Good Chip, Bad Chip


Let’s first discuss the good chips.

Johns Hopkins University has developed a bionic eye that recognizes faces and could help blind users to see. A computer chip that is in the back of the eye is linked to a mini video camera built into the eyeglasses of the user.
http://www.axistive....

Now that’s good news. That’s the type of science I like. That’s a good use of a computer chip!

Unfortunately, there also are some bad Chips:

I’m certain you’ve heard of the Mark of the Beast. If you believe the bible, then you know that the book of Revelations talks about how there would come a time when no man would be able to buy or sell unless he (or she) took the Mark of the Beast---and the Beast’s number is 666 (666 has long been linked to computers. I remember reading years ago that it’s interchangeable with 999, which is helpful to programmers?) Well anyway, the Beast has arrived.

http://www.slate.com...

http://www.foxnews.c...

http://www.greaterth...

http://wnd.com/news/...

What I find odd is that there are actually people who are allowing their jobs to implant them with chips. Why would a person allow him/herself to be implanted---knowing that doing so will take away all of privacy? Why would anyone volunteer to become a virtual slave to Big Brother? The "chipping" process leaves much to be desired, for certain.

I would go as far as to say that people should not even allow their animals to be implanted with chips. Yet, on a daily basis, people are taking their animals to the Vet and having a tracking device implanted. It is totally bizarre no matter how one tries to fix it up. It’s simply not normal.

In an age of Big Brother, I say less government and more individual privacy. No chips for me, thanks. I choose not to be tracked and I certainly don't need to have ID implanted into my body.