We have blogged in the past about the desire of the international bankers to create the North American Union (Canada, United States, Mexico) along with a common currency: The Amero.
Now you can watch for yourself as the first steps towards creating this reality are set into place, regardless of the outcry against it.
First Step: Create a system that allows for more fluid travel between the eventual members of the North American Union. The Washington Post reports that the US Government has released new electronic passports, based on RFID, that allow the data to be read from the card up to 20′ away.
The interesting part is that the cards cost $45 with a “more secure” card costing $97 and can only be read from 3″ away.
At this point I would encourage you to watch Zeitgeist, to get an idea of where all the social and economic changes in the US since the early 1900s have been directing us. With out those data points and seeing how they connect to the current post-911 reality we live in where civil liberties apparently are an inconvenience and help support terrorist activity, making the jump from “RFID in travel papers” to “RFID in you” seems like a far fetched idea.
Some of you may have already come to this conclusion, but here is my take:
- RFID in travel documents. 85% choose the cheaper and less secure 20′-readable card. Now you can mostly “walk through” border security check points instead of standing in long lines that didn’t exist until after the post-911 “Terrorism everywhere!” fanaticism and you think it’s super convenient, so you accept it. At this time RFID readers begin getting deployed to government buildings and other equivalent locations.
- Few years later RFID in all government issued documents, like driver’s licenses. But hey, now you can wait less time at the DMV and when you sign in for jury duty it’s really quick along with a slew of other little conveniences that make you appreciate this new technology.
- 5 or 10 years after that, optional personal RFID identifiers offered to citizens for living conveniences like buying gas, groceries or other small items immediately as long as you have your personal RFID identifier on you when you walk into stores or locations with readers that support it. This like this have been attempted before as long as 10 years ago with gas-buying, but a unified governmental system and backing database of personal information will make this effort a success. Vendors will be able to target specific data sets, data centers, protocols and technological requirements instead of each company trying to invent their own/better approach.
- 5 or 10 years after that, optional implanted RFID identifiers are introduced (key word here is “optional”). Identifier that is a few mm in size, inserted under the skin in the arm or leg and provides all the super-conveniences that have been growing up around this technology for the last 10-20 years at this point. Naturally there will be plenty of rhetoric surrounding child-safety and how the implant improves that (likely all valid points). Again, this is used as an opt-in survey by the government to see what the overall acceptance level of such technology is. At this point if most people opt-in to having this done, that will shorten the time from which the implant stops being optional and becomes mandatory for citizens.
I think #5 is the next obvious jump… some catastrophic event occurs, like 911, scares everyone again into submission and more legislation is passed that either all new citizens to the US need to get the implant (and then eventually all citizens) or they jump right to all citizens need the implants to protected again <insert some scary event/occurrence here>.
I’ll be honest with you, I wouldn’t be such a skeptic if after every single tragic event that occurred in this country since 1907 it wasn’t immediately followed up by legislation that hugely benefited the banking interests. Taking each event by itself isn’t enough to understand how these all connect however.
For specific data points, documents and facts to back up these reoccurring themes through out history, please set aside some time and watch Zeitgeist. It’s only when you see each even laid out next to the previous one, with all the social and economic changes that occurred as a result of each event, that you can read them collectively, like a book… end-to-end, and see where it is all eventually going. Without that insight, these land-mark events in our history just seem like random shitty events rather than pieces of a puzzle.























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