September 29, 2009

Injectable Microchips Ready for Use with Vaccines

Injectable Microchips Ready for Use with Swine Flu Vaccine

September 24, 2009

Wise Up Journal - A Reuters report (see following story) tells how on Monday VeriChip shares jumped 186% due to a patent on their swine flu pandemic detecting mini-microchip for the purpose of human implantation, which is a massive upgrade to their current microchip already in thousands of people from children to the elderly. If your grasp of technological devices hangs from floppy disks to WiFi let Reuters inform you a little bit about VeriChip’s device (actually Reuters promotes the corporation’s stocks).

If you look at VeriChip share prices for the following trading days prior to this announcement, you can see a 100% jump, with massive trading volume of shares indicating insider buying. Receiving patents for very unique devices are not surprises. In the couple of days before this announcement, the share price went from 0.56 cents to 1.15 cents, a 107% rise before Monday’s 186% rise. The maximum number of shares traded in one day for the past few months was 60,000. This all kicked off with 200,000 shares traded in one day, then up to 645,000 last Wednesday. Normally this sort of large volume trading can be seen six months before a big announcement, so the correlation is not as brazen. On Monday, when the company made a public hoopla about the patent, which allows insiders and others with the knowledge to legally buy, millions of shares were gobbled up within seconds.
Every year it is standard for a mild flu to kill only people who are already seriously ill. The H1N1 swine flu is very mild — how fortunate for VeriChip and fellow corporations in biotech that the media have hyped it up to fever pitch.

A few months ago, a phase six H1N1 pandemic was put in to place by an unelected organisation, the World Health Organisation. Certainly all this fear will help promote VeriChip’s technology. Soon they might find some government lackeys dumb enough to order some — ideal technology for surveillance-obsessed-pandemic-worrying states of the 21st century with tax payers’ money to waste.
Billions already have been spent on billions of rushed vaccines for a very mild flu, and more money spent on plans for ensuring the jab is given to every child, woman, and man.

All this during a global recession/depression when governments are making cutbacks except, of course, for bankrupting bank bailouts.

If the mass injection plan goes off without a major incident (relegating the banking scandal), and the swine flu scare fades away in 2010, governments are going to have a lot of healthy angry people to deal with for throwing money away at bankrupt/corrupt banks.
Exactly what the hell is this new marker chip by Digital Angle’s VeriChip?

The spread of a pandemic with these chips can only be remotely detected if a large amount (or the entire) population have them. Trading Markets reports the Robert E. Carlson, Ph.D., President and CSO at Receptors, said:
“Through our development partnership with VeriChip, we are focused on building an integrated suite of products that will identify a biological threat, from pandemic influenza and multiple-resistant pathogens.”
From VeriChips May 2009 white paper and older product development paper, we learn that the chips contain a “glucose sensing system” housed in a “biocompatible membrane” with a Radio Frequency Identification device that WiFi can certantly read the same way Radio Frequency Identification chips in mobile phones are tracked. This “biostable sensing component” is “incorporated into a millimeter scale signal transduction and RFID enabled communication device.”

People who are still trying to catch up from the 250k floppy disk of the 90’s to remote wireless information transfer will struggle to comprehend technology now being introduced in to the public arena. Six years ago Hitachi introduced an RFID chip with embedded antenna only half a millimeter in size called the µ-Chip, which are now on the shelves attached to products we buy to track their delivery to the stores, but they don’t remove them once they have arrived. The Hitachi website article from 2003 said it “features an internal antenna, enabling chips to employ the energy of incoming electrical waves to wirelessly transmit... The 0.4mm X 0.4mm chip can thus operate entirely on its own.”

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Vaccination and ID tracking trials did in fact take place last year. The Boston Globe from November 2008 informs us:
“Boston disease trackers are embarking on a novel experiment — one of the first in the country — aimed at eventually creating a citywide registry of everyone who has had a flu vaccination... Keeping track of that cache of vaccine - and which patients are getting it.”

Dr. Alfred DeMaria, top disease doctor at the Massachusetts Department of Public Health said: “If you’re tracking multiple clinics in real time, you can see where the uptake is better and where it’s less, and then focus on outreach... When people arrive for their shots, they will get an ID bracelet […] information — name, age, gender, address — will be entered into the patient tracking database. There will be electronic records, too, of who gave the vaccine and whether it was injected into the right arm or the left, and time-stamped for that day.”

Mass injection of VeriChip devices under all of our skin is the only way the device could detect the spread of pandemics. A lofty and insane undertaking for the near future, perhaps, but you’d be surprised how many people would accept illogical measures during a scare.

Until there is confirmation that these chips will be put in to use, everyone’s main focus should be the illogical use of rushed vaccines for a mild flu. There are dangerous ingredients confirmed in the vaccines, and the confidence of governments in them can be seen with governments granting legal immunity to manufactures and servants implementing the scheme.

Daily Mail & Times report on tiny microchips in medicine that helps doctors track your wellness
Fox News: Nursing home microchips elderly people, Fox News says it’s good (video below)
Fox News said when your parents get old you will have to worry about them getting alzheimer’s disease, wondering off and getting lost. Then Fox News informs us of a charitable Florida company that is microchipping old people for free. It’s not just old people and dogs that are getting chipped, regular people are getting it done to have their medical records stored on it in the rare event they get knocked unconscious and are taken to hospital. Microsoft has also teamed up the with producers of the chip, Verichip Corporation, whose sister company produces the microchip for pets and cattle. — Wise Up Journal



VeriChip Shares Jump After H1N1 Patent License Win

September 21, 2009

Reuters - Shares of VeriChip Corp tripled after the company said it had been granted an exclusive license to two patents, which will help it to develop implantable virus detection systems in humans.

The patents, held by VeriChip partner Receptors LLC, relate to biosensors that can detect the H1N1 and other viruses, and biological threats such as methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, VeriChip said in a statement.

The technology will combine with VeriChip’s implantable radio frequency identification devices to develop virus triage detection systems.

The triage system will provide multiple levels of identification — the first will identify the agent as virus or non-virus, the second level will classify the virus and alert the user to the presence of pandemic threat viruses, and the third level will identify the precise pathogen, VeriChip said in a white paper published May 7, 2009...

Big Pharma Microchip to Force Drugging

September 22, 2009

Financial Times - Patients who fail to pop pills on time could soon benefit from having a chip on their shoulder, under a ground-breaking electronic system being developed by Novartis, the Swiss pharmaceuticals group.

The company is testing technology that inserts a tiny microchip into each pill swallowed and sends a reminder to patients by text message if they fail to follow their doctors’ prescriptions.

The partnership with Proteus Biomedical, which originally developed the technology, is one of several alliances under development by Novartis as it and rival pharmaceuticals companies attempt to maintain high prices for innovative medicines by ensuring that they are taken as the doctor ordered. Pfizer’s Health Solutions division has developed a system to telephone patients to encourage them to take medicine.

Joe Jimenez, head of pharmaceuticals at Novartis, said tests using the system – which broadcasts from the “chip in the pill” to a receiver on the shoulder – on 20 patients using Diovan, a drug to lower blood pressure, had boosted “compliance” with prescriptions from 30 per cent to 80 per cent after six months...

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