Welcome To Call To Decision


SURPRISE! You're EnSLAVED! To RFID and BEYOND!!
 Mon, 22 Aug 2005 06:09:22 -0500


REPOSTS ON: 08-22-AD2005  Archived at: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/LLNews5    Out:06:00am
Join and check http://groups.yahoo.com/group/govtwatch4 for the BEST in the latest headlines and news!   
HTML Copies of this newsletter are in LLNews5 and http://groups.yahoo.com/group/worldcom
To be cut from more mai lings just email me back at this address                                                 hitech1@bluemarble.net
Since Yahoo ID's are sometimes DELETED,  USE ABOVE EMAIL ADDRESS TO CORRESPOND             ^  ^ ^
 
 
(One thing we who oppose this technology NEED is a simple 'DETECTOR' so we can put an icepick through these DAMNABLE things!)
 
 
 
M.M.E.A. - MULTIPLE MICRO ELECTRODE ARRAY IS SO ADVANCED IT CAN FULFILL REV 13:16-18! -
Part 1  Part 2   Part 3   Part 4   Part 5
 
D.A.R.P.A. IS FUNDING AN IMPLANTABLE CHIP FAR MORE ADVANCED THAN"DIGITAL ANGEL"! M.M.E.A. - MULTIPLE MICRO ELECTRODE ARRAY IS SO ADVANCED IT CAN FULFILL REV 13:16-18! Part 1 of 4
 

For many years, Christians have looked at the development of an implantable device as one of THE signs that the Kingdom of Antichrist is drawing close. When Digital Angel publicly began to promote their human implantable chip, Christians the world over gasped in excitement that an implantable chip was now on the world scene, being promoted for all the medical, financial, and personal benefits it could provide the human host. When Digital Angel went public on Wall Street, and when they began to get large orders, we all felt that the prophetic time table was moving ever faster forward.

 

However, behind the scene and very quietly, that superscret DARPA "Anti-terrorist" organization headed by Admiral John Poindexter began to pump significant dollars of research behind a new implantable chip called MMEA, Multiple Micro Electrode Array. This chip is so far ahead of the Digital Angel Veri-Chip product, it took my breath away. Once you fully understand its capability, you will realize its probable full prophetic significance, and will realize that we may have probably been pointed to Digital Angel simply so we would not be aware of MMEA.
 

* MMEA, Multiple Micro Electrode Array: Multiple Micro Electrode Array, this is the actual Chip. This chip will be surgically implanted directly into a human nerve or into specific area of the brain. The Chip at the moment is a little smaller than a Tic Tac breath mint. The chip implanted into the pioneer, a Professor Kevin Warwick, had 100 Electrodes; each electrode looks like a small needle and is capable of detecting electric signals traveling through the nervous system and also sending electrical signals to the nervous system, this was all performed via a RF (Radio Frequency) device connected to the MMEA.

As you can see already, this implantable chip is far ahead of anything Digital Angel has on the market; further, MMEA is light-years ahead of the RFID technology which retailers like Wal-Mart are racing into production. As we unfold the science of this chip, you will see that it offers a repressive global government the capability of controlling entire captive populations with a sophisticated software program! You will clearly see how an entire population of the earth might actually fulfill these prophetic verses:

 

Sent: Thursday, August 18, 2005 1:45 PM
Subject: August 18, 2005 Headlines | UK to test RFID-tagged license plates

I guess this will mean even more radio waves being pumped into the atmosphere!!
 
http://www.vermontguardian.com/dailies/0904/0818.shtml
 

From: Iron_Clay
Sent: Thursday, August 18, 2005 11:54 PM
Subject: ID cards could be used for mass surveillance system
 
 
When they see things like the ID systems lots of people are suckered into making things like "surveillance system" their main concern. Silly really because the people that premote these fears are the same ones who are in power.
Ever get the idea there's a hook in your nose?? well take a look at how big it is.

An Member of Parliament said "The Government is creating a system of "mass public surveillance" capable of tracking every adult in Britain without their consent. People who have never committed a crime can be "electronically monitored" without their knowledge.
Aren't these Members oof parliament working in the same parliament that's introducing the ID Cards???
WOW so that's how big the hook in your nose is ... and you suckered for it.

The real reason and only one these Members of Parliament will never bring up, is that this ID Card System is "The Mark of The Beast".
Well ... have you ever seen any MP raise this issue???
Every other issue on earth but the real one. Why??
The Answer: So that another MP can introduce a protection "for the public" and thuse "close dow" all those who took the sucker bate.
Because if 10,000 people all build a resistance to the "price" or to "surveillance" and then "Parliament" drops the price or blocks the surveillance then all 10,000 people would look stupidly like they're grasping at straws to find something wrong if the changed their resistance to "the colour" or "the size".

The bates and hooks are for the smart fish to stay away from. Let the silly fish take the bates while they drift down stream.

Neal
 

ID cards could be used for mass surveillance system

By Marie Woolf
Chief Political Correspondent

08/18/05 "The Independent" -- -- The Government is creating a system of "mass public surveillance" capable of tracking every adult in Britain without their consent, MPs say. They warn that people who have never committed a crime can be "electronically monitored" without their knowledge.

Biometric facial scans, which will be compulsory with ID cards, are to be put on a national database which can then be matched with images from CCTV. The database of faces will enable police and security services to track individuals regardless of whether they have broken the law.

CCTV surveillance footage from streets, shops and even shopping centres could be cross-referenced with photographs of every adult in the UK once the ID cards Bill becomes law. Biometric facial scans, iris scans and fingerprints of all adults in the UK will be stored on a national database. Civil liberties groups say the plans are a "dangerous" threat to people's privacy.

Mark Oaten, the Liberal Democrat home affairs spokesman, said the plans were being brought in by the Government without informing the public. "A new system capable of mass public surveillance is being created with no public debate. The arrival of CCTV cameras which can recognise you and track you without your knowledge means we are stepping into an unknown future," he said.

The monitoring will be possible using the country's four million CCTV cameras - more than any country in the world. Images could be swiftly cross-referenced with the database.

Charles Clarke, the Home Secretary, has said that the "facial images national database should be operational by December 2006".

The technology is already used by the police to check for offenders, and for football hooligans. Casinos use it to spot VIPs and to check for gamblers they have barred.

The Home Office said the police would only check a person against the National Identity Register to investigate a specific crime. "The police may request information from the National Identity Register without an individual's consent [or knowledge] if it is necessary for the prevention of further offences or establishing who committed the crime they are investigating," said a spokeswoman. "An internal authorisation process would operate ... so that only officers of a specified rank could apply for information."

--
Visit my Website at ... http://iron-clay.cloudnine.net.nz/one_world_government.html
See my "Why Come Out" page here ... http://iron-clay.cloudnine.net.nz/why_come_out.html

But if the watchman sees the sword coming and does not blow the trumpet to warn the people and the sword comes and takes the life of one of them, that man will be taken away because of his sin, but I will hold the watchman accountable for his blood."   - Eze 33:6

To be added to future mailings place "Please add" in the subject line.
To be removed from future mailings place "REMOVE" in the subject line.
and email to iron_clay@clear.net.nz 


 
From: Rosemary LaVigne <rosemary006@centurytel.net
To: Rosemary <vanguard@centurytel.net
Sent: Thursday, August 18, 2005 4:42 PM
Subject: Fw: CASPIAN NEWSLETTER, 08-18-05: The Catch-up Edition

 

Of interest as we see the Day approaching....
----- Original Message -----
From: "CASPIAN Newsletter" <newsletter@nocards.org
To: <newsletter@nocards.org
Sent: Thursday, August 18, 2005 3:25 PM
Subject: CASPIAN NEWSLETTER, 08-18-05: The Catch-up Edition


 CASPIAN NEWSLETTER, 08-18-05: The Catch-up Edition
 Consumer privacy and RFID newsletter
 =====================================================================

 A Note from Katherine Albrecht

 There hasn't been a newsletter in several months, but for a very good
 reason. I've been working with my co-author Liz McIntyre to finish our
 upcoming book Spychips: How Major Corporations and Government Plan to
 Track Your Every Move With RFID (Nelson Current/2005). It's an explosive
 expose that tells everything we know about RFID and offers up some new,
 never-before-published information that will prove in the companies' own
 words their unsavory plans to monitor everything on earth and all of
 humanity. It's due out in the major bookstores October 4, 2005. We'll
 send out an email reminder when it's available so you can buy this
 must-have book.

 Many thanks to Sunni Maravillosa for all her help in producing the
 newsletter over the past year while I've been working on the book. She
 will be refocusing her energy on her very successful website, Sunni's
 Salon, at www.endervidualism.com/salon/ and her blog at
 www.sunnimaravillosa.com. Starting with this "catch-up" edition,
 CASPIAN's Communications Director Liz McIntyre and I will bring you the
 latest in supermarket surveillance news and RFID misdeeds.

 CATCH-UP NEWS:
 1- CASPIAN warns of CVS loyalty card security hole
 2- Levi-Strauss tags jeans in Mexico with RFID
 3- AMEX and retailers tout spychipped payment cards
 4- Ex-Bush cabinet member joins VeriChip board
 5- Spychipped kids' pajamas
 6- Texas A & M University tagging student uniforms
 7- UK union workers say "no way" to RFID
 8- RFID license plates to be tested in the UK
 9- Homeland Security launches RFID checkpoints
 10- United Airlines employees get spychipped passports
 11- Gov't official uses CVS cards to justify more snooping
 12- Cleveland Museum of Art to track visitors with RFID

 OLDER NEWS:
 1-  Federal agency warns of RFID privacy risk
 2-  The mobile parking spy
 3-  Library requires fingerprint to use computers
 4-  RFID marketing hits Seattle
 5-  We got National ID
 6-  US and Britain to share ID card technology
 7-  Tesco wants to sell you a house -- and bury you, too
 8-  Scales that phone home
 9-  New microphones listen in on London
 10- RFID added to Oxford dictionary

 CASPIAN ACTIVISTS UPDATE:
 1-   CASPIAN in the news
 2-   CASPIAN members sound off
 3-   Member Corner

 =====================================================================
 CASPIAN WARNS OF CVS LOYALTY CARD SECURITY HOLE
 =====================================================================

 Consumers using the CVS ExtraCare cards to buy health-related items
 could have been offering up their purchase details to co-workers, family
 members and even their mechanics and valets. Anybody with access to the
 ExtraCare loyalty card number dangling from someone's keychain, the
 first three letters of the person's last name, and their zip code could
 peer into over a year's worth of CVS purchases.

 CASPIAN revealed the security hole by asking volunteer reporters to sign
 up for a CVS ExtraCare card and purchase health-related items. Then we
 asked only for the reporters' card numbers and zip codes. Armed with
 that information we accessed the CVS website and had a list of their
 purchases sent to a temporary email account we had set up for the
 purchase.

 In each case, CVS responded within 24 hours, sending us lists detailing
 purchases of sensitive items like Trojan Twisted Pleasure condoms, a
 home pregnancy test kit, and enema kits. Information in the emails
 included products purchased, date of purchase, price paid, and UPC
 numbers. An example email is posted at our website at
 http://www.nocards.org/press/images/cvs-email.jpg.

 CVS was offering the purchase histories so consumers could prove their
 over-the-counter medical product purchases qualified for a federal tax
 program. Qualifying purchases can be reimbursed through a so-called
 flexible spending account, or FSA. However, CVS made the information
 available on every ExtraCare cardholder, whether they requested the
 service or not. The demonstration not only pointed out CVS's lax
 security, but showed how the pharmacy chain is collecting massive
 amounts of information on people through it's ExtraCare card.

 CVS shut down its email program for several days so it could improve its
 security, but not before reporters had a field day. The story was
 covered in over 100 media outlets, including CNN, the Boston Globe, the
 Washington Post, and the Los Angeles Times.

 =====================================================================
 LEVI-STRAUSS TAGS JEANS IN MEXICO WITH RFID
 =====================================================================

 Levi-Strauss quietly started an item-level RFID pilot at one of its
 stores outside of Mexico City this spring with an evaluation planned for
 this past July. When we caught wind of the scheme, we faxed an open
 letter to senior management requesting details, but so far there has
 been no response. We'll keep you posted on this development so you'll
 know if it's time to say adios to your Dockers!

 Source: Frontline Solutions, June 1, 2005
 http://www.frontlinetoday.com/frontline/article/articleDetail.jsp?id=164014

 =====================================================================
 AMEX AND RETAILERS TOUT SPYCHIPPED PAYMENT CARDS
 =====================================================================

 American Express says don't leave home without it -- your spychipped
 credit card, that is. They've started shipping out their new see-through
 "Blue Card" that features a visible RFID tag inside. Already, CVS and
 7-Eleven have begun installing contactless credit card readers at
 checkouts in hopes customers will pay for even very small purchases by
 waving their wallets or spychipped AMEX key fobs. Credit card companies
 Visa and Mastercard are planning spychipped cards, too, and other
 merchants, including McDonalds, Walgreens, KFC, and Regal Cinemas have
 reportedly signed on to the RFID payment agenda.

 We were dismayed to learn that card-free Meijer supermarkets (one of our
 favorite retailers) announced Monday they will roll out contactless RFID
 credit card readers to all 171 Meijers locations. Their gas pumps will
 be spychip-ready early this fall. If you are a Meijer shopper, please
 register your concern with the company through
 http://www.meijer.com/contact/pcaform.asp or call (616) 453-6711.
 (Remember to block your phone number by dialing *67 first.)

 Source: Chicago Sun-Times, August 8, 2005
 http://www.suntimes.com/output/business/cst-fin-card08.html
 and
 Progressive Grocer, August 16, 2005
 
http://www.progressivegrocer.com/progressivegrocer/headlines/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1001015352

 =====================================================================
 EX-BUSH CABINET MEMBER JOINS VERICHIP BOARD
 =====================================================================

 Not long after former Health & Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson
 joined the board of VeriChip Corporation (makers of the human RFID
 implant), he began touting implants for all sorts of applications. In a
 July television interview, the former Wisconsin governor told CBS
 MarketWatch the implant was "a giant step forward to getting what we
 call an electronic medical record for all Americans." Just what we need
 -- computer chips in our arms and federal oversight of our confidential
 medical information. Thompson went on to describe "so many uses," even
 suggesting the implant could "replace dog tags with the United States
 armed forces."

 After espousing the benefits of human chipping, Thompson claimed RFID
 technology could help prevent infant abductions from hospitals --
 feeding overblown fears about an extremely rare occurrence. Statistics
 show that, on average, out of more than 4 million births per year in the
 United States, 0 to 12 babies are kidnapped from U.S. hospitals
 annually, and 95 percent are returned safely.

 Ironically, just a few days after that interview, a well-publicized baby
 "abduction" at a hospital in North Carolina was reportedly averted by
 VeriChip's RFID infant protection system ankle bracelet. However, the
 publicist failed to mention that the abductors were the baby's own
 parents who were fearful that the hospital might take their infant from
 them.

 Source: Yahoo Finance, July 18, 2005
 http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/050718/185344.html?.v=1
 and
 Information Week, July 19, 2005
 http://www.informationweek.com/story/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=166400496

 Note: the Tommy Thompson video is no longer posted, but we have the
 footage. We also made a transcript that is posted at our website:
 www.spychips.com.

 =====================================================================
 SPYCHIPPED KIDS' PAJAMAS
 =====================================================================

 Sleepwear manufacturer Lauren Scott must be dreaming if she thinks
 spychipping pajamas will keep kids safer. Her company is planning to
 market PJs with RFID tags sewn into the hems on the premise they could
 avert child abductions. The scheme has parents buying a SmartWear RFID
 system (about $500) and installing the RFID readers in key areas of the
 home, like a child's bedroom, so an alarm can sound when the spychip
 laden jammies pass the reader. Target Corp. has reportedly placed an
 order for the pajamas which are due out next spring.

 Of course, there are predictable issues with the system, like false
 alarms triggered by midnight trips to the bathroom. But that's not
 stopping SmartWear. The company is also working to develop other
 applications for long-range child tracking, like active RFID tags sewn
 into children's outerwear.

 Given how easy it would be for an abductor to simply remove the tagged
 clothing items, we're wondering how long before someone suggests tagging
 the kids themselves with implants.

 Source: Information Week, July 18, 2005
 
http://www.informationweek.com/showArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=1DIYRQZX1LUI4QSNDBCCKHSCJUMEKJVN?articleID=165702816

 =====================================================================
 TEXAS A & M UNIVERSITY TAGGING STUDENT UNIFORMS
 ===================================================================

 Freshmen entering Texas A & M's military Corps of Cadets this fall will
 find spies in their uniforms. University workers are sewing RFID tags
 into the cadets' pants, skirts, shirts and jackets to uniquely identify
 each piece and register it to the student. The project and database
 loaded with details of cadet garments will be overseen by the school's
 RFiD2 Lab, an arm of the university's engineering department.

 Source: RFID Journal, July 21, 2005
 http://www.rfidjournal.com/article/articleview/1752/1/1/

 =====================================================================
 UK UNION WORKERS SAY "NO WAY" TO RFID
 =====================================================================

 Don't tag us! says one of the UK's largest trade unions, GMB. The Union
 is demanding the European Commission ban RFID and GPS tracking of
 workers, pointing to how the practice can "seriously invade [workers']
 right to privacy." A GMB study shows companies are not only monitoring
 work activities, but also recording worker breaks and bathroom visits.
 The union charged retailers Sainsbury, Marks & Spencer, and Tesco with
 "dehumanizing their workforce" through these surveillance practices.

 Source: Baseline, August 4, 2005
 http://www.baselinemag.com/print_article2/0,1217,a=157578,00.asp

 =====================================================================
 RFID LICENSE PLATES TO BE TESTED IN THE UK
 =====================================================================

 The UK is planning to embed active (battery-powered) RFID tags in
 vehicle license plates later this year as a way to monitor vehicle
 compliance. The plate manufacturer, Hills Numberplates, claims "A single
 reader can identify dozens of vehicles fitted with an e-Plate moving at
 any speed at a distance of up to 100 metres."

 Highway authorities here in the States are reportedly excited about the
 possibilities. One Texas highway bureaucrat, Jerry Dike, was quoted as
 enthusing, "We see tremendous advantages to the (e-Plate) for everything
 from verifying registration and insurance to Amber (missing child)
 Alerts."

 No doubt they could find other uses for the remotely trackable plates,
 as well. Once the government can identify and track individual cars,
 they can track the people driving them and learn a great deal about
 their habits. For example, using mobile readers, government agents could
 monitor cars entering the parking lot of a political rally, identifying
 those opposed to the party in power.

 Sources: The Washington Times, August 12, 2005
 http://washingtontimes.com/upi/20050812-082018-4885r.htm
 and
 Wired News, August 9, 2005
 http://www.wired.com/news/privacy/0,1848,68429,00.html
 and
 e-Plate website
 http://www.e-plate.com/

 =====================================================================
 HOMELAND SECURITY LAUNCHES RFID CHECKPOINTS
 =====================================================================

 The U.S. Government has begun issuing spychipped documents to visitors
 crossing into the United States at five checkpoints on the Mexican and
 Canadian borders. That's quite a leap for a technology we were promised
 would never be used to track people.

 Source: News.com, August 8, 2005
 
http://news.com.com/Feds+test+RFID+controls+at+U.S.+borders/2100-7348_3-5823958.html?tag=nefd.top

 =====================================================================
 UNITED AIRLINES EMPLOYEES GET SPYCHIPPED PASSPORTS
 =====================================================================

 Selected United Airlines pilots and cabin crew are participating in a
 three-month trial of the new spychipped U.S. passports. The test, which
 started in mid-June, includes 300 employees who make international
 flights between the United States, New Zealand, and Australia. The goal
 is to evaluate the readability and durability of the chips so systems
 can be tweaked before being unleashed on the general public in early
 2006. Time's running out to get a privacy friendly passport!

 Source: Wired News, August 9, 2005
 http://www.wired.com/news/privacy/0,1848,68451,00.html

 =====================================================================
 GOV'T OFFICAL USES CVS CARDS TO JUSTIFY MORE SNOOPING
 =====================================================================

 Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff is trying to justify the
 TSA's plan to collect even more information about airline passengers by
 pointing to CVS ExtraCare cards. Said Chertoff, "The average American
 gives information up to get a CVS (drugstore discount) card that is far
 more in-depth than TSA's going to be looking at."

 We agree that the CVS cards are invasive, Mr. Chertoff, but that doesn't
 give the federal government the green light to get nosy, too.

 Source: USA TODAY, August 10, 2005
 http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2005-08-10-chertoff-interview_x.htm

 =====================================================================
 CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART TO TRACK VISITORS WITH RFID
 =====================================================================

 The Cleveland Museum of Art plans to deploy RFID tracking technology
 this October to closely observe visitors in order to better understand
 how they use the museum. This move won't surprise anyone who has
 reviewed the list of museum benefactors that includes notorious
 spychippers like IBM, Accenture, and the Cintas uniform company.

 Source: CIO Asia Magazine, August 2005
 http://cio-asia.com/ShowPage.aspx?pagetype=2&articleid=2308&pubid=5&issueid=60

 =====================================================================
 FEDERAL AGENCY WARNS OF RFID PRIVACY RISK
 =====================================================================

 A recent federal government report identifies RFID privacy issues that
 include "tracking an individual's movements; profiling an individual's
 habits, tastes, or predilections; and allowing for secondary uses of
 information." But agencies deploying RFID are apparently not too
 concerned. While three of the 24 agencies surveyed acknowledged the
 technology would allow for tracking employee movements, only one agency
 identified "protecting an individual's right to privacy" as a concern.
 This is particularly troubling since more than half of the agencies
 surveyed are either using or planning to use RFID.

 Report: INFORMATION SECURITY: Radio Frequency Identification Technology
 in the Federal Government available at
 http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d05551.pdf

 =====================================================================
 THE MOBILE PARKING SPY
 =====================================================================

 Government vehicles equipped with license-plate snapping camera systems
 are rolling through cities like Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles and
 Toronto, looking for scofflaws. The AutoFind License Plate Recognition
 system reportedly feeds license plate information to a central database
 to monitor not only the presence of vehicles, but how long they remain
 parked and whether the drivers are "persons of interest."

 RFID could make such invasive spy systems even more powerful. Imagine if
 an RFID counterpart to the camera system could roam the streets sniffing
 out RFID-enabled license plates and vehicle registration stickers? It
 would work in the dark, in the rain, or at 65 miles per hour. Worse,
 such a system could be turned to scan the spychipped drivers licenses
 tucked in the purses and wallets of passersby.

 Source: Boston Herald, May 28, 2005
 http://news.bostonherald.com/localRegional/view.bg?articleid=86797&format=text

 =====================================================================
 LIBRARY REQUIRES FINGERPRINT TO USE COMPUTERS
 =====================================================================

 If you want to use a library computer in Naperville, Illinois you'll
 have to provide a fingerprint scan to verify your identity. While
 investigating a lewd conduct report on a library patron, officials
 discovered that other users were swapping library cards and using
 passwords of friends and relatives to get online. (The nerve of those
 brazen criminals!) To prevent such unauthorized anonymous or
 pseudonymous web surfing, the three-library system is installing
 fingerprint scanners on 130 computers, at a cost to taxpayers of over
 $40,000. This will create an audit trail of computer users that can
 later be accessed by law enforcement.

 Here's to the 99% of other libraries across the nation that value free
 access to information and encourage patrons to access the Internet
 anonymously.

 Source: Chicago Tribune, May 20, 2005
 
http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/chicagotribune/abstract/842275931.html?did=842275931&FMT=ABS&FMTS=FT&date=May+20

%2C+2005&author=James+Kimberly%2C+Tribune+staff+reporter&pub=Chicago+Tribune&desc=Library+card%3F+

Check.+Fingerprint%3F+Really%3F+%3B+Citing+security%2C+Naperville+libraries+will+make+patrons+prove+their+identities+b

efore+using+computers.+Privacy+advocates+fear+misuse+of+the+data.

 Source: LibraryJournal.com, July 15, 2005
 http://www.libraryjournal.com/article/CA622707.html

 =====================================================================
 MARKETING VIA RFID COMES TO SEATTLE
 =====================================================================

 Hey Seattle residents! Want to be spammed with personalized marketing
 and advertising as you stroll around downtown? To be properly barraged,
 you must rent or buy a special active RFID tag from Awarea Corp. Then,
 whenever you walk within 100 feet of one of the city's six new RFID
 zones, your Awarea tag will trigger overhead speakers to serve up the
 kind of information most of us desperately want to escape. As a bonus,
 the system also tracks your movements, giving Awarea another way to cash
 in: They plan to mine information about participating consumers and sell
 it to retailers.

 Source: Computerworld, May 23, 2005
 
http://www.computerworld.com/mobiletopics/mobile/technology/story/0,10801,101951,00.html?source=NLT_PM&nid=101951

 =====================================================================
 WE GOT NATIONAL ID
 =====================================================================

 "Tuesday May 10th 2005 is the day that future historians will note as
 The Day America Changed. On this date, the Senate of the United States
 of America [unanimously] passed legislation that will bring about a
 national ID card."

 Unreal ID: The site that generated 20,000+ faxes
 http://www.unrealid.com/

 "Stay angry about Real ID," a message of resistance
 http://www.clairewolfe.com/wolfesblog/00001399.html

 =====================================================================
 US AND BRITAIN TO SHARE ID CARD TECHNOLOGY
 =====================================================================

 Now that both the US and Britain have plans to impose national ID cards
 on their citizens, the countries are working together to ensure that
 their systems are compatible. Michael Chertoff, the newly appointed US
 Secretary for Homeland Security, said, "I certainly hope we have the
 same chip... It would be very bad if we all invested huge amounts of
 money in biometric systems and they didn't work with each other."

 Source: The Independent, May 27, 2005
 http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/politics/article223372.ece

 =====================================================================
 TESCO WANTS TO SELL YOU A HOUSE -- AND BURY YOU, TOO
 =====================================================================

 TESCO, UK's biggest retailer (and target of a CASPIAN-led boycott), will
 be undercutting professional realtors by selling houses on its website
 for a fee of approximately $100 U.S. dollars. (UK realtors typically
 charge a standard commission of one to two percent.) Buyers register
 with a credit card, browse available houses online, tour homes
 virtually, and then contact the seller directly. While this may sound
 good, Tesco's tentacles are beginning to reach into a few too many areas
 of the British economy for our comfort.

 ====

 "Shop 'til you drop" could take on new meaning at TESCO. Shoppers can
 now prepare for their ultimate demise by putting their loyalty card
 points towards funeral expenses at Dignity, TESCO's "death partner."
 Dignity, another mega corporation, owns hundreds of funeral homes and
 crematories across Great Britain. Sounds like the perfect partnership.

 Source: Tesco Real Estate, BBC, May 17, 2005
 http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/magazine/4554717.stm
 and
 The Guardian, June 25, 2005
 http://money.guardian.co.uk/aforeyego/story/0,14036,1514112,00.html

 Boycott site:
 http://www.BoycottTesco.com

 =====================================================================
 SCALES THAT PHONE HOME
 =====================================================================

 Now everyone can know how much you weigh! A new scale will allow medical
 professionals to monitor your weight remotely, Gerrye Stegall, a
 clinical specialist with American Healthways, Inc., told CIO Insight.
 "The devices are wireless and transmit to a phone hub. The patient
 stands on the scale, the scale [data] goes to the hub, then into the
 phone line, and then the nurses will look at the data." Wouldn't HMOs,
 food nannies, and bureaucrats love to have this tool in every home!

 Source: Scales: CIO Insight, May 11, 2005
 http://www.cioinsight.com/print_article2/0,2533,a=151484,00.asp

 =====================================================================
 NEW MICROPHONES LISTEN IN ON LONDON
 =====================================================================

 Now that London citizens have grown accustomed to surveillance cameras
 videotaping their every move, the watchers are upping the ante with
 microphone-based surveillance. Seven microphones have been installed in
 the Soho area of London to monitor sound. While government officials
 have promised that "the microphones only activate if noise levels reach
 above a certain threshold," this development is ripe for escalation.
 Today the government says it wants to hear a crowd, tomorrow we're
 betting they'll want to hear a whisper.

 Check out the photo that goes with the story.
 Keep quiet if you see one of these.

 Source: Vnunet, May 4, 2005
 http://www.vnunet.com/news/1162852

 =====================================================================
 "RFID" ADDED TO OXFORD DICTIONARY
 =====================================================================

 The term "RFID" will be among 2,000 new words added to the New Oxford
 American Dictionary this year. Drawn from U.S. popular culture,
 technology, and news headlines, the new words "reflect the
 preoccupations of American culture, the times we live in, and pluralism
 of our nation," according to the publisher. RFID joins other newly
 recognized words such as al Qaeda, frankenfood, hate crime, supersize,
 Amber alert, bluetooth, barista and reality TV.

 Source: Press Release from Oxford University Press USA, May 16, 2005
 
http://www.prbop.com/archives/000474.shtml
 
http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=109&STORY=/www/story/05-16-2005/0003630257&EDATE=

 via RFIDetail, May 31, 2005
 http://go.rfidetail.com/

 =====================================================================
 CASPIAN IN THE NEWS
 =====================================================================

 CASPIAN founder Katherine Albrecht has been busy talking with the media.
 She was interviewed by BBC radio and CBS Marketwatch to discuss the
 VeriChip, reached millions of Coast-to-Coast AM radio listeners with
 news about the RFID menace, and did a live one-hour program on Wisconsin
 Public Radio just this week.

 She was also quoted in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Arkansas Democrat
 Gazette, Seattle Times, San Francisco Chronicle, New York Times, and
 numerous other newspapers and trade publications. Her work was profiled
 in Women's Wall Street and she did an interview in Hustler magazine.

  Chips track more people, products
  Milwaukee Journal Sentinel - Aug 12, 2005
  http://www.jsonline.com/bym/news/aug05/348097.asp

  Radio ID tags stir privacy concerns
  Arkansas Democrat Gazette, AR - Aug 15, 2005

 http://www.nwanews.com/story.php?paper=adg&section=Business&storyid=125036

  Tiny tags in chips to track gamblers
  Seattle Times, WA - May 18, 2005

 http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2002278760_pokerchips18.html

  Chase introduces no-swipe plastic Cards work with an embedded chip
  San Francisco Chronicle, CA - May 19, 2005

 http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2005/05/20/CREDITCARD.TMP

  You're the Shopper and the Cashier
  New York Times, NY - May 3, 2005

 http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/04/technology/techspecial/04selingo.html

  Holy bar code! Big Brother can watch you but he promises he won't.
  Women's Wall Street - May 20, 2005
  http://www.womenswallstreet.com/columns/Column.aspx?aid=869

 CASPIAN's Communications Director and Spychips co-author Liz McIntyre
 has also been spreading the word, with recent radio appearances on the
 GCN network and WOOD radio 1300 in Grand Rapids, Michigan. In addition,
 she has been quoted in the Chicago Sun-Times and a UPI/Washington Times
 story that was featured on the Drudge Report and at Newsmax. Catch Liz
 live August 24 on the American Freedom Network from 9 to 10 AM CST, and
 August 30 on the Republic Broadcasting Network from 11 PM to midnight
 CST.

  It's getting easier to wave goodbye to your money
  Chicago Sun-Times, IL - Aug 8, 2005
  http://www.suntimes.com/output/business/cst-fin-card08.html

  Wireless world: chips track license plates
  Washington Times, DC - Aug 12, 2005
  http://washingtontimes.com/upi/20050812-082018-4885r.htm

 =====================================================================
 CASPIAN MEMBERS SOUND OFF
 =====================================================================

 I am a retired 30 year elem. teacher... I desire to be informed of all
 new technology surrounding us, especially when we don't even know it's
 going on!!  Thanks so much.
 - Anonymous

 Excellent site! I too have found that the cards provide no benefits, are
 incredibly annoying, and definitely a privacy concern as well.
 - Mark in Kalispell, Montana

 I find what and where the world is headed very scary, it is amazing how
 naive people are as to what is happening and what is happening to
 them....I truly believe that we are very close to major happenings in
 our world.
 - Anonymous

 The day is coming when everthing you do is documented and
 recorded....It's time for us to fight back while we still can!
 - Kurt S. in Urbana, IL

 Where does it stop? If each item is ID'ed by RF tags then the government
 can track where you are all the time, what you spend your money on, how
 much you spend and the list goes on and on and on.
 - Norman in Brisbane, Australia

 Just wanted to let you know that a local chain (Lowes Foods) will next
 month begin allowing customers to pay for groceries via fingerprint! (As
 if the card wasn't bad enough.)
 - Anonymous in Kernersville, KY

 I am very glad I found your site. I had wanted to start something like
 this for years. We have to voice our opinions.
 - Brent in Hattisfield, MS

 Great job! I don't want to become a tagged person. It just reminds me of
 the numbers tattooed on the arms of the concentration camp victims.
 - Thomas B. in Paris, France

 As of now, it looks like the [Real ID/national ID] bill(hr418) has
 passed through the senate and will become law... Now what choice does
 the general public have?  I know what I want and this is not it, but
 what type of network is there out there for people, especially with
 families?
 - Rebecca in Nampa, ID

 Thanks for the information about these stores....I am sick of this card
 BS.  What happened to us as people?  Why do they need to know or care
 about what I'm doing or what clothes I'm in?
 - Anonymous in Denver, CO

 Our government; our leaders; our politicians are failing us, themselves,
 our forefathers, and our future. CASPIAN should be held high as national
 heroes of the same degree as our revolutionary political ancestry. Thank
 you for your efforts on the behalf of the millions of unknowing.
 - Anonymous

 I have now had a job at [the Kroger-owned, Seattle-area grocery chain]
 QFC for about a month, and I am beginning to understand it a lot more.
 QFC has forgotten that they have customers whom they sell food
 to....Their employees and customers simply don't matter to them, so why
 not take advantage.
 - Anonymous

 I walked out of Giant & Safeway over cards, years before I heard about
 CASPIAN.  It's these cards and RFID chips and everything else that make
 people go off the grid, deal in cash and barter, and refuse to register
 to vote....I'll be emailing Giant & Safeway after this to remind them
 that I don't shop there anymore.
 - Ahtnamas in Virginia

 =====================================================================
 MEMBER CORNER
 =====================================================================

 And finally, here's one that was just too funny to keep to ourselves.

 Since card-imposing grocery stores promise to return shoppers' keys if
 they're lost, one enterprising protester decided to test the system and
 see if they'd return a HUGE keychain. Here's his story.


 Dear Katherine Albrecht:

 This is in regards to my idea of mailing Kroger keychains back and forth
 in order to protest.... I put a massive keychain in the mail April 1st,
 and just yesterday I received a call from my local Kroger saying, and I
 quote, "We have your rather large keychain here in the store, if you'd
 like to come pick it up." I dearly wish you could have heard the sound
 of this woman's voice on the phone, but when I went in to get it there
 were no questions asked, just "here's your keys."

 I'm not sure how much that keychain weighed but my best guess says over
 a pound. I have a picture of it you'd like to see it....  Let me know if
 you have heard anything on the legality of doing this, as I would dearly
 love to be able to say I've contributed to the cause.

- R.C., Wichita, KS

 We've posted a picture of R.C.'s keychain at our NoCards website here:
 http://www.nocards.org/images/keychain-on-steroids.jpg

 Of course we're not advocating that anyone else do this, but we bet
 you'll get a laugh out of the photo. ;)

 =====================================================================

 CASPIAN: Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion and Numbering
 Opposing supermarket "loyalty" cards and other retail surveillance
 schemes since 1999

 http://www.nocards.org/
 http://www.spychips.com/

 You're welcome to duplicate and distribute this message to others who
 may find it of interest.

 =====================================================================
 To subscribe or unsubscribe to the CASPIAN mailing list, click the
 following link or copy and paste it into your browser:
 http://www.nocards.org/cgi-bin/mojo/mojo.cgi

 If you have difficulty with the web-based interface, you may also
 subscribe or unsubscribe via email by writing to:
 admin@nocards.org
 =====================================================================