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Compilation of Fox News Promoting The Mark Of The Beast Implantable Microchip

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Fox and Friends and Bill O’Reilly segments promoting the cashless society mark of the beast implantable microchip.

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Video Transcript:

I did a couple of times. 10 million times before you can get a drop. Right. Because if you are a RFI, you chip it there anywhere. It opens the doors. And sometimes you can't find it. Wouldn't it be great if rather than looking for this, you simply swipe your hand and it opens the door. Just click through yourself, Steve. Do you see? There's almost constant company that see that little microchip that you would put in maybe your dog. If your dog is missing, you can find them. You're putting this in their employees and they have 50 employees who said, yeah, we'll do it. Where did they put it in right here, Janice? Can we show this on camera? This is very painful between your thumb and your four-pigal right there. And they say, so if you buy a stack in the company work room, you can just crack it. But oddly, they also say it keeps your medical records in there. So who has less of a disability? Can you announce any track? You have to have a rule. You can say that I can do that. They say they're not a due man. If you're on the beach, they've got that microchip. But it would open doors, allow you to use a copy machine and even log under your computer and think about that rather than log and on thing. You get a damn right there. Is that something you would do, Steve? Well, let's ask the folks out there. What do you think? Ron would you? Well, he writes, the day I can install a chip in my body to buy snacks or open doors to where I work, it's time to learn. Jay on Twitter says, if someone wants to put a microchip under my skin, they had better bring the swathe team to that. You find that right, gosh. I like the idea of tracking your pets. You know, if you lose your voice, I don't know about her dog. It would be very effective. Because you lost your dog and you could find your dog. Where did they put it in your dog? Right there in the fleshy part of the neck. Oh my god. Well, the dog didn't even do that. It didn't do that. I was talking to that. I would not have had to interview one of these employees. See, I'll tell you. Paul, that would provide you with an incredible amount of information. He talked to Bill O'Reilly about the possibilities of a library in your brain. Sometime in the next century, because computerships are getting smaller and faster, and eventually the time will come when a child is implanted with a little chip back here. And we'll learn to control the chip in the same way that you learn to control your bodily functions and your voice and your movements so that, not only can you, right now, my mind is telling my body to talk, and it's supplying my mouth with the words that I'm giving to you. And the mind could also learn to say to the chip, go to a certain webpage, download some information, and then supply it to the inside of my eyeball. You believe that you can act. You're going to be actually able to tell your mind through a chip to provide you with information that you can then speak. So on this program, this would be great for me. You put a little chip in there. And if I didn't know something, I could say to you that you would have to say it out loud or just think it. Either way, you just think it. Give me an answer. Right now, we're loaded up with bionic stuff already. I'm wearing glasses. I have feelings in my teeth. This is a wristwatch. I'm wearing clothing, which allows me to adjust to the climate as I go outside. So it's obviously only a matter of time until convergence allows us to match the number one tool of the next century, and that would be the computer chip. I mean, so the computer chip. But all of these are externally computer chip be in you and that's what frightens me. Well, it could be in you or it could be wherever you wanted it to be. And it would allow you to make telephone calls without having a cell phone. Allow you to surf the web without having to monitor. Show me how. So if I had a chip embedded in my head, I could make a telephone call by you can start talking. Call mom. Yeah. And mom would be in. And I can talk to say, hello mom. I wouldn't have a phone or anything. No. And so you have to have some body language so people would know what you were doing. Let's say you're standing at the American Airlines terminal. Yeah. And you're calling the advantage desk and saying, I've missed my flight, do you have any seats at 10 o'clock? Okay. If you're standing there saying that, somebody's going to look at you like you're one of these crates. Not if everybody had the chip, they'd all know it was going on. Yeah. But you would do this. Right. You go there, it's a little fun. This means I'm not just talking to myself, I'm talking on the phone. And then if you're so, if you're reading the web on the inside of your eyeballs, Yeah. It would look rude to people, it would look like I'm staring straight through you. But I'm not staring straight through you. I'm looking at the Fox News webpage, right? So how do I want people to know that? I would just go like this. You know, so if you're going to have a whole side like what you're saying. This sounds so unbelievable. If I download an information. But it's true. It could happen, right? Well, you see, my article is half serious and it's half satirical. I don't know which half is half though, because things are converging so quickly and computers are already such an amazing tool. But we've checked it out a little further than your article. And the scientists tell us that it is absolutely true and absolutely possible for a human being to be, have a chip embedded in their system and to have many, many things appear in their mind upon command. So you would say, I need to know the name of the 18th president. Bing. Not only that, I meet you when I call up your credit report while we're talking. We thought Bill O'Reilly already had it. Maybe sitting in our hands literally. That's because some people are getting microchips implanted in their hands. And those chips might be tiny, but their potential is huge. I mean, you can't see it really. It's just a little, like a little brain arrives right inside there. Is he plants in a bump in the light? That bump is a microchip that tattoo artist Aaron had implanted in his hand. Getting stuck with an evil isn't pleasant. I mean, there's no question there, but it's not bad. It's almost, it's easily getting blood. He also put a magnet in the other side of his hand for fun. The chip is known as a radio frequency identification device. Aaron uses it for more practical purposes. I can load a link to any website on there. I can load a message. I can load a phone number. I can load a contact. So it's limitless. It depends on what you do either professionally or socially. What you want to have on there. So, one second. Sorry. Showtime networks prop us several people around the world who are using these implanted microchips in their everyday life. That was quite a cool feeling to see that I could connect with another device. And both, I guess, makes me kind of a device as well. The device is like one you might have put in your family dog. A scan of the chip identifies the owner. People with these implants could swipe their hand over a scanner to get into a building. It could store a security code to unlock a cell phone or keep your credit card information. Implanting the chip is a relatively minor procedure done by making a small incision in the hand. But doctors wore these implants come with health risks. There's always a worry of infection. I'd say that's probably the number of one risk. There are other things that can happen also. Local reactions, the device can move. It can be implanted into a place that's unsafe, for example, or there's some nerves or arteries. So, I think it has to be done in the right context. There are people now keeping credit card information in the chips. And they use their hand just to pay for things that don't have to carry anything when they're leaving the house. Tep to artist and body cruiser, gentle J Blondeau, is considering getting one to help in his business. It's amazing. We're living literally in the future. The FDA has approved the first radio frequency device for human use in the US, despite the potential medical problems. There's also the issue of security experts that your hand could be hacked, electronically hacked. That is just a major thing that you're going to lose your phone mark. The chips are not encrypted so the information could be put out and at your risk. The FDA has approved the first radio frequency device for human use. The FDA has approved the first radio frequency device for human use. The FDA has approved the first radio frequency device for human use. The FDA has approved the first radio frequency device for human use. The FDA has approved the first radio frequency device for human use. The FDA has approved the first radio frequency device for human use.