The Mark of the Beast is more almost here than ever before.
As SHTF has previously noted, the
likelihood of a forced RFID implant under the guise of a martial law pandemic
emergency might be a little too obvious, as far as future tyranny goes.
Before it comes to that, it seems plenty of people will be voluntarily subjecting themselves
to cattle-like status, by jumping at the chance to ditch the inconvenience of
a wallet and get a “smarter” payment system that can be embedded under their
skin.
Via the Business Insider:
A mind-boggling 25% of Australians say they are at least “slightly
interested” at the prospect of having a chip implanted in their skin that
could be used for payments, new research has found.
The research by credit card company Visa and the University of Technology
Sydney found Australians are open to the prospect of paying for items
using wearable tech including smart watches, rings, glasses and even a
connected car.
[…]
“New technology like tokenisation makes it possible to turn any device
into a secure vehicle for commerce. We’re already seeing smartphone payments
take off in Australia.
Things are about to get creepier. The significance of the “mind-boggling
25% of Australians” is that the number is growing into a sizable portion of
the population. They are ready to accept it.
If that continues, polls might soon show that 60% and 80% of the
population are interested in these devices, and that a 25% or 33% of them are
already using them.
Whereas firms like VeriChip met fierce resistance in introducing implantable
RFID chips in the wake of 9/11, the furious trend to buy smart technology
is making biometrics and data tracking seem passive and benign – even in the
face of Edward Snowden’s revelations about mass surveillance through a
partnership between the government and private industry.
To make matters more conspiratorial, this poll linking the popularity of
wearables, implants and digital payments coincides with numerous calls in the
financial sector to ban cash and force people to use electronic currency in
order to make the enforcement of certain economic policies easier (and to enrich banks with deposit fees, transaction fees and fines,
of course).
SHTF reported:
The Federal Reserve bank and its owners, the largest banks on Wall
Street, want badly to be able to charge you interest for the privilege of
depositing your funds. The problem is getting you to stand for it.
[T]hey can bring interest rates to zero, but reducing them further below
that is fraught with problems, the biggest of which is cash in the economy.
Cash therefore gives people an easy and effective way of avoiding
negative nominal rates.
[ergo…]
Abolish currency.
Tax currency.
But of course… there are definitely some drawbacks to a cashless system.
Switching exclusively to electronic payments may create new security and
operational risks.
Abolishing currency would inevitably be associated with a loss of
privacy and create risks of excessive intrusion by the government.
Nevertheless, it is coming down the pipe – and privacy (and the
protections of the 4th Amendment), as we have learned well, doesn’t mean much
to those controlling the system.
Will forced RFID implants on a cashless control grid inside an electronic
prison planet really be our future?
There are many who will draw a firm red line against it, who will even die
before they take it.
But there are others who will line up for it the same way they have lined
up for any other release of the latest techno gadget.
As with any other new technology, acceptance by the masses depends upon
the early adopters, who typically pay premium prices to get consumer
electronic systems before they become the standard, or before most people on
the block have them. These are the trendies, who help decide the fate of
dualing formats like BetaMax and VHS, HD DVD or BluRay, or iPhone or Android,
and set the tone for consumer attitudes, closely monitored by the system.
For something ominous and apocalyptic like the RFID chip – and the soon-to-be
dominate consumer field of smart tech and wearables – it is important for the
system to gauge what the public will accept, and just how many care about the
implications for privacy, etc. compared with all those willing to embrace the
conveniences at any social cost.
Will you stand for it?
“And he causes all, the small and the great, and the rich and the
poor, and the free men and the slaves, to be given a mark on their right hand
or on their forehead, and he provides that no one will be able to buy or to
sell, except the one who has the mark, either the name of the beast or the
number of his name.…” -Revelation 13:16-17