophiles 
receive microchip implants after their release from prison that would 
allow them to be tracked by satellite. Release would be conditional on 
"voluntarily" receiving an implant. The government would know not only 
whether pedophiles visited locations such as schools or parks but, 
based on a proposal by one company, whether they are sexually excited.

What politician in Britain or anywhere else has the guts to stand up in 
favor of the privacy rights of pedophiles? Yet, by implanting 
microchips into the likes of pedophiles and other persons whose 
proclivities disgust most people, we begin descending a slippery slope 
into Borg-dom.

An industry that's built around tagging human beings against their will 
grow powerful as it consumes tax dollars and forges alliances with the 
rich and politically connected. Like all industries, it will try to 
expand its market, and create products and scenarios to make expansion 
politically expedient.

Lobbyists will funnel campaign contributions to politicians and urge 
them to expand mandatory chipping, say to parolees and ex-felons. Once 
this is accomplished, they'll argue that society would be safer if all 
convicted criminals had a chip implant. Next (for safety's sake, of 
course) lawmakers will require workers in high-risk or high-security 
occupations-police, prison guards, drivers transporting hazardous 
materials, etc.-to be chipped. After that, potential offenders will be 
tagged involuntarily-e.g., gun owners, persons working with 
children ...ANYONE.

There should be a core principle that microchips should never be 
implanted in anyone, unless it's a truly voluntary act. You'll be 
reading a lot about implantable microchips in the future. When 
governments begin proposing their use to track society's undesirables, 
I hope that you have the courage to stand up for their rights. For by 
defending their rights, you defend your own, and prevent society's 
descent into the Borg.

MARK NESTMANN, Wealth Preservation and Tax Consultant on behalf of 
The Sovereign Society 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
http://www.nestmann.com

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