Secret hoard of Human Microchips - USAF contractor William Pawelec - TopicsExpress



          

Secret hoard of Human Microchips - USAF contractor William Pawelec - with nanotechnology the human microchips are now 5 micro-millimeter https://youtube/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=QMOezlb2UcQ William Pawelec Interview Extract from original interview: The Disclosure Project 2012. disclosureproject.org cseti.org youtube/watch?v=xU5JZl... From CSETIWEB on youtube: Mr. William Pawelec was a U.S. Air Force computer operations and programming specialist with numerous credentials in security technologies and access control systems. He gave this interview with Dr. Greer prior to the 2001 National Press Club Disclosure event and asked that it not be released until after his death. We recently found out that Mr. William Pawelec passed away on May 22, 2007 and we received permission to release it in December 2010. Interestingly, like many government whistleblowers and others who take a stand against the government, Pawelec died of cancer. Normally we assume cancer to be the result of a natural cause. However, the US government have been working on the development of aggressive cancer-causing viruses from at least 1963. Ironically, Pawelec himself even refers directly to cancer as a bio-weapon in his interview. One such program was designed to develop a cancer-causing bio-weapon intended to be used to assassinate Fidel Castro in 1964. The rationale behind the use of such cancer-causing agents is, of course, that no suspicion of murder would be raised at the time of death. The following is a reminder of Aaron Russos revelations about RFID chips and 9/11 as a false flag attack and pretext for the New World Order. Russo also died of cancer... Pawelec mentioned Siemens buying the rights to these chips. Looks like he was right. Siemens to pilot RFID bracelets for health care Others seek to implant data under the skin By Ephraim Schwartz Siemens Business Services announced this week a pilot project with Jacobi Medical Center in New York to track patients by incorporating RFID chips into the ubiquitous plastic band strapped onto patients wrists during hospital admissions. Encoded on the band is patient name, date of birth, gender, and a medical record number, linked to the hospital network that connects the patient record to labs, billing, and the pharmacy. Doctors and nurses will be equipped with a tablet-style PC with an RFID reader and a Wi-Fi connection to access the network. Today, after admitting a patient, most hospitals generate a plastic identity card which, like a credit card, imprints the patient ID onto a piece of paper inserted into the sleeve of a patients wristband. Jerry Moy, senior client executive at Siemens, said he has seen clerks and nurses with scissors cutting the paper and trying to stuff it into the wrist band. Its medieval, to say the least, said Moy. Made by Applied Digital Solutions (ADS), the VeriChip is a miniaturized RFID chip with applications in health care, security, and tracking. Katherine Albrecht, founder and director of CASPIAN (Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion and Numbering) said her biggest concern is that in the future a tyrannical state would adopt RFID implants as a way to monitor the activity of its citizens.
Posted on: Wed, 17 Sep 2014 21:38:08 +0000

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