Friday, December 30, 2005

MICROCHIP IMPLANTS

The Bible Says in Revelation 13:16-18 that every one on Earth would recieve a mark or engraving or etching in the skin as Strongs concordence puts its. This definately is a microchip implanted in ones right hand or forehead, so the future EU WORLD DICTATOR can keep track of everyone on Earth. If you recieve this Microchip implant you are doomed to hell forever, but if you refuse it, you will be murdered but live with Christ forever here on Earth. You choose, BUT I WARN YOU DON'T DARE TAKE THE MARK OF THE WORLD EU POLITICIAN.

Revelation 13:16-18
16 And he causeth all, both small and great, rich and poor, free and bond, to receive a mark in their right hand, or in their foreheads:17 And that no man might buy or sell, save he that had the mark, or the name of the beast, or the number of his name.18 Here is wisdom. Let him that hath understanding count the number of the beast: for it is the number of a man; and his number is Six hundred threescore and six.

Maurice Sklar ministries (NOV 24,05)

You shall surely perish when the fullness of My wrath comes upon Babylon (USA). You shall be utterly burned with fire. You have heard and received the fullness of My love and grace, America. Still, you spit in My face and harden your hearts and refuse to turn back to Me.

Europe, you rejected Me and threw Me out. For hundreds of years you provoked Me to wrath. You despised My people Israel and slaughtered them in a rage that reached to heaven after robbing the Jewish people and throwing them out of nation after nation.

You did this all in My Name!! How can you escape the wrath to come?! You cannot. Therefore, you shall receive and drink the fullness of My cup of wrath. Prepare to meet your God, O Europe! Europe, you shall receive 'the king' that you desire to worship instead of Me. He is soon to come forth. When you receive his mark, you will be eternally damned.

Hospital to Test ID Chip in Patients

By Annette Wells, San Bernardino County Sun, Calif.

Nov. 23--A controversial device that can store security information and is the size of a grain of rice will make its way into the right arms of some 50 volunteering Arrowhead Regional Medical Center patients. But, its purpose here won't be to provide bank account or e-mail passwords to the Colton hospital's staff.

The VeriMed microchip system will be used to store valuable information such as type of allergies and current medication so physicians can determine the safest treatment in the event someone is unconscious or unable to speak. On Tuesday, the county Board of Supervisors approved the hospital's request to take part in a pilot program with the microchip's maker, VeriChip Corporation, for four months.

The hospital will receive 50 of the devices and, on a voluntary basis, will implant them into its patients. Dr. Dev GnanaDev, Arrowhead Regional medical director, said the program is part of the hospital's push to get appropriate care to those with chronic ailments such as cardiovascular disease or diabetes.

Arrowhead Regional's emergency room is often occupied by patients with a chronic disorder who can't effectively communicate their medical needs. For example, GnanaDev said a diabetic might enter the hospital in a coma, but ER staff might not associate the two because
they don't have access to medical records that quickly.

"In a situation like that, just a few more minutes might make a difference," he said.
With the Board's approval, Arrowhead Regional becomes the seventh hospital in the country and the first in California to agree to pilot the microchip.

Depending on the time it takes to get up and running, Arrowhead Regional's program could become just the second to go online, said John Procter, a spokesman for VeriChip Corporation.
Currently, Hackensack University Medical Center in New Jersey is the only hospital nationwide where the device is in use.

The microchip was approved by the Federal Food and Drug Administration last year for medical purposes. However, because it can be used to store other, more private information, Supervisor Gary Ovitt said he is opposed to the hospital's proposal to pilot it.

The 4th District supervisor said, philosophically, he's not opposed to implanting medical devices such as pacemakers. However, he didn't see the need for implanting a device in someone with identifying information.

"It's kind of a privacy issue," he said. Bill Postmus, chairman of the board, also cast a dissenting vote. GnanaDev said he understood Ovitt's position and those of privacy rights advocates.
"Our answer to that is that we're not identifying anyone; we're not tracking anyone; we're just giving them a number that links them to their medical records," he said.

VeriChip is a subdermal radio frequency microchip that, once inserted under the skin in a brief outpatient procedure, can not be seen by the human eye. Each chip contains a unique 16-digit verification number that is captured by passing a scanner over the insertion site.

The 16-digit number links to a database via encrypted Internet access. That stored information is then conveyed via the Internet to the requesting healthcare provider. A similar device has been used as a location aid in pets for about 15 years.

For the pilot, Arrowhead Regional will receive 50 devices at no cost, as well as the scanning device. If there is interest in more chips, the hospital would enter into a separate agreement with VeriChip Corporation to purchase them, pending approval from the Board of Supervisors.
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