<!–DIV {margin:0px;}–>
Verichip and the Mark of the Beast
RFID Privacy Issues and News

Look around, the Mark of the Beast is everywhere. It appears in the media frequently and is being watched in the nasdaq. Not only is it under the watchful eye of the discerning Christian [1], but it’s also being scoped by the privacy advocate [2][3] and businessman alike [4]. It’s even become a fashion statement* [5].
How can I boast such claims? Simple. Radio frequency identification (RFID) implants are currently the prime candidate for this beastly technology. These tiny wonders are already being implanted in the body to be used as a form of payment [6].
* “Beautiful club-goers have a problem: If you’re going to wear a halter top and micro-skirt, there’s not much of anywhere to put a wallet. And who wants to carry a purse when you’re there to dance? Luckily, a company called VeriChip this year unveiled a solution based on radio-frequency identification (RFID) technology. It’s a slender glass capsule … a computer chip, which stores a unique code that can identify an individual — sort of an electronic Social Security number.” Get chipped, then charge without plastic — you are the card
Verichips are implanted in the upper arm of patrons at the Baja Beach Club in Barcelona, Spain. Along with the Baja Beach Club is The Rotterdam Beach Club in the Netherlands, and the Bar Soba in Glasgow, Scotland, all who have successfully introduced the Verichip microchip implant as a form of payment.
Even with the growing evidence in support of a microchip implant, many Christians still choose to ignore the clear warnings around us. The Mark of the Beast is almost here.
More about RFID implants and the Verichip
There’s just too much evidence to discard the possibility that the Mark of the Beast is a subdermal microchip implant, namely the Verichip implant. In fact, the language in Revelation strongly supports such an idea. We’ll explore Revelation in the next few sections, but first let’s take a closer look at the Verichip.
RFID, which stands for Radio Frequency IDentification, is currently making leaps and bounds as a replacement for the common barcode. RFID is also being hyped as the next big thing in personal identification. There are two types of RFID microchips (a.k.a. tags or transponders) in development, passive and active.
The barcode replacements and current versions of the Verichip implant are passive transponders. A passive transponder requires an outside source of energy to activate. A burst of energy within a close distance (usually a few inches) charges the microchip enough to respond with whatever information is stored on it. In the case of the Verichip, that information is a 16 digit identification number which is then cross referenced against a database for unlimited amounts of information.
In contrast, active RFID tags have their own power supply and require no outside energy to broadcast their information. Because this type of microchip will soon be implanted in the body, an internal renewable power supply is a must. This is a major challenge and is also big business.
Commercial devices are coming to market which will be surgically implanted and require some sort of power supply. This is nothing new, consider the pacemaker. The big difference though is that a pacemaker runs on batteries, and batteries need to be replaced. Replacement requires another costly operation, which inherently involves risk. The point of an internal renewable power supply is that the batteries will never have to be replaced.
There is already existing technology that provides a means of creating an electrical current through the process of temperature change. The Mark of the Beast is said to be in the hand or forehead and it’s no surprise that these are prime areas for hot and cold changes.
Thermo Life [7][8], owned by Applied Digital Solutions through it’s purchase of eXI Wireless, is a technology that converts temperature change into electricity. Consider the following:
“This next-generation Thermo Life™ is a direct result of VeriChip Corp’s acquisition of eXI Wireless. Knowing that the acquisition was in the process, our research and development personnel aimed to improve the Thermo Life™ product to provide a potential power source for an active RFID tag for People.” Scott R. Silverman, Chairman and CEO of Applied Digital
Thermo Life is a permanent power supply that operates off temperature fluctuations in the human body. One of the main advantages of a powered (active) RFID implant is to allow for tracking. In fact, Applied Digital Solutions is currently hard at work incorporating GPS into their Verichip for the allowance of global tracking [9]. Thermo Life will likely power these devices. The name alone is reminiscent of eternal hell fire, exactly what partakers of the Mark of the Beast can look forward to..
Applied Digital Solutions has already been successful in marketing and developing external devices that track people at small and large scales. Their Hugs and HALO products track newborns while in the hospital. RoamAlert and WatchMate are external devices used for security or “Wander Prevention.”
Verichip Corp’s implantable products include VeriMed, VeriGuard, [10] and VeriPay. RoamAlert also comes in an implantable version. Verichip Corp recently pulled all references to their VeriPay product [11]. They have been known to remove specific references to their products only to have them resurface when the time is right [12].
Not long ago their VeriKid [13] product tracked children in urban environments, but they have also since pulled this product, likely until the market is able to accept it more readily. It was easy to see the similarities between VeriKid and the Mark of the Beast.
The tracking doesn’t stop at geographic location either. Heart rate, breathing, temperature, sleep, and consciousness can all be monitored from any remote location [14]. All of this is already being used in real world applications.
Why Verichip Corp?
Why Applied Digital Solutions, why Verichip Corp, why not some other company or device? Because Applied Digital Solutions holds the patent to “A transceiver device implantable in a human body comprising: a triggerable radio frequency transmitter, a power source for powering said transmitter, triggering means for activating said transmitter, receiver means allowing the detection of an externally generated information signal,…” [15]
That covers the complete operation of the RFID microchip and the device to read its signal. No company can legally step in and manufacture a similar device. And the patent is absolutely correct when it states that “The device meets the growing demand for a new level of safety and peace of mind.” This device is here to stay.
The first people to receive the Verichip in large numbers will be those who society feels need a watchful eye; children, the elderly, immigrants, prisoners and paroled criminals are all likely candidates, and the list goes on. Police officers and gun owners could also be some of the first to accept the implant. A microchip in the hand and another in the gun would allow only the owner to fire the weapon, thereby reducing accidental death and increasing safety [16][17].
Verichip Corp is already marketing to a diverse range of individuals. The microchip implant seems ready to go, so what’s left before mass adoption? Active RFID, GPS, and security are all likely to be rolled into future generations of the chip. Security is probably the biggest factor since the current generation of the Verichip has already proven to be insecure [18][19].. And there’s no room for error when finances and identification are at stake.
Expect to see large scale applications in animal “chipping”, both in pets and livestock. These are perfect pilot programs to test and refine a system that will be used on the populace. Criminals will follow since they have no choice in the matter, and children will come next as the fears of parents are increasingly preyed upon. All the while a restless and rebellious segment of the general population will be getting “chipped” because they think it’s cool [20].

Links referenced in this study:
[1] GETTING CHIPPED: How the mark may be applied in these last days
[2] spychips.com – how RFID will compromise privacy, security, freedom
[3] RFID Position Statement of Consumer Privacy and Civil Liberties Organizations
[4] RFIDs: Great New Logistics Business
[5] USA Today Reports on Nightclub VeriChip
[6] Paying for drinks with wave of the hand
[7] Applied Digital Completes Development of Next Generation Thermo Life®
[9] Deal forged to equip VeriChip with GPS
[10] VeriChip Corporation – RFID Tags
[11] Tracking Junior With a Microchip
[12] When Cash Is Only Skin Deep
[13] “Digital Angel” not pursuing implants
[14] VeriChip recipients can be ID’d, monitored anywhere in the world
[15] United States Patent 5629678 – Personal tracking and recovery system
[16] Implanted microchip would allow only police officers to fire their guns
[17] VeriChip and Guns
[18] Verichip RFID Implant Hacked!
——————————————————————
| Our RFID protest in NYC was a huge success! You can check out our original press release, see a local news story, read about the outcome on digg, or go directly to the report (with video) at homeland stupidity
More than a dozen of us (just the right number to escape the need for an NYC protest permit) stood directly outside the entrance of the “RFID in Fashion 2008″ event on Wednesday. We put the industry on notice that we’re planning boycotts of any company doing item-level RFID tagging. Thank you again to everyone for all of your help and support! |
|
|
|
Microchips Everywhere: a Future Vision By TODD LEWAN The Associated Press Saturday, January 26, 2008
Rodents and Dogs: A Review of the Literature 1990–2006
4/29/07
AMERICAN EXPRESS ADDRESSES RFID PEOPLE TRACKING PLANS Promises Full Patent Review, Tracking Notice, and Chip-Free Option
Human Chipping Company Omits Salient Risks from IPO Disclosure
SENATE BANKING COMMITTEE MEMBER DENOUNCES “NO-SWIPE” CREDIT CARDS that info to raise your rates…” —Katherine Albrecht
half-hour segment on WBAI’s Law and Disorder… December 15, 2006
of the way the tech operates, silently and through radio waves. If people have an interest in surreptitious tracking, RFID is a natural candidate.”
George Orwell’s book 1984 about absolute government control. “I don’t know how many people want to be monitored 24/7.” to new purposes, and its people could become virtual prisoners of their own technological creations…” —Liz McIntyre
click here to read the press release…
SPYCHIPPED CREDIT CARDS Cards from Wallets Security researchers find RFID-equipped cards vulnerable…. “SPYCHIPS” PAPERBACK RELEASED BY PENGUIN/ PLUME
RFID-ENABLED AIRPORT Spychips in Passports May be Just the Start, Warn Privacy Advocates >> click here to read the press release
from Conference
On the eve of a major RFID apparel and footwear conference, privacy activists are asking questions about an Orwellian industry video presentation depicting the use of Radio Frequency Identification at an American Eagle Outfitters store… >> press release | >> RFID demo video
Groundbreaking Law Spotlights Opposition to VeriChip Wisconsin’s new law was introduced as Assembly Bill 290 by Representative Marlin D. Schneider (D) and was passed unanimously by both houses of the Wisconsin State Legislature. The law makes it illegal to require an individual to have a microchip implant and subjects a violator to a fine of up to $10,000 per day… >> click here to read the press release >> Similar legislation has now been introduced in Ohio, Colorado, North Dakota, and Oklahoma (with both House and Senate bills)
“Spychips: How Major Corporations and Government Plan to Track Your Every Move with RFID” is now available in Latin American countries including Mexico, Colombia, Panama, Venezuela, and Chile… >> click here to read the press release | >> ChipsEspias.com
has alarmed civil libertarians by promoting the company’s subcutaneous human tracking device as a way to identify immigrants and guest workers…
spychipping of clothing. Our recent Levi’s story is generating responses in places such as Australia, India, and Europe…
Radio Frequency Identification with a modern-day version of the telescreen from George Orwell’s novel 1984, says Liz McIntyre, commenting at FreeMarketNews. Technically Speaking lends itself to abuse. RFID readers can be placed invisibly in the environment. RFID tags can be placed on clothes and in peoples belongings. And maybe the most worrisome part is that the companies that are aiming to put the readers in the environment and the tags into peoples belongings have spelled out some pretty frightening plans for how they hope to abuse the technology literally to use it to spy on people…” >> click here to read more…
Your Every Move with RFID has been named winner of the Lysander Spooner Award for Advancing the Literature of Liberty by Laissez Faire Books. Authors Katherine Albrecht and Liz McIntyre will share in the prize for the “top book on liberty for the year.” >> click here to read more!
Plan to Track Your Every Move with RFID” is offering personally-autographed copies of this award-winning bestseller! Available individually or as case (24). >> read what critics are saying about “Spychips…” Also available from Katherine: “On the Brink of the Mark” and “RFID: Tracking Everything, Everywhere” in DVD or VHS format. >> click here for the book/video order form! Our friends at FoeBuD in Germany have translated Spychips Chapter One into German here: http://www.foebud.org/rfid/kapitel-1-spychips
How “spychips” pose a threat to your privacy
Photographs of RFID tags: page 1 | page 2
What should be done?
Stop RFIDs in California IDs Tell Your Lawmakers to Vote “YES” to SB 768
CASPIAN Launches Worldwide Tesco Boycott!
Business Week Article:
CIO Magazine Article:
Scandals
DHS Wants Beefed up RFID To Silently ID People 25 Feet Away The VeriChip Can be Cloned, May Not Work When Needed Ex-HHS Head Puts Off Being Chipped Despite July Promise Ex-Bush cabinet member praises & recommends VeriChip CASPIAN uncovers Government RFID Promotion Scheme Mexican Chipping Overstated (CASPIAN reveals 18 officials chipped, not 160) FDA letter outlines serious health risks from VeriChip human implants Censored! CASPIAN told to remove incriminating RFID tagging photos Photos of chipped CVS products, Kleenex, Huggies baby wipes Calvin Klein and other clothing labels with hidden RFID tags Mexican Attorney General and staff take RFID implants Wal-Mart is RFID tagging in Texas! Call 1-800-Wal-Mart to complain!
Industry Attempt to Smear RFID Activist Katherine Albrecht
CASPIAN finds embarrassing confidential RFID documents lawmakers into the “inner circle.” CASPIAN asks “How can we trust these people with our personal data?”
Metro “Future Store” hides RFID in shopper cards
Wal-Mart, P&G Caught in Secret RFID Test |
<!–DIV {margin:0px;}–>
“And the first went and poured out his vial upon the earth.
And there fell a sore and grievous wound upon men who had the character of the beast:
and upon them that adored the image thereof.”
(Apocalypse Chapter 16:2)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE September 9, 2007
Damning research findings could spell the end of VeriChip…
The Associated Press will issue a breaking story this weekend revealing that microchip implants have induced cancer in laboratory animals and dogs, says privacy expert and long-time VeriChip opponent Dr. Katherine Albrecht.
As the AP will report, a series of research articles spanning more than a decade found that mice and rats injected with glass-encapsulated RFID transponders developed malignant, fast-growing, lethal cancers in up to 1% to 10% of cases. The tumors originated in the tissue surrounding the microchips and often grew to completely surround the devices, the researchers said.
Albrecht first became aware of the microchip-cancer link when she and her “Spychips” co-author, Liz McIntyre, were contacted by a pet owner whose dog had died from a chip-induced tumor.. Albrecht then found medical studies showing a causal link between microchip implants and cancer in other animals. Before she brought the research to the AP’s attention, the studies had somehow escaped public notice.
A four-month AP investigation turned up additional documents, several of which had been published before VeriChip’s parent company, Applied Digital Solutions, sought FDA approval to market the implant for humans. The VeriChip received FDA approval in 2004 under the watch of then Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson who later joined the
company’s board.
Under FDA policy, it would have been VeriChip’s responsibility to bring the adverse studies to the FDA’s attention, but VeriChip CEO Scott Silverman claims the company was unaware of the research.
Albrecht expressed skepticism that a company like VeriChip, whose primary business is microchip implants, would be unaware of relevant studies in the published literature.
“For Mr. Silverman not to know about this research would be negligent. If he did know about these studies, he certainly had an incentive to keep them quiet,” said Albrecht. “Had the FDA known about the cancer link, they might never have approved his company’s product.”
Since gaining FDA approval, VeriChip has aggressively targeted diabetic and dementia patients, and recently announced that it had chipped 90 Alzheimer’s patients and their caregivers in Florida. Employees in the Mexican Attorney General’s Office, workers in a U.S. security firm, and club-goers in Europe have also been implanted.
Albrecht expressed concern for those who have received a chip implant, urging them to get the devices removed as soon as possible.
“These new revelations change everything,” she said. “Why would anyone take the risk of having a cancer chip in their arm?”
!WARNING!
As you read this website:
The Antichrist system is in the process of being implemented…
Are You Ready?
Radio Frequency Identification Device
RFID – 666
RFID ‘Powder’ – The World’s Smallest RFID Tag…
“And he shall make all, both little and great, rich and poor, freemen and bondmen, to have a character in their right hand or on their foreheads: And that no man might buy or sell, but he that hath the character, or the name of the beast, or the number of his name.”
(Apocalypse Chapter 13: 16-17)

The world’s smallest and thinnest RFID tags were introduced yesterday by Hitachi. Tiny miracles of miniaturization, these RFID chips (Radio Frequency IDentification chips) measure just 0..05 x 0.05 millimeters.
The previous record-holder, the Hitachi mu-chip, is just 0.4 x 0.4 millimeters. Take a look at the size of the mu-chip RFID tag on a human fingertip. Now, compare that with the new RFID tags. The “powder type” tags are some sixty times smaller.
The new RFID chips have a 128-bit ROM for storing a unique 38 digit number, like their predecessor. Hitachi used semiconductor miniaturization technology and electron beams to write data on the chip substrates to achieve the new, smaller size.
Hitachi’s mu-chips are already in production; they were used to prevent ticket forgery at last year’s Aichi international technology exposition. RFID ‘powder,’ on the other hand, is so much smaller that it can easily be incorporated into thin paper, like that used in paper currency and gift certificates. Science fiction fans will have a field day with this new technology. In his 1998 novel Distraction, Bruce Sterling referred to bugged money:
“They always played poker with European cash. There was American cash around, flimsy plastic stuff, but most people wouldn’t take American cash anymore. It was hard to take American cash seriously when it was no longer convertible outside U.S. borders. Besides, all the bigger bills were bugged. (Read more about bugged money)”
These tiny RFID tags could be worked into any product; combined with RFID readers built into doorways, theft of consumer goods would be practically impossible. These devices could also be used to identify and track people. For example, suppose you participated in some sort of protest or other organized activity. If police agencies sprinkled these tags around, every individual could be tracked and later identified at leisure, with powerful enough tag scanners.
To put it in the context of popular culture, see the picture below, which was taken from the 1996 movie Mission Impossible. One of the IMF operatives places a tracking tag on the shoulder of a computer programmer. Pretty clunky-looking tag…
Take a look at these earlier stories related to RFID, and consider how much easier it will be with tinier chips: RFID Sensor Tag Shower For Disasters (gentle rain of RFID), RFID-Maki: Easy Payment Sushi (just tag the sushi directly, then scan customer’s stomach) and VeriChip Chairman Proposes RFID Chips For Immigrants (just dust the border).
Animal tags for people?
Business Week reported on January 11, 2007:
Under the federally supported National Animal Identification System (NAIS), digital tags are expected to be affixed to the U.S.’s 40 million farm animals to enable regulators to track and respond quickly to disease, bioterrorism, and other calamities. Opponents have many fears about this plan, among them that it could be the forerunner of a similar system for humans. The theory, circulated in blogs, goes like this: You test it on the animals first, demonstrating the viability of the radio frequency identification devices (RFIDs) to monitor each and every animal’s movements and health history from birth to death, and then move on to people.
Well, all you conspiracy buffs, let me introduce you to Kevin McGrath and Scott Silverman. McGrath heads a small, growing company that makes RFID chips for animals…and people.
Silverman heads a second company that sells the rice-size people chips, which are the only ones with Food & Drug Administration (FDA) approval, for implantation in an individual’s right biceps. They carry an identity marker that would be linked to medical records. His goal is to create “the first RFID company for people.”
Human-Chip Company Plans IPO
While the NAIS remains voluntary on a federal level, and there is no formal people identification system as yet, both executives are moving aggressively to position their companies for the day when chips in animals and people are the norm rather than the exception. Mary Zanoni, a lawyer and critic of NAIS who has written extensively about the system, says that “the microchipping of livestock and pet animals is intended to make tagging more acceptable in helping these companies market their devices for people.”
McGrath’s company, Digital Angel (DOC), does nearly $60 million in annual sales and has sold several million chips for attachment to livestock, mostly in the U.S. and Canada.
Silverman’s company, VeriChip Corp., is preparing for widespread marketing of its people chips with an initial public offering that it expects to complete within the next 60 days. It has begun building what he refers to as “the infrastructure” by signing up more than 400 hospitals to adopt system scanners and databases and about 1,200 physicians to make chips available to patients likeliest to benefit from them, such as diabetics.
While McGrath and Silverman aren’t related, their companies are. Digital Angel and VeriChip have the same majority owner. Applied Digital Solutions (ADSX), the parent of seven smaller companies, owns 55% of Digital Angel and all of VeriChip.
Larger Farms Join the RFID Program
Digital Angel has a big head start in marketing, thanks in part to the Agriculture Dept..-sponsored NAIS program, which, while it is billed as voluntary, is expected by various opponents of NAIS, including Zanoni as well as blogs such as nonais.org, to be imposed on farmers by growing numbers of states. Michigan begins requiring RFID tags for cattle on Mar. 1 in the first such effort (see BusinessWeek.com, 12/19/06, “Farmers Say No to Animal Tags”).
Farmers running midsize and large operations are signing up for NAIS in growing numbers. The USDA says 343,186 farms have registered, which translates into millions of animals, driven by what McGrath says are significant economic incentives.
One is inventory control. He points to a pig farm as an example. The farmer can use RFID tags “to monitor the amount fed to the sows, the medications they receive, when they get pregnant, the length of pregnancies, the number born to each sow, and the number of days to weaning.”
As another example, he cites a farm with about 5,000 pigs that had an outbreak of disease, where some of the pigs got fever and several died.
By being able to spot health problems earlier via scanning of RFID chips compared to “managing by clipboard,” says McGrath, the cost of the disease in lost animals and treatment was about $75,000, vs. an expected $250,000 without chips.
McGrath acknowledges that Digital Angel’s chips are more appropriate for factory farms than for smaller farms focused on selling locally. “If you’re a farmer who sells to a neighbor, who cares” about RFID chips? “But if you are a farmer who sells to Japan, the Japanese say they want you to categorically state [the animal] is this age and has not had these diseases. If you cannot show this, the Japanese won’t buy it.” For those farmers who can pass the test, $25-per-head premiums await, he says.
People Tags Are More Profitable
McGrath, for now, is content to focus Digital Angel on the factory farm market, having seen sales of the animal chip rise from 200,000 in 2003 to about 3 million last year. “We believe we will continue to grow at that rate,” he says. In addition, Digital Angel continues selling tags to track lost pets and to monitor fish like salmon for environmental purposes.
Silverman is taking a similar tack with VeriChip by expanding existing markets—the two primary ones are tags for the bracelets and anklets worn by newborn babies and their parents to prevent kidnappings, and those for elderly nursing home patients with Alzheimer’s disease to recover “wanderers.” Its 2005 revenues were $24 million.
But the big attraction for both companies, and the reason for the upcoming VeriChip public offering, is the lure of implanting the chips into people. McGrath points out that while the RFID chips attached to animals sell for about $1.50 each, and will likely decline to under $1 within a few years because of competitive pressures, the chips for people sell for $25, based on special design to allow implanting. “To the extent they [VeriChip] would need 1 million [chips], it would be huge for us,” McGrath says.
For now, VeriChip has only “a couple hundred patients” who have had the RFID chips surgically implanted in their arms. The company is focusing its attention on building databases of patient medical information to attract hospitals to adopt the company’s chips. The chips are being targeted at an estimated 45 million “high-risk patients”—diabetics and heart patients, for example, who could be brought into hospitals unconscious or semiconscious and thus not be able to identify themselves.
Business May Compel Chip Wearing
Of course, no discussion of these cousin companies would be complete without addressing the privacy concerns many people have about being tagged. Both McGrath and Silverman say their companies protect privacy by limiting data stored on the chips for both farm animals and people to identification numbers only, which are extracted via special scanners and then matched to records in databases.
McGrath also says he appreciates the concerns many small farmers have about the potential infringement on their privacy that NAIS represents. “You’re dealing with people who are intensely independent,” he says. “They don’t like people looking over their shoulders.”
Silverman says: “We are leaders in the RFID industry in facing privacy issues head on.” The chip for people “should always be a voluntary product, with opt-in and opt-out capability.”
As comforting as such statements appear, it’s important to remember that adoption of the RFID chips doesn’t necessarily need to be legislated to become nearly universal. If enough hospitals and insurance companies begin requiring them, or treating patients wearing them more expeditiously than nonusers, or providing discounts for usage of the chips, they well could become the norm. Then, not wearing a chip might be akin to not having a bank ATM card or, increasingly in Eastern states with toll roads and turnpikes, not having a transponder to pay tolls in your car (see BusinessWeek.com, 10/9/06, “Radio-Shipment Tracking: A Revolution Delayed”).
Animal Farms Put Us on Notice
It’s also important to keep in mind that the real prize for VeriChip is in assembling the databases of patient health information. The more patients in the database, the more leverage it has in the health-care marketplace. In that sense, it’s in competition with retailers like Walgreens (WAG) that are collecting data via their walk-in clinics (see BusinessWeek.com, 7/17/06, “Drugstore Clinics Are Bursting with Health”).
The most important opinion may be rendered by the financial marketplace, and so far, investors haven’t fallen over themselves for either company. Digital Angel’s stock over the past two years has declined from about $7.50 a share to the current $2.60. VeriChip’s IPO has been put off several times by “market conditions,” says Silverman, since it first filed in December of last year. Since then, it has filed five amended offering statements, the most recent on Jan. 9.
It may be a while before we all begin wearing medical information chips in our arms, but the farm animals are telling us it’s closer than we may have imagined.
Plans are Underway to
Microchip every Newborn
in U.S. and Europe…
Regarding plans to microchip newborns, Dr. Kilde said the U.S. has been moving in this direction “in secrecy.”
She added that in Sweden, Prime Minister Olof Palme gave permission in 1973 to implant prisoners, and Data Inspection’s ex-Director General Jan Freese revealed that nursing-home patients were implanted in the mid-1980s. The technology is revealed in the 1972:47 Swedish state report, Statens Officiella Utradninger
Are you prepared to live in a world in which every newborn baby is micro-chipped? And finally are you ready to have your every move tracked, recorded and placed in Big Brother’s data bank? According to the Finnish article, distributed to doctors and medical students, time is running out for changing the direction of military medicine and mind control technology, ensuring the future of human freedom.
“Implanted human beings can be followed anywhere. Their brain functions can be remotely monitored by supercomputers and even altered through the changing of frequencies,” wrote Dr. Kilde. “Guinea pigs in secret experiments have included prisoners, soldiers, mental patients,handicapped children, deaf and blind people, homosexuals, single women, the elderly, school children, and any group of people considered “marginal” by the elite experimenters. The published experiences of prisoners in Utah State Prison, for example, are shocking to the conscience.
“Today’s microchips operate by means of low-frequency radio waves that target them. With the help of satellites, the implanted person can be tracked anywhere on the globe. Such a technique was among a number tested in the Iraq war, according to Dr. Carl Sanders, who invented the intelligence-manned interface (IMI) biotic, which is injected into people. (Earlier during the Vietnam War, soldiers were injected with the Rambo chip, designed to increase adrenaline flow into the bloodstream.) The 20-billion-bit/second supercomputers at the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) could now “see and hear” what soldiers experience in the battlefield with a remote monitoring system (RMS).
“When a 5-micromillimeter microchip (the diameter of a strand of hair is 50 micromillimeters) is placed into optical nerve of the eye, it draws neuro-impulses from the brain that embody the experiences, smells, sights, and voice of the implanted person. Once transferred and stored in a computer, these neuro-impulses can be projected back to the person’s brain via the microchip to be re-experienced. Using a RMS, a land-based computer operator can send electromagnetic messages (encoded as signals) to the nervous system, affecting the target’s performance. With RMS, healthy persons can be induced to see hallucinations and to hear voices in their heads.
“Every thought, reaction, hearing, and visual observation causes a certain neurological potential, spikes, and patterns in the brain and its electromagnetic fields, which can now be decoded into thoughts, pictures, and voices. Electromagnetic stimulation can therefore change a person’s brainwaves and affect muscular activity, causing painful muscular cramps experienced as torture.”
The Mark of the Beast – Means Total Surveillance of
Livestock, too…
The National Animal Identification System (NAIS) is set up to put RFID tags in all livestock. This means total surveillance of all livestock. It is mandatory by January 2008. This means if you have one chicken, one horse, one cow, one sheep, one goat, one bison, one sheep, one goat, one llama, one alpaca, one turkey, or one duck, etc – you must register, the premises and the animals. Who do you think will be next? You and me.
See: http://animalid.aphis.usda.gov/nais/about/pdf/NAIS_Draft_Strategic_Plan_42505.pdf and http://animalid.aphis.usda.gov/nais/about/pdf/NAIS_Technical_Supplement_072605.pdf
GPS Device Finds Bank Robbery Suspect …
Cincinnati, OH — Police say modern technology foiled an old-fashioned bank robbery. A teller placed an electronic Global Positioning System device in a bag of stolen money, allowing police to track down a suspect in just 42 minutes Thursday.
“Around here (GPS) is still relatively rare,” Hamilton County sheriff’s office spokesman Steve Barnett said. “But with the advancement in technology and the continued success of catching bank robbers, soon I would hope that other financial institutions would jump on board.” Authorities said that after William Ingram, 46, left a U.S. Bank in suburban Colerain Township, the GPS device tracked him to a car dealership in Hartwell, where he was returning a Honda that he had borrowed for a test drive but actually used as a getaway car. When Ingram was confronted, money began spilling from his pockets, officials said.
EDITOR’S Comment: There will be no place to hide for anyone who takes the Mark of the Beast.
Three R’s: Reading, Writing, RFID (Radio Frequency
Identification) chips…
Gary Stillman, the director of a small K-8 charter school in Buffalo, New York, is an RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) believer.
While privacy advocates fret that the embedded microchips will be used to track people surreptitiously, Stillman said he believes that RFID tags will make his inner city school safer and more efficient.
Stillman has gone whole-hog for radio-frequency technology, which his year-old Enterprise Charter School started using last month to record the time of day students arrive in the morning. In the next months, he plans to use RFID to track library loans, disciplinary records, cafeteria purchases and visits to the nurse’s office. Eventually he’d like to expand the system to track students’ punctuality (or lack thereof) for every class and to verify the time they get on and off school buses.
“That way, we could confirm that Johnny Jones got off at Oak and Hurtle at 3:22,” Stillman said. “All this relates to safety and keeping track of kids…. Eventually it will become a monitoring tool for us.”
Radio-frequency identification tags — which have been hailed as the next-generation bar code — consist of a microchip outfitted with a tiny antenna that broadcasts an ID number to a reader unit. The reader searches a database for the number and finds the related file, which contains the tagged item’s description, or in the case of Enterprise Charter, the student’s information.
Euro notes may be radio tagged…
Hitachi is rumored to be in talks with the European Central Bank about embedding radio tags into euro banknotes.
Radio tags the size of a grain of sand could be embedded in the euro note if a rumored deal between the European Central Bank (ECB) and Japanese electronics maker Hitachi is signed.
“RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) tags also have the ability of recording information such as details of the transactions the paper note has been involved in. It would, therefore, also prevent money-laundering, make it possible to track illegal transactions and even prevent kidnappers demanding unmarked bills,” Chopra said.
Library adopts Spy Chips…
A civil liberties watchdog group is expressing concern over the San Francisco Public Library’s plans to track books by inserting computer chips into each tome. Library officials approved a plan Thursday to install tiny radio frequency identification chips, known as RFIDs, into the roughly 2 million books, CDs and audiovisual materials patrons can borrow. The system still needs fun
ding and wouldn’t be ready until at least 2005.
Your car tires have RFID’s chips in them ALREADY!!!
Its a us federal sponsored initiative to track vehicles near certain highways feeding certain urban areas. Basically the FBI enters a rfid number into the database and then history of travel for the car pops up. The feds can also pre-enter rfids they want to watch after getting a reading off your parked car or from the Canadian-us customs border (where they already actively log the car rfids in the tires and associate them with plates)
Your tires have a passive coil with 64 to 128 bit serial number emitter in them!
Federal Drug Administration approves use of the Mark of the Beast for medical Patients…
And he shall make all, both little and great, rich and poor, freemen and bondmen,
to have a character in their right hand or on their foreheads:
And that no man might buy or sell, but he that hath the character,
or the name of the beast, or the number of his name. 
(Apocalypse Chapter 13: 16-17)
Medical milestone or privacy invasion? A tiny computer chip approved Wednesday for implantation in a patient’s arm can speed vital information about a patient’s medical history to doctors and hospitals. But critics warn that it could open new ways to imperil the confidentiality of medical records.
The Food and Drug Administration said Wednesday that Applied Digital Solutions of Delray Beach, Fla., could market the VeriChip, an implantable computer chip about the size of a grain of rice, for medical purposes.
With the pinch of a syringe, the microchip is inserted under the skin in a procedure that takes less than 20 minutes and leaves no stitches. Silently and invisibly, the dormant chip stores a code that releases patient-specific information when a scanner passes over it.
Think UPC code. The identifier, emblazoned on a food item, brings up its name and price on the cashier’s screen. At the doctor’s office the codes stamped onto chips, once scanned, would reveal such information as a patient’s allergies and prior treatments, speeding care.
The microchips have already been implanted in 1 million pets. But the chip’s possible dual use for tracking people’s movements – as well as speeding delivery of their medical information to emergency rooms – has raised alarm.
Mexico’s Attorney General required
the Mark of the Beast in a 160 people.
Thousands more are now planned…
MEXICO CITY, MEXICO – Security has reached the subcutaneous level for Mexico’s attorney general and at least 160 people in his office – they have been implanted with microchips that get them access to secure areas of their headquarters.
Mexico’s top federal prosecutors and investigators began receiving chip implants in their arms in November in order to get access to restricted areas inside the attorney general’s headquarters, said Antonio Aceves, general director of Solusat, the company that distributes the microchips in Mexico.
Attorney General Rafael Macedo de la Concha and 160 of his employees were implanted at a cost to taxpayers of $150 for each rice grain-sized chip. More are scheduled to get “tagged” in coming months, and key members of the Mexican military, the police and the office of President Vicente Fox might follow suit, Aceves said. Fox’s office did not immediately return a call seeking comment. Aceves said his company eventually hopes to provide Mexican officials with implantable devices that can track their physical location at any given time, but that technology is still under development.
The chips that have been implanted are manufactured by VeriChip Corp., a subsidiary of Applied Digital Solutions Inc. (ADSX) of Palm Beach, Fla. They lie dormant under the skin until read by an electromagnetic scanner, which uses a technology known as radio frequency identification, or RFID, that’s now getting hot in the inventory and supply chain businesses. Erik Michielsen, director of RFID analysis at ABI Research Inc., said that in theory the chips could be as secure as existing RFID-based access control systems such as the contactless employee badges widely used in corporate and government facilities.
In addition to the chips sold to the Mexican government, more than 1,000 Mexicans have implanted them for medical reasons, Aceves said. Hospital officials can use a scanning device to download a chip’s serial number, which they then use to access a patient’s blood type, name and other information on a computer. Still, Silverman said that his company has sold 7,000 chips to distributors across the United States and that more than 1,000 of those had likely been inserted into U.S. customers, mostly for security or identification reasons.
Because the Applied Digital chips cannot be easily removed – and are housed in glass capsules designed to break and be unusable if taken out – they could be even more popular someday if they eventually can incorporate locator capabilities. Already, global positioning system chips have become common accouterments on jewelry or clothing in Mexico. In fact, in March, Mexican authorities broke up a ring of used-car salesmen turned kidnappers who were known as “Los Chips” because they searched their victims to detect whether they were carrying the chips to help them be located.
Bio-chip implant “VeriPay”
arrives for cashless
checkless society…



At a global security conference held on November 21, 2003, in Paris, an American company, Applied Digital Solutions, announced a new syringe-injectable microchip “VeriPay” implant for humans, designed to be used as a fraud-proof payment method for cash and credit-card transactions. The chip implant is being presented as an advance over credit cards and smart cards, which, absent biometrics and appropriate safeguard technologies, are subject to theft, resulting in identity fraud.
Cashless payment systems are now part of a larger technology development subset: government identification experiments that seek to combine cashless payment applications with national ID information on media (such as a “smart” card), which contain a whole host of government, personal, employment and commercial data and applications on a single, contactless RFID chip. “We are the only ones out there offering implantable ID technology,” said Silverman, who announced the “VeriPay” service during a speech Friday at ID World 2003 in Paris.. “We believe the market will evolve to use our product.” 
VeriPay – Your Cash Register on the move…
You can now accept credit card payments from your customers anywhere and anytime. All you need is a standard GSM mobile phone, which becomes an EFTPOS terminal in your pocket. You don’t even need to make a phone call – transaction details are simply sent as an SMS text message and confirmed within a few seconds. Ensure the card is good and money is in your bank before you leave the job. No more end-of-day paperwork, visits to the bank or double handling of transactions.
U.N. meeting hears proposal for global human database, ID numbers, to register everyone…
Verichip, a miniaturized, implantable identification device with a variety of medical, security and emergency applications…
VeriChip is an implantable, 12mm by 2.1mm radio frequency device about the size of the point of a typical ballpoint pen. Each VeriChip will contain a unique identification number and other critical data. Utilizing an external scanner, radio frequency energy passes through the skin energizing the dormant VeriChip, which then emits a radio frequency signal transmitting the identification number and other data contained in the VeriChip. The scanner will display the identification number, but the VeriChip data can also be transmitted, via telephone or the Internet, to an FDA compliant, secure data-storage site. It will then be accessible by authorized personnel. Inserting the VeriChip device is a simple procedure performed in an outpatient, office setting. It requires only local anesthesia, a tiny incision and perhaps a small adhesive bandage. Sutures are not necessary.
Ex-New Jersey surgeon offers himself for experiment
NEWARK — The terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center have spurred a former surgeon from New Jersey to turn himself into a human guinea pig. Five days after the Sept. 11 attacks, Richard Seelig spent about five minutes implanting two “Verichips” — each no larger than a small breath mint — below the skin of his right forearm and right hip.
Florida firm first to sell ID
microchips to be implanted
under skin…
“Digital Angel”: technology that “cares” — (Horse !!Crap!!)
The Digital Angel is a computer chip that is smaller than a grain of rice and has a short antenna. It is placed under the skin of a person and the chip sends a signal to cell phone towers and satellites in the sky and it can tell the body temperature, pulse, heartbeat, insulin levels, etc. and it also tells the location of a person anywhere in the world. All this information on a person would be available over the internet. This chip can also be put in furniture or anything of value for tracking in case of theft. It can also be put in food to record temperature and location as it is shipped across the country.
The Digital Angel demonstration will be held on Thursday, October 26, at the Unconvention Center (Pier 94) in New York City. Roughly 200 invitations will be issued to interested members of the national media, potential joint-venture/licensing partners and selected Wall Street analysts. As previously announced, attendees of the event will witness an historical first: the first-ever operational combination of bio-sensor technology and Web-enabled wireless telecommunications linked to GPS location-tracking systems.
Applied Digital Solutions (ADSX) holds all the patents on the Digital Angel. The projected worldwide sales is $100 billion dollars. The stock is currently selling at 36 cents a share. They call it “technology that cares.” We call it the Mark of the Beast or 666.
Back in 2000 Applied Digital Solutions used this above graphic for their Digital Angel product.
The angel image on the left was a part of an early ‘splash’ screen for a GPS-based tracking device similar to OnStar or LoJack designed to be worn by or implanted in humans for medical monitoring, location of at-risk individuals, firearms control, and as “a foolproof means of identification for e-commerce security.
The image in the center is the prior image inverted. Many people feel that the line drawing of the angel forms a clear and distinct pattern resembling the number 666 – the Number of the Beast from the Book of Revelations. The image on the right highlights this pattern. Was this design a deliberate act of sabotage or an unfortunate accident of design or a sign of the prophecy?
The Bible says those who take
the 666 Microchip will
receive the Wrath of God…
http://www.tldm.org/bible/bible.htm
And that no man might buy or sell, but he that hath the character…
And it was given him to give life to the image of the beast: and that the image of the beast should speak: and should cause that whosoever will not adore the image of the beast should be slain. And he shall make all, both little and great, rich and poor, freemen and bondmen, to have a character in their right hand or on their foreheads: And that no man might buy or sell, but he that hath the character, or the name of the beast, or the number of his name. Here is wisdom. He that hath understanding, let him count the number of the beast. For it is the number of a man: and the number of him is six hundred sixty-six. (Apocalypse Chapter 13: 15-18)
He also shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God…
And the third angel followed them, saying with a loud voice: If any man shall adore the beast and his image and receive his character in his forehead or in his hand, He also shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God, which is mingled with pure wine in the cup of his wrath: and shall be tormented with fire and brimstone in the sight of the holy angels and in the sight of the Lamb. And the smoke of their torments, shall ascend up for ever and ever: neither have they rest day nor night, who have adored the beast and his image and whoever receiveth the character of his name. Here is the patience of the saints, who keep the commandments of God and the faith of Jesus. (Apocalypse Chapter 14:9-12)
And there fell a sore and grievous wound upon men who had the character of the beast…
And the first went and poured out his vial upon the earth. And there fell a sore and grievous wound upon men who had the character of the beast: and upon them that adored the image thereof. (Apocalypse Chapter Chapter 16:2)
Cast alive into the pool of fire burning with brimstone..
And the beast was taken, and with him the false prophet who wrought signs before him, wherewith he seduced them who received the character of the beast and who adored his image. These two were cast alive into the pool of fire burning with brimstone. (Apocalypse Chapter 19:20)
But they shall be priests of God and of Christ: and shall reign with him a thousand years…
And I saw seats. And they sat upon them: and judgment was given unto them. And the souls of them that were beheaded for the testimony of Jesus and for the word of God and who had not adored the beast nor his image nor received his character on their foreheads or in their hands. And they lived and reigned with Christ a thousand years. The rest of the dead lived not, till the thousand years were finished. This is the first resurrection. Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first resurrection. In these the second death hath no power. But they shall be priests of God and of Christ: and shall reign with him a thousand years. (Apocalypse Chapter 20: 4-6)
The complete Apocalypse is found at: http://www..tldm.org/bible/new%20testament/apoc.htm
Detailed explanation of the 666 code in every UPC Barcode
There is 666 code imbedded in every barcode on every product sold in America. This page explains how to read the barcodes and the undeniable detail of the 666 code imbedded in each one. It also explains the profound implications.
666 in the barcode
There is a 666 in every barcode scanned at the cash register. This page proves it beyond any doubt. Barcodes are easy to read. Take about 10 minutes to read this page, you will be able to read barcodes and there will be no doubt that there is a 666 in every barcode.
Different types of barcodes
The UPC (Universal Product Code) is the type of barcode used at the cash register (Point of Sale). There are many types of barcodes but the only ones that will be recognized at the cash register are of the UPC type. Barcodes used for shipping labels or serial numbers are ignored. One product may have two different barcodes such as Diet Coke has a bar code on each can and another on a 12 pack case. The reseller will program their system to read the can barcode, the 12 pack barcode, or both based on which they sell.
Click Here for a Website that allows you to create a UPC barcode with any number you wish
I chose to use the Diet Coke barcodes because they are common and it is likely that you have one to use for comparison. Diet Coke barcodes are essentially the same as any other barcode.

Diet Coke Can Diet Coke 12 Pack Diet Coke 24 Pack
More information on types of barcodes
Introductory Information about Barcodes
BarCodes – How to Get Started – Top 25 FAQs

Example of a UPC barcode containing the number 012345678901

Two thin lines are used at the start, middle and end. These are used as dividers so that the decoding device knows when to start and stop reading.
Left Character Set Right Character Set

Two lines of varying width represent one character. Here they are colored so you can easily identify each.
There are two character sets, one set for the left side of the center divider and the other for the right side of the divider.
When the lines are read with a laser reader, the laser dot moves back and forth. The two different character sets allow the Laser to know if the laser dot is is moving in the left or right direction.
The Laser dot appears as a line because of its brightness and speed.

This is the barcode from above with the lines colored so they can be read more easily.
Notice that the number 6 in the right character set is the same as the left, center and right dividers.

Look at your barcodes. ALL UPC Barcodes have the 666 code imbedded.

Diet Coke 24 Pack
I may be wrong, but I do not believe that the barcode is the “Mark of the Beast”.
What I am sure of is that any new device (Smart Card, Implantable Microchip or other such device) MUST have the 666 markers imbedded within it in order to be decoded by existing equipment at the cash register.
If you would like to see what I (the author of this page) believes to be the Mark of the Beast then click here:
RFID and the “Mark of the Beast”
History of Implantation
The implantation of RFID chips started with animals. Currently, all animals will require RFID tagging by 2009 in accordance with the (NAIS) National Animal Identification System. Shortly after the events of September 11, 2001, there were many reports of people getting “Chipped”.
Required Implantation
Some businesses and governments have required that their people be implanted.
Mexican Officials Get Chipped – The attorney general of Mexico and several of his staff implant microchips in their arms. …through a chip, which what’s more is unremovable… …so that I can be located at any moment wherever I am… …The chips would enable the wearer to be found anywhere inside Mexico…
Verichip Wants To Test Human Implantable Rfid On Military – E-business & Business Technology News By Techweb – VeriChip is pitching its human implantable RFID chips to the U.S. military. VeriChip spokesperson Nicole Philbin confirmed Wednesday that the company’s Board Chairman Scott Silverman has held informal meetings with U.S. Navy and Air Force leaders to suggest a feasibility study of its VeriMed system.
Company requires RFID injection – SecurityFocus.com – Two employees have been injected with RFID chips this week as part of a new requirement to access their company’s datacenter. Cincinnati based surveillance company CityWatcher.com created the policy with the hopes of increasing security in the datacenter where video surveillance tapes are stored.
All Airport Employees To Have Microchip Implants? – Congress is moving quickly to put into motion measures that will ensure airport employees are subjected to stricter security checks. Everyone from Restaurant employees to airline mechanics could soon be forced to provide biometric finger and iris scans and may even face the possibility of being implanted with a microchip.
Health Risks
Chip implants linked to animal tumors – Yahoo! News – neither the company nor the regulators publicly mentioned this: A series of veterinary and toxicology studies, dating to the mid-1990s, stated that chip implants had “induced” malignant tumors in some lab mice and rats.
DailyTech – RFID Chips Linked to Fast-Growing Cancer – Numerous studies linking RFID implants to cancer in animals, are gaining significant attention
Applications
The U.S. Electronic Passport - The US Passport now has an RFID chip imbedded
– Toll Booths
- Coke Machines
Security Issues
VeriChip’s human-implantable RFID chips clonable, sez hackers – Engadget – a pair of hackers have recently demonstrated how human-implantable RFID chips from VeriChip can be easily cloned, effectively stealing the person’s identity.
Companies involved in the Implantable RFID
Digital Angel
Applied Digital Solutions
More Information
IBM, Verichip and the Fourth Reich - Movie
Resistance
Patients, doctors staying away from implantable RFID chips | CNET News.com – Patients, doctors staying away from implantable RFID chips | RFID chip company gets ho-hum response to its initial public offering, partly because only 222 people have gotten chipped. | February 12, 2007, 3:06 PM PT | Michael Kanellos
RFid Gazette – Implantable RFID VeriChip Faces Nationwide Resistance
Implantable RFID chip decision draws criticism – DrugResearcher.com – Implantable RFID chip decision draws criticism This week’s announcement of the US approval for an implantable radiofrequency identification (RFID) chip for use in humans
California bans forced RFID implants – Health Care IT News.com – Gov.Arnold Schwarzenegger (R-Calif.) last Friday signed a bill that prohibits the forced implanting of radio frequency devices in order to protect individual privacy rights.
Organized Resistance
We The People Will Not Be Chipped – The We the People Will Not Be Chipped – No Verichip Inside Movement, is based on the irrefutable fact, that we believe in mankind’s inalienable human rights that are absolute and can not be debased, nor perverted. Human life can not be degraded to a 16 digit RFID chip number embedded under you skin under any circumstance. By uniting on this common ground, we can send a strong message to the IBM funded Verichip that we the people will not be chipped!
Still Ridiculing People Who Talk About Forced Microchip Implants? – For over a decade now Alex Jones and others have been warning that the event of enforced microchipping of humans for tracking and security purposes is upon us. Despite countless policy documents calling for just this and hundreds of mainstream news reports covering the issue, many would dismiss this as utter science fiction or a “conspiracy theory” and refuse to look into the facts.
“And he causeth all, both small and great, rich and poor, free and bond, to receive a mark in their right hand, or in their foreheads: And that no man might buy or sell, save he that had the mark, or the name of the beast, or the number of his name. Here is wisdom. Let him that hath understanding count the number of the beast: for it is the number of a man; and his number is Six hundred threescore and six.“
Revelations:13 (King James Version of the Holy Bible)
“And the third angel followed them, saying with a loud voice, If any man worship the beast and his image, and receive his mark in his forehead, or in his hand, the same shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God, which is poured out without mixture into the cup of his indignation; and he shall be tormented with fire and brimstone in the presence of the holy angels, and in the presence of the Lamb: and the smoke of their torment ascendeth up for ever and ever: and they have no rest day nor night, who worship the beast and his image, and whosoever receiveth the mark of his name.“
Revelation 14:9-12
Our Lady of the Roses’
awesome Bayside Prophecies…
http://www.tldm.org/../Bayside/
These prophecies came from Jesus, Mary, and the saints to Veronica Lueken at Bayside, NY, from 1968 to 1995.
The Mark of the Beast and the Mark of the Living Christ…
“You have been asked to wear a sacramental about your neck. Now I will explain why, My children. I have warned you of the unseen evil forces about you. I have cautioned you that your human eyes cannot see this. But it exists and is as solid in their world as you are on your earthly plane. Know this, that there are two camps now on earth: Lucifer on one side and the road to Heaven and its followers on the other. You have all been marked. There are two signs now: the mark of the beast and the mark of the living Christ.
“Recognize the signs of the times, My children. The war is on.” – Our Lady of the Roses, March 25, 1972
Insight…
“As time goes on, My children of light, you will be able to recognize with your human eyes, through insight from the Eternal Father in the Spirit, those who are marked with the sign of the cross or the beast.” – Our Lady of the Roses, July 25, 1978
Marked with the mark of satan…
“My child, there will be very many victims upon earth: those who are willing to sacrifice their own pleasures, their own human pursuits, to give them over to the salvation of souls, their brothers and sisters, who are marked with the mark of satan and are seeking to take it away. There is only one way: conversion, and then cure of the sick soul.” – Jesus, July 25, 1985
Every person of conscionable age…
“The final count shall be in the few of those who are to be saved. My children, at this very moment of time upon earth, each and every person of conscionable age has been marked with the sign of the cross and redemption, or they have accepted on free will the mark of the beast, eternal damnation!” -Our Lady of the Roses, August 14, 1978
Be branded…
“Each man on earth who has been baptized and set himself up as a follower of My Son in infancy has received the mark of the cross upon him. He can in his lifetime cast this away and be branded with the mark of the beast. This will be of his choice. No man will be lost without his own choice.” -Our Lady of the Roses, December 31, 1972
Other topics in the awesome
Bayside Prophecies:
latest news, terrorism, nuclear war, coming events upon man, test tube baby, prophecies, killer comet, 666, World War III, race war, United Nations, children’s plague, monetary crash, Armageddon, death ray gun, illuminati, Russian submarines, and secret societies.
Directives from Heaven…
http://www.tldm.org/directives/directives.htm
D52 - Mark of the Beast
D139 – Preparations: Spiritual
D140 - Preparations: Material
Other links…
A step closer to the Mark of the Beast… http://www.tldm.org/News5/Mark_of_the_Beast.htm
Outside links…
When cash is only skin deep… http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,61357,00.html?tw=wn_tophead_2
They Want Their ID Chips Now http://www.wired.com/news/privacy/0,1848,50187,00.html
Global security confab unveils syringe-injectable ID microchip http://wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=35766
“All have been marked now by the cross or by the mark of the beast.” http://www.tldm.org/bayside/messages/bm790804.htm
Digital Angel demo http://www.digitalangel.net/works_demo.asp
Injectable chip opens door to ‘human bar code’ http://eetimes.com/story/OEG20020104S0044





0 responses so far ↓
There are no comments yet...Kick things off by filling out the form below.
You must log in to post a comment.