“Who will rise up for me against the evildoers? or who will stand up for me against the workers of iniquity?” ―GOD (Psalm 94:16) JESUS CHRIST IS THE ONLY WAY TO HEAVEN!!! “I am the way, the truth, and the life; NO MAN cometh unto the Father, BUT BY ME.” —Jesus Christ (John 14:6)


King James Bible Audio Drama with Music and Sound Effects

Sunday, April 27, 2014

700 Club and the Digital Angel

700 Club and the Digital Angel

Why did Pat Robertson's "700 Club" sell the idea of Applied Digital Solutions (ADS) and its sub-dermal identification implant chip, originally called "Digital Angel"?

A recent 700 Club segment concluded that, despite "some Christian's concerns," the human identification chip shouldn't be feared because it will be "voluntary", and the "end times" identification scheme will be "coerced" and "government enforced" -- or so the 700 club's "expert" contended. The "expert" also stated, "it is illogical and unfair" for "some Christians" to attack ADS for "making a prototype mark of the Beast."

Maybe Robertson and his 700 Club staff live somewhere where "voluntary" means "absolutely not required" -- such as the Moon perhaps.

Or perhaps, for his definitions of "voluntary" and "required" Robertson uses the same dictionary as does Bill Clinton.

Consider the "voluntary income tax." Perhaps Robertson would agree, as one IRS official contended, that the "voluntarily income tax" is likened to a stop sign. We voluntarily stop (to avoid the consequences).

Unfortunately, here in the real world voluntary, state-administered schemes invariably have a way of becoming mandatory requirements -- either explicitly or implicitly -- over time.

But more apparently, Robertson is simply speaking from his "privileged class" status. The 700 Club is, after all, a "tax exempt" state-creation. Therefore, it can only use state-approved definitions for words in espousing state-approved doctrine.

The Beast system will always contend that the mark of the beast is not the mark of the beast. And creations of the Beast (i.e., all religious organizations operating under privilege of the Beast) will always preach the same. This is the foundation for the "Great Deception".

People who live under the paradigms of state-approved doctrine can -- in their own mind -- reconcile all of the otherwise obvious contradictions, such as calling things that are requirements of the state, "voluntary".

State doctrine holds that you have a right to become part of the privileged class as long as you play by all of the privileged class rules. Members of the privileged class convince themselves that state-granted privileges are rights (granted by their god), and they voluntarily (even eagerly) comply with all state requirements.

Tax exempt organizations are all state creations. The creator is, by definition, the god of its creations.

The 700 Club is among the privileged class of tax exempt religious organizations. It must, therefore preach only state approved doctrine for as long as it holds that status.

---

"Beware lest any man spoil you through philosophy and vain deceit, after the tradition of men, after the rudiments of the world, and not after Christ."
—Colossians 2:8

"For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine; but after their own lusts shall they heap to themselves teachers, having itching ears; And they shall turn away their ears from the truth, and shall be turned unto fables."
—2nd Timothy 4:3-4

"Beware of false prophets, which come to you in sheep’s clothing, but inwardly they are ravening wolves."
—Matthew 7:15

"And then shall many be offended, and shall betray one another, and shall hate one another. And many false prophets shall rise, and shall deceive many."
—Matthew 24:10-11

"For there shall arise false Christs, and false prophets, and shall shew great signs and wonders; insomuch that, if it were possible, they shall deceive the very elect. Behold, I have told you before."
—Matthew 24:24-25

http://cyanews.com/old-articles/03-20-02700clubandthedigitalangel.htm
 

The Chip The "Veri-Chip" or "Digital Angel"

The Chip The "Veri-Chip" or "Digital Angel" is a microchip implant that can hold personal, medical and other information under your skin. It can be read by an electronic scanner several feet away from your body. It may soon also include Global Positioning System (GPS) Satellite tracking capabilities so that your location can be monitored 24 hours a day. The chip is made by a company from Florida called Applied Digital Solutions (ADS). On December19th2001, the company unveiled the chip to the public and announced that it was seeking FDA government approval to begin marketing the chip for human use. On April 4th, 2002 it received that approval. If we all "get chipped" (as the company likes to call it) we will be much easier to keep track of and control. Of course the company says it's for our own good. If you've ever had any doubts about the government or corporations ­ don't let them put a micro chip in your arm.

Once that's happened, you'll be at their mercy. The Media Blitz. From February 1st through March 15th (6 weeks) there has been a huge amount of favorable corporate media coverage of the Veri-Chip. The company's CEO calls "the amount and quality of media coverage... astounding. "The Chip has been featured on CNN, MSNBC, Fox's The O'Reilly Factor, Nickelodeon Kids' News, The 700 Club Christian News and many many others. In the last 6 weeks there have been 30 news stories so glowing in their coverage of The Veri-Chip that ADS has put links for them up on its webpage. (www.adsx.com)

People all around the world are doing what it takes to say NO (to the implant and more!) This pamphlet is an attempt to save your life, sanity and ability to revolt. Master copies can be downloaded from the Cascadia Media Collective at: www.cascadiamedia.org

Fox TV's The O'Reilly Factor called The Chip "the wave of the future." Andy Rooney said on 60 Minutes, "I wouldn't mind having something planted permanently in my arm that would identify me. "The Company told Tech TV on March 13th that 2,000 kids have already written to request that they have the chip implanted in them.
 

The Mark of The Beast?

Many people think of the Biblically prophesized Mark of The Beast when they hear about the Veri-Chip. Many Christians are concerned that that's exactly what's going on, that the chip is a sign of the end of the world. The conservative Christian daily news show The700 Club, hosted by Pat Robertson, did a story on the Veri-Chip and discussed the Mark of The Beast issue. They decided that it couldn't be what had been biblically prophesized because it's going to be voluntary and it won't involve buying and selling. According to them, "getting chipped" is just fine.
 

Is it Really Voluntary?

The makers of Veri-Chip and the media that loves it assure us that receiving the implant will be up to each of us as individuals. ADS Vice President Keith Bolton told The 700 Club that "We live in a free society. You can either elect to smoke [or not]. You can elect to have the VeriChip. So it's a freedom of choice technology." This emphasis on the chip being voluntary is anew part of ADS's public relations campaign, though. For example, just last December the company's CEO, Richard Sullivan, told The Palm Beach Post that Veri-Chips could be a great alternative to green cards for tracking "foreigners." "Foreigners who pass though customs or immigration could be injected with the chip, allowing officials to monitor their activities better and keep terrorists out." Likewise, in the same article Sullivan says that in five years, he can see the chips being used in children, the elderly and prisoners. That doesn't sound voluntary. The company's vice president, Bolton, told the Washington Post in December that use of the chip would be voluntary, unless the law allows otherwise.
 

What About Buying and Selling?

Religious scholars who, for whatever reason, approve of the Veri-Chip say that it isn't The Mark of The Beast because it won't be used for buying and selling. That kind of talk is pretty new for ADS, though. CEO Richard Sullivan said in December that in five years, we could be using the Veri-Chip instead of ATM or credit cards. Ultimately, the biblical technicalities aren't the only thing that's important. The basic idea is this: if all compliant citizens promise to be compliant not just now, but forever, then anyone at any time in the future who doesn't obey orders will be easy to identify, track and possibly exclude from society.

In Starhawk's book The Fifth Sacred Thing, for example, a futuristic totalitarian government releases genetically engineered diseases into the air supply. In order to survive, everyone must receive regular vaccinations. Anyone who questions orders is simply denied their next vaccination and is unable to survive. Does this seem like a relevant story in connection to the Veri-Chip? I think so.
 

Rules Can't Be Trusted When thinking about all of this, consider the following facts:-

The US Government once planned to kill US civilians as an excuse to invade another country. (ABC News, May 1st2001) The plan, called Operation Northwoods, was presented to the Kennedy administration in 1962, signed by the heads of the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marines, and asked for permission to detonate explosives in US cities, blow up a space shuttle with John Glenn in it, and blame it all on Cuba in order to whip up US public support for an invasion. Some Christians say this old Digital Angel logo looks a whole lot like the number 666, when you turn it upside down. Dick Sullivan, CEO Applied Digital Solutions. Do you want this man to know where you are? Next time you see some one who looks different from you, say hi to them. They probably don't want an implant either!

 

You've Got Mems Under Your Skin? Sensor to Track your every Move

By Doug Brown
Small Times Correspondent

March 19, 2002

A Florida company is developing an implantable, sensor-spangled microchip that can communicate the wearer's location, pulse, body temperature and other data.

This type of sensor could be welcome news for health care professionals charged with caring for wandering Alzheimer's patients, parole officers and even as a safeguard against the wave of kidnappings in South America, developers say.

But privacy groups, worried about the potential for misuse, call it a slippery slope to Big Brother. And some Christian groups call it the "mark of the beast."

Applied Digital Solutions (Nasdaq ADSX) in Palm Beach, Fla., already sells an implantable microchip called Verichip that contains information about its wearer, such as allergies or medical conditions. It also sells Digital Angel, a wearable constellation of sensors that link to the Global Positioning System network and that send off alarms if, for example, its wearer wanders beyond a designated boundary or falls down.

Now, the company is toiling to combine the two products, to take the technology “beyond the watch and pager device to a technology that can be implanted under the skin, similar Digital Angel, a wearable constellation of sensors that link to the Global Positioning System network, sends off alarms if, for example, its wearer wanders beyond a designated boundary or falls down.

to the technology of a pacemaker,” said Keith Bolton, the company’s chief technology officer. Originally, he said, the company steered clear of the implantable sensor-filled device because research showed that the market for wearable devices alone was enormous. But intense interest in South America, stemming from the rapid acceleration of kidnappings in different countries, is causing the company to “rethink” its position, he said.

“It is conceivable that a product like this, with the right demand and in concert with any government regulation or state and federal issues, could be in the marketplace sometime in 2003,” he said. In the United States to date, the only regulatory hurdle for the future product would be passing Food and Drug Administration muster.

Bolton said that today’s Digital Angel products use the smallest GPS receiver on the market, measuring about 1 inch by 1 inch in diameter. The GPS component of the product delivers information about the location of its wearers to the Digital Angel system.

A sensor in the current products can sound alarms when wearers cross geographic boundaries, such as a five-mile radius perimeter. The criminal justice industry has shown interest in the technology for prisoners under house arrest or on parole, Bolton said. It’s also perfect for sufferers of Alzheimer's disease, who often wander from homes and hospitals and get lost, and for parents to attach to children.

Another sensor passes along body-temperature information. In development are sensors that will send vital sign information like pulse, blood oxygen and glucose levels, Bolton said. Taking advantage of MEMS technology has been key to the success of Digital Angel, said Peter Zhou, the company’s chief scientist.

MEMS, he said, “will be even more important in the future. We are still not happy with how small we are. We want to go further.” To date, the company used MEMS technology in the construction of the Digital Angel chip. It’s also the backbone of a sensor that measures acceleration.

“When you move, you accelerate, and this chip measures it,” he said.

Zhou said MEMS will dominate the development of the product as the company works to increasingly shrink its product line while affixing it with more and more sensors. All of the information is forwarded to a Digital Angel network, comprised of proprietary middleware, which holds the data in real time and can interface with all of the wireless devices on the market today, Bolton said.

The system, he said, gives tracking control to the individual, “so you the caregiver can actually log on with a PDA and a common browser (or over a telephone line) and see the information,” he said. As a result, he said, the company does not need to have command centers staffed with people responding to alerts.

A mapping protocol that links longitude and latitude information with mapping information across the globe makes the product especially unique, he said. “It doesn’t matter if the person is in Indiana or Brazil or England, we have the ability to see that information, not only in a freeze-frame capability but in real motion,” he said.

Thousands of people around the world have ordered Digital Angel products, Bolton said. The product was in development for roughly two years and was introduced into the marketplace late last year. Applied Digital stock closed Monday at $0.45 a share, down from a 52- week high of $1.75 last April. The company posted annual revenues of $260.1 million in 2000, down from $336.7 million in 1999.

Applied Digital announced late in 2001 that Digital Angel would be set up as a separate company under an agreement with Medical Advisory Systems calling for Applied Digital to own 80 percent of the company.
 

The 'Creepy' Factor

The combined sensor-chip device is still in development, and it’s getting scrutinized. The idea of the implantable chip larded with sensors and hooked up to GPS “is very creepy,” said Marlene Bourne, a senior analyst with Cahners In-Stat MDR, in Scottsdale, Arizona.

“This really raises a lot of questions,” she said. “First of all, who are you going to implant this stuff into? Do you need their permission? What if they refuse, do you go ahead anyway? Will it be only for physicians? And for what purpose? It could start very benignly,” but morph into something more sinister, she said.

Bourne, who studies the MEMS industry, said she is not aware of any other companies pursuing sensor-rich implantable devices. Even though company officials say both Digital Angel and Verichip are voluntary, benign technologies, privacy advocates are leery of the products.

“Business models change in hard times,” said Chris Hoofnagle, legislative counsel for the Electronic Privacy Information Center, a Washington, D.C. cyberspace civil liberties watchdog organization. “Today it might be optional for people with medical conditions (to wear tracking or information devices), but tomorrow it might be mandatory.”

Hoofnagle said he did not believe the company intends to accomplish anything sinister with its product. The problem, he said, is that it “sets up a system and conditions Americans to the idea that location tracking is OK.”
 

Mark of the Beast

Zhou said MEMS will dominate the development of the product as the company works to increasingly shrink its product line while affixing it with more and more sensors.

All of the information is forwarded to a Digital Angel network, comprised of proprietary middleware, which holds the data in real time and can interface with all of the wireless devices on the market today, Bolton said.

The system, he said, gives tracking control to the individual, "so you the caregiver can actually log on with a PDA and a common browser (or over a telephone line) and see the information," he said. As a result, he said, the company does not need to have command centers staffed with people responding to alerts.

A mapping protocol that links longitude and latitude information with mapping information across the globe makes the product especially unique, he said.

"It doesn't matter if the person is in Indiana or Brazil or England, we have the ability to see that information, not only in a freeze-frame capability but in real motion," he said.

Thousands of people around the world have ordered Digital Angel products, Bolton said. The product was in development for roughly two years and was introduced into the marketplace late last year.

Applied Digital stock closed Monday at $0.45 a share, down from a 52- week high of $1.75 last April. The company posted annual revenues of $260.1 million in 2000, down from $336.7 million in 1999.

Applied Digital announced late in 2001 that Digital Angel would be set up as a separate company under an agreement with Medical Advisory Systems calling for Applied Digital to own 80 percent of the company.

A "700 Club" spokesperson said that the episode was popular enough to be rebroadcast earlier this month

http://www.ccg.org/_domain/ccg.org/Technology/MEMS.htm


The 700 Club EXPOSED!

Pat Robertson's False Gospel

WARNING About the 700 Club!

Pat Robertson and 700 Club are Heretic

Greg Palast investigates... Pat Robertson

Pat Robertson Supported by Coors Beer!

Pat Robertson “Pleased” with Immoral, Anti-American,
Communist U.S. President!

Pat Robertson's 700 Club or 7000 who have not bowed
their knees to charismatic ecumenism


How does a person get to Heaven?

Ye Must Be Born Again! | You Need HIS Righteousness!

No comments:

Post a Comment

The simple, clear Gospel of God’s Grace
— The Gospel of Jesus Christ.

Clear presentation of the Gospel message.
You can be saved and secure forever!
 

God loves you! (John 3:16)
Sin separates us from God. (Romans 3:23)
Heaven is a perfect place. (Revelation 21:27)
The penalty for sin is eternal separation from God. (Romans 6:23)
Good works will not save. (Titus 3:5)
Salvation is a free gift. (Ephesians 2:8-9)
Jesus died for you, in your place. (II Corinthians 5:21)
By simply believing on Jesus, you have eternal life. (John 6:47)
You can know for sure that you have eternal life. (I John 5:13)

For more information contact office@northlandchurch.com

Website: http://www.northlandchurch.com/index.cfm



FREE E-BOOKLETS (.PDF) BY DR. THOMAS M. CUCUZZA

HOW TO BE SURE YOU ARE GOING TO HEAVEN
A Clear and Simple Explanation of the Gospel of Jesus Christ


Download

THE PERMANENCE OF SALVATION
Twelve Reasons Why "Once Saved, Always Saved" Is True


Download

 
REPENTANCE
Its Meaning and Application


Download

 
FAITH WITHOUT WORKS IS DEAD
What Does It Mean?
A detailed study on one of the most controversial passages in the Bible


Download



I NEVER KNEW YOU, The Horror Of The Great White Throne Judgment And How You Can Avoid it By Michael Patrick Bowen

I NEVER KNEW YOU 

The Horror
Of
The Great White Throne Judgment
And
How You Can Avoid It

MICHAEL PATRICK BOWEN

 
Hard Copies Are Available! ...
Order Books From AMAZON.COM
I NEVER KNEW YOU, The Horror Of The Great White Throne Judgment And How You Can Avoid it By Michael Patrick Bowen