The Coming Office Parties and Long Lines to Get Microchipped


One of the quickest ways for the New World Order (NWO) to reach its goals will be to have a compliant, moldable, and accepting queue of sycophants lined up to not only receive the microchip, but to do so willingly and cheerfully.  Forget the old films of miserable, mind-numbed automatons moving toward the abyss without emotion or with a grim determination that this is inevitable (remember the Wendy’s commercial?)

No longer does the NWO want an impression to be circulating that people who accept what is “good for them” are merely idiots without a brain (even though that’s the way they’re actually viewed by the NWO).  They want them portrayed as young, hip, and groovy members of the new movement of those who want to be “chipped” and in fact are celebrated for being “chipped!”  “Let’s have a CHIPPING party!  Yeah!  Woo!”

Last summer, the internet was abuzz about a company in Wisconsin that wanted to microchip their employees. Workers at the technology company, Three Market Square, were given the option of having a chip implanted in their hands and 50 out of 80 eagerly lined up for the privilege.

Why? So they could buy food or swipe their way through building security with a wave of their hand. Software engineer Sam Bengtson explained why he was on board.

“It was pretty much 100 percent yes right from the get-go for me. In the next five to 10 years, this is going to be something that isn’t scoffed at so much, or is more normal. So I like to jump on the bandwagon with these kind of things early, just to say that I have it.”

He wasn’t alone. In fact, they had a microchipping party and some people got chipped live on TV so the rest of us reluctant humans could all see how cool it was to get microchipped. Watch what fun they had!

It isn’t just this American company chipping workers. Here’s an example in Sweden.

What could pass for a dystopian vision of the workplace is almost routine at the Swedish start-up hub Epicenter.

The company offers to implant its workers and start-up members with microchips the size of grains of rice that function as swipe cards: to open doors, operate printers or buy smoothies with a wave of the hand.

“The biggest benefit, I think, is convenience,” said Patrick Mesterton, co-founder and chief executive of Epicenter. As a demonstration, he unlocks a door merely by waving near it. “It basically replaces a lot of things you have, other communication devices, whether it be credit cards or keys.”

Not everyone on the technology end of the spectrum agrees those that this is a great idea.  In fact, there are just as many naysayers as there are those who embrace this move and, probably a lot more in fact, because the people who don’t agree are being shut down, shut up, or ignored.

Alessandro Acquisti, a professor of information technology and public policy at Carnegie Mellon University’s Heinz College, warns that this might not be a good idea. (Although it doesn’t take a Ph.D. to realize this.)

“Companies often claim that these chips are secure and encrypted…But “encrypted” is “a pretty vague term,” he said, “which could include anything from a truly secure product to something that is easily hackable.”

Another potential problem, Dr. Acquisti said, is that technology designed for one purpose may later be used for another. A microchip implanted today to allow for easy building access and payments could, in theory, be used later in more invasive ways: to track the length of employees’ bathroom or lunch breaks, for instance, without their consent or even their knowledge.

“Once they are implanted, it’s very hard to predict or stop a future widening of their usage,” Dr. Acquisti said.

Read on the following page about those who see this as inevitable and how there is literally nothing we can do about this!

Next Page »



Share

1,111 Comments

  1. Teriqua Jones

Leave a Reply

Pin It on Pinterest