egarding 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 [sic. Should be "Utredningar". Editor's
note].
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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,", Dr. Kilde indicates "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, " Dr. Kilde adds.
"Electromagnetic stimulation can therefore change a person's
brainwaves and affect muscular activity, causing painful
muscular cramps experienced as torture."