Conspiracy Theorists & The Great Reset

Well I am off to bed, I've told you what happens, but this is the long and short and how do you think this ends?


With me shaking my heed.
 


It seems to work well for dogs and such.

No dog is given a microchip via a vaccination. They are chipped through an implantation process, and human recipients might actually notice that they are getting something the size of a grain of rice in a glass case put in at the same time.

How do doctors or nurses or healthcare workers not see something that size if they are injecting someone with it?
How do the recipients not feel it?
How do no one in the production process know it's there?
How would a chip work, given they have no power supply? A chip that big in a dog can do one thing and one thing only...hold a number which can be scanned at RFID distance i.e. virtually touching. What else would a Top Secret Chip do and how would it be powered to do it?
 
This thread will never end. If a vaccine is rolled out and no one is micro chipped, due to the many reason why it's just bullshit, the narrative for CT will move on. Never ending bullshit. 'Oh it was just a dry run to see how easy the people could be controlled, just wait for the next pandemic'.

I can see it now.
 
Of course, it's a total set up, companies are going to fall like dominoes and many people will be put under state financial control.


:lol: :lol: :lol: Of course it's not save the planet, it's to take your wealth/belongings.
One of the basic fundamentals of economics is that it it not about how much money or debt people have, it is about the amount of money flowing round the economy. If that money stops flowing round, everything breaks down.

Why would those rich people wanting to get richer, want to slop that flow.

A year from now, things will be pretty much back to normal and there are going to be a bunch of people looking and feeling very silly. The moon landings conspiracy is a good one to hang on to, as nobody can go back to the 60s, sit on the moon and see the first lunar module touch down. But this, either our freedoms are gone for ever or this is a temporary disruption. We will soon see.
 
No dog is given a microchip via a vaccination. They are chipped through an implantation process, and human recipients might actually notice that they are getting something the size of a grain of rice in a glass case put in at the same time.
How do doctors or nurses or healthcare workers not see something that size if they are injecting someone with it?
How do the recipients not feel it?
How do no one in the production process know it's there?
I don't recall mentioning injection of a chip into humans. You've simply assumed I've said it.

How would a chip work, given they have no power supply? A chip that big in a dog can do one thing and one thing only...hold a number which can be scanned at RFID distance i.e. virtually touching. What else would a Top Secret Chip do and how would it be powered to do it?
If you can get the details of the dog owners and what not you can easily apply this to humans and put enough info on it that can be scanned. It doesn't need to be injected...just implanted.

You can stick small items into your computer and download any amount of info. Massive amounts of gig.

I'm sure there's a good possibility that tiny implants could store way more than enough info from each person.

Don't you think?
 
I don't recall mentioning injection of a chip into humans. You've simply assumed I've said it.

If you can get the details of the dog owners and what not you can easily apply this to humans and put enough info on it that can be scanned. It doesn't need to be injected...just implanted.

You can stick small items into your computer and download any amount of info. Massive amounts of gig.

I'm sure there's a good possibility that tiny implants could store way more than enough info from each person.

Don't you think?
The sort of chips in dogs work by having a coil of wire. When a magnetic field is waved in it's direction that generates a very small amount of power, to power a tiny chip and transmitter, which is then picked up by a receiver on the wand device. It is very similar tech (usually different wavelengths) to that used in swipe cards used in most workplaces these days.

The physical size makes it difficult to add much storage, but also the low powered chip means it is a very slow chip, with very slow data transfer rates. A dog chip contains a serial number and that is all it can manage to transmit - a few bytes. A typical work card, Mifare Classsic is the common standard here, and that holds 1k of information.

The frequencies used by such devices (13 Mhz) does not lend itself to fast data transfer. The likes of Wifi are 2.4Ghz and 5Ghz, but require a faster more power hungry processor and transmitter, which can not be done via magnetic induction with a small coil. You also need a larger antenna.

We are a long long way off being able to hold many gig of data into a chip implanted into a person and have it accessed by a scanner. Not without someone having to stand very still for a long time anyway. It also would not make any sense, why hold the data on the person? The smart way to do it would be to have a dog similar chip where everyone has an ID number and the data is held centrally (and backed up), the ID just becomes the identifier.

This is what we have now anyway, just not in implant form. Ok it is not one single ID running across all systems and you have a different ID for each. This does help security as data is in silos. We carry cards, online IDs and a number of other ways of identifying ourselves. Dogs can't speak or carry a wallet, which is why a chip is useful for them.

Of course this is just storage of data. Scale that up to the deluded paranoia that it will contain GPS tracking, monitor everything you do and say, and perform instant blood analysis of your health, and you take a massive quantum leap in technology.

So, no I don't think. Not within the next 2 decades anyway.
 
I don't recall mentioning injection of a chip into humans. You've simply assumed I've said it.

Well, that's because it was the entire point you were replying to.

me:
What valid points are there about the vaccine being a plot to put microchips into people?

you:
It seems to work well for dogs and such.

me:
wouldn’t work for humans

you:
I don't recall mentioning injection of a chip into humans. You've simply assumed I've said it.

But never mind.
 
The sort of chips in dogs work by having a coil of wire. When a magnetic field is waved in it's direction that generates a very small amount of power, to power a tiny chip and transmitter, which is then picked up by a receiver on the wand device. It is very similar tech (usually different wavelengths) to that used in swipe cards used in most workplaces these days.

The physical size makes it difficult to add much storage, but also the low powered chip means it is a very slow chip, with very slow data transfer rates. A dog chip contains a serial number and that is all it can manage to transmit - a few bytes. A typical work card, Mifare Classsic is the common standard here, and that holds 1k of information.

The frequencies used by such devices (13 Mhz) does not lend itself to fast data transfer. The likes of Wifi are 2.4Ghz and 5Ghz, but require a faster more power hungry processor and transmitter, which can not be done via magnetic induction with a small coil. You also need a larger antenna.

We are a long long way off being able to hold many gig of data into a chip implanted into a person and have it accessed by a scanner. Not without someone having to stand very still for a long time anyway. It also would not make any sense, why hold the data on the person? The smart way to do it would be to have a dog similar chip where everyone has an ID number and the data is held centrally (and backed up), the ID just becomes the identifier.

This is what we have now anyway, just not in implant form. Ok it is not one single ID running across all systems and you have a different ID for each. This does help security as data is in silos. We carry cards, online IDs and a number of other ways of identifying ourselves. Dogs can't speak or carry a wallet, which is why a chip is useful for them.

Of course this is just storage of data. Scale that up to the deluded paranoia that it will contain GPS tracking, monitor everything you do and say, and perform instant blood analysis of your health, and you take a massive quantum leap in technology.

So, no I don't think. Not within the next 2 decades anyway.

The article is from 2018

 
The article is from 2018

That is similar to the dog chip, a small amount of data and low transfer rate, a serial number and little more.

This link says RFID can store 2k with some high memory specialist tags going up to 8k. These are physically larger, for tagging aircraft parts. A long way from the ‘many gig’.
 
Another claim made was that there were more votes cast in the US election than the population. I somehow doubt that 155 million votes cast is a larger amount than the 250 million Americans eligible to vote. Unless it's Toby Young in charge of the census.
 

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