It will be here before you know it. Europeans having been using Smart Cards for some time, and Hillary Clinton is pushing here. That information can later be transferred to a Digital Angel Implant (under the skin) to do your banking, but also has the capability of 271 functions in it's microchip. Does this sound like it could be the mark of the beast?
Right now it's a soft sell to locate lost children, but can monitor vital signs, regulate heart rate, cause hormones i.e.: Hcg, insulin, adrenalin, to be excreted which, can act as birth control, regulate diabetes, or if the NWO decides to liquidate you, cause ventricular tachycardia. After the heart speeds up 200-250 beat/min, you go into an arrhythmia called cardiac stand still which lead to cardiac arrest. The UN/Hague has already pass into law the voluntary right of euthanasia.
Wells Fargo Bank, just installed a Matrix. It takes your picture at the ATM. It's been recommended if you have an account with them close it. If you don't do not open an account with them. They'll get the picture.
Then it goes into NISI, and to a world wide data base. It can be sold to the EU or any company wishing to purchase it for their data base. This was the same system used at the Super Bowl.
Newshound
: (This is from The Independent.)
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: EU plans to issue 'identity number' for every citizen
: By Stephen Castle in Brussels and Andrew Grice
: 5 February 2001
: Ambitious plans to help European Union citizens move more
: freely between countries during the course of their working
: lives may include giving every person an individual
: "EU social security number".
: A task force to be set up at next month's summit of European
: leaders in Stockholm is to study the proposal as part of a
: drive to sweep away barriers stopping people from moving
: easily between member states.
: Senior EU officials are pressing for a feasibility study into
: a common social security coding system for Europe. This
: would enable entitlements to benefits and insurance
: contributions to be "portable" for each person,
: regardless of which country they might live in.
: Officials stressed that the move would not be designed to win
: new powers for the EU, and that the levels of state
: benefits and insurance contributions would continue to be
: fixed by national governments. But a more unified system
: would enable those who pay social security contributions
: while working in another European country to claim benefits
: when they returned home.
: If adopted, the controversial plan would bring American-style
: mobility to the European employment market. In America,
: people readily move from state to state to look for jobs,
: but only a tiny minority of EU workers are prepared to
: migrate to another country for work. In the EU, 0.5 per
: cent of the working population moves abroad each year
: compared with 2 to 3 per cent of Americans who move states
: to find work.
: Officials in Brussels acknowledge that Europeans encounter
: more problems in changing countries, including language
: difficulties. However, they point out that while states in
: America have different benefit rules, every American has a
: nine-digit social security number, which records
: contributions throughout the country.
: The British Government, which wants to encourage freer
: movement of workers within the EU, is keeping an open mind
: about the proposal until it sees the details. Ministers
: would oppose any move towards common EU benefit levels but
: do not believe Brussels is trying to achieve this.
: However, an EU-wide coding system would be politically
: sensitive, fuelling Tory claims that Britain was being
: sucked into an EU superstate.
: A spokesman for Anna Diamantopoulou, the social affairs
: commissioner, said the remit of the task force remained
: under discussion but added: "It will look at the A to
: Z of legal, administrative and practical problems for
: people living and working in different countries which
: obstruct mobility, with a view to removing these obstacles
: by 2005."
: Frits Bolkestein, the European commissioner responsible for
: the internal market, will discuss plans to improve labour
: mobility with Gordon Brown, the Chancellor, today.
: In a speech in London, Mr Bolkestein will welcome the British
: Government's support for moves to create an EU single
: market but accuse ministers of failing to match their words
: with actions.
: The European Commission wants the Stockholm summit to look at
: other issues such as the mutual recognition of professional
: qualifications throughout the EU, another barrier to free
: movement of labour.
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