Hank showed up here and my stock in Alcoa went up 10%.

On Wed, Nov 26, 2008 at 4:51 PM, mark <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>
> nah the tin foil hat will do that.
>
> On Nov 26, 1:50 pm, Kamakazee <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Could be, but most likely that steel plate in your head with block the
> > transmissions.
> >
> > On Nov 26, 12:32 pm, Hank Kroll <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > > Bush Administration: Dismiss RFID 'Mark of the Beast' Lawsuit
> > > David Kravets – Wired.com November 14, 2008
> >
> > > The Bush administration on Thursday urged a federal judge to dismiss a
> > > lawsuit brought by a group of Amish farmers in Michigan claiming RFID
> > > chips required on cattle "are a mark of the beast."
> >
> > > The Amish farmers claim (.pdf) Michigan regulations requiring them to
> > > use radio frequency identification devices on their cattle
> > > "constitutes some form of a 'mark of the beast' and/or represents an
> > > infringement of their 'dominion over cattle and all living things' in
> > > violation of their fundamental religious beliefs," according to the
> > > farmers' lawsuit filed in September in U.S. District Court for the
> > > District of Columbia.
> >
> > > In response to the charges, the United States Department of
> > > Agriculture wrote (.pdf) Thursday that its RFID tagging program is a
> > > voluntary measure to help agricultural officials track bovine and
> > > other livestock diseases. The USDA said the lawsuit should be directed
> > > at Michigan, which adopted RFID requirements last year.
> >
> > > The case should be dismissed, the administration wrote, "because
> > > plaintiffs cannot establish that any rule issued or action taken by
> > > the USDA either mandates the use of RFID tags on livestock located
> > > within Michigan, or, conversely, prevents the Michigan Department of
> > > Agriculture from granting appropriate religious exemptions imposed by
> > > that department."
> >
> > > The farmers, however, contend the program is a USDA mandate because
> > > the Michigan law was adapted last year as part of a multi-million
> > > dollar, federally backed grant program to help eradicate livestock
> > > disease.
> >
> > > As radio frequency identification devices become a daily part of the
> > > electronic age, RFID technology is increasingly coming under fire for
> > > allegedly being the mark of Satan. The technology is fast becoming a
> > > part of passports, payment cards, locking devices and is widely
> > > expected to replace bar-code labels on consumer goods.
> >
> > > The Virginia-based Farm-to-Consumer Legal Defense Fund, a 1,400-member
> > > group, brought the case. Some of its members so staunchly oppose the
> > > program that "they may have to quit farming," according to the
> > > lawsuit.http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/2008/11/bush-administra.htmlLast
> > > updated 24/11/2008
> >
> > >www.GuardDogBooks.com <http://www.guarddogbooks.com/>&
> www.AlaskaPublishing.com <http://www.alaskapublishing.com/>
> >
>


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