Cancer Worries Prompt Verichip to Abandon Human Microchips

FrankRep

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Cancer Worries Prompt Verichip to Abandon Human Microchips

The John Birch Society
July 28, 2008

The VeriChip Corporation, manufactures of the VeriChip — the microchip made to be implanted in humans — has taken a considerable downturn after evidence has emerged showing the chip could cause cancer.


verichip.001.jpg



The size of two grains of rice, the tiny VeriChip, a microchip made to be implanted in the human body and transmit information about that person through radio signals, has huge Owellian implications. “The VeriChip Corporation markets the implant as a method of accessing medical records in an emergency, for use as a payment device, and as a way to control access to secure facilities,” consumer privacy advocate Katherine Albrecht describes in the newly released VeriChip FAQ. It sounds innocent enough, but numerous critics of the chip, including Dr. Albright, author of Spychips, How Major Corporations and Government Plan to Track Your Every Move with RFIDs, have brought to attention the fact “the implant could be surreptitiously used for tracking purposes through a network of local readers” by a government or agency that wanted to control a large group of people. Another risk is the possibility of hacking. David H. Holtzman in his Business Week article “Human ID Chips Get Under my skin,” pointed out: “All it would take is a careless employee to accidentally expose everyone’s number (the 16 digits on the chip that associate a person with his or her information) to an ill-intentioned hacker,” who then could use the personal information stored on a database in correlation to the numbers to access financial, medical, and security information about that person.

After the FDA approved these chips for use in humans, the reaction was intense. Groups began protesting the use of chips in humans and numerous campaigns to prohibit foreseeable use of it came under way. Despite the controversy, the use of human “chipping” continued being discussed. Immigrants, the military, Alzheimer’s patients, and babies were the first candidates for being “chipped.”

Then the floodwaters broke. In 2007, Dr. Albrecht, the founder of CASPIAN (Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion and Numbering), brought out studies showing a connection between microchipped animals and cancer to the attention of the Associated Press. The Washington Post, in an article entitled “Chip Implants Linked to Animal Tumors,” reported: “A series of veterinary and toxicology studies, dating to the mid-1990s, stated that chip implants had ‘induced’ malignant tumors in some lab mice and rats,” and that furthermore, “Leading cancer specialists reviewed the research for The Associated Press and, while cautioning that animal test results do not necessarily apply to humans, said the findings troubled them. Some said they would not allow family members to receive implants, and all urged further research before the glass-encased transponders are widely implanted in people.”

On November 19, 2007, CASPIAN released the reports, entitled Microchip-Induced Tumors in Laboratory Rodents and Dogs: A Review of the Literature 1990–2006 showing how lab rats, mice and dogs contracted cancer from being implanted with RFID chips. Most of these studies were conducted for research reasons other than that of testing the VeriChip, but when both the control group (animals not exposed to chemicals being tested) and the experimental group were found to have contracted cancer from the microchips put in them for ID purposes, the conductors of the tests thought it significant enough to report.


Scott Silverman the, CEO of VeriChip, at first denied any knowledge of such tests, stating: “(the VeriChip company) was not aware of any studies that have resulted in malignant tumors in mice or rats, and certainly not cats or dogs.” Later, however, Silverman admitted certain studies were "omitted from the sheaf of studies included in the FDA application (for approval),” as Sobhean Morissy paraphrased in his article “Are Microchip Tags Safe?" It might be asked, what else might Mr. Silverman have concealed from the FDA?

Since the reports have come out, Mr. Silverman has been caught in a tangle of misstatements and VeriChip has gone down hard and fast. Over the past year the company lost more than 11 million dollars and its stock has dropped from over 10.47 dollars a share to less than two. “VeriChip’s media efforts have done little to salvage the company's public image or its financial performance, both of which plummeted after research linking the implantable microchip to cancer was first widely revealed,” Dr. Albrecht reported. “The same company that once predicted revenues in the ‘billions’ earned just $3,000 from its microchip implant operations in the first quarter of 2008”

On July 21, the true victory came. VeriChip sold the failing human microchip division of the company that comprised its main enterprise to Stanley Canada Company for $47.9 million. Though this may seem like a lot, with over $24 million going to pay off debt and another $15 million allotted as dividends for shareholders, the company has made a minimal profit in comparison with its hopes. Mr. Silverman has stepped down as CEO, and the parent corporation, Digital Angel, has taken over what is left of the company. VeriChip has lost the battle to market the human microchip.

Just because the battle is won, does not mean the war is over. Now that the Canadian Stanley Corporation has the “chip,” it may be re-marketed or re-developed and re-sold to the public under a new name. But for the moment, the voice of the people has been heard:

“We don’t want microchips implanted in us for any reason and we won’t stop till the threat is gone!”



SOURCE:
http://www.jbs.org/index.php/jbs-ne...s-prompt-verichip-to-abandon-human-microchips
 
Thanks for this. It's a temporary victory, perhaps, but a great one for now!
 
Thanks for this. It's a temporary victory, perhaps, but a great one for now!

As someone who once worked on Capitol Hill and later as a independent consultant and tech writer and has been tracking this as a side "pet" project of mine since 1999...I can say with some confidence, do not get too excited.

Not to rain on your parade, but this isn't a victory. Stanley Works bought Xmark and Sonitrol. Sonitrol "provides security monitoring services, access control and fire detection systems to commercial customers in North America via two monitoring centers and a national multi-channel distribution network."

I've copied a bit on Stanley below. Start reading up a bit more....step away from the current transaction and look at the overall picture. I'm not a "tin foil hat" wearer (usually, lol), but I've been watching this technology long enough. I now am able to read between the lines of msm and regular press releases to see a very big picture.

This is not being swept under a rug. It has been restructured to be in a better position to be implemented. Personally, I'd be watching this to morph with something like Somark Innovations (http://www.somarkinnovations.com/) application. They were just successful in creating a RFID tattoo that can be read through metal (no place to hide...). I think I read somewhere they had an invisible ink too.

This will unfold in stages. Somark, Xmark....one in the same. They have different "security theaters" so I won't be surprised if eventually the two companies/divisions find themselves either working in tandem or under one roof since the two applications actually compliment each other.

Stanley Works Security Solutions page http://www.stanleyworks.com/bu_securitysolutions.asp says (emphasis added mine):

"An industry powerhouse with a global footprint, Stanley Security Solutions builds on Stanley’s development of the first automatic door with integrated solutions that provide wall-to-wall security, including doors, hardware, software and service. Stanley’s Security Solutions protect buildings, airports and institutions all over the world.

Key Brands
Best® Access, Blick®, cj rush™, Frisco Bay™, HSM Electronic Protection Services, Integrator.com™, ISR™ Solutions, Sargent & Greenleaf™, Safemasters®, Senior Technologies™, Stanley® Access Technologies, Stanley® Hardware


The Stanley Security Solutions Product Group offers a wide array of electronic security products, mechanical security products, integration software, and installation and support services for a diverse set of industrial, institutional, and commercial facility applications.

Electronic security, access and safety products manufactured and tested to the industry’s highest standards for functionality and long life. Applications include schools, banks, retail stores, hospitals, government agencies, manufacturing facilities, colleges and universities, and utilities, to name a few.

Mechanical security products include patented keying, customized masterkey systems and quality door and lock hardware. These combine to supply customers with mechanical access control that is cost-effective and efficient.

Our Integration software technologies and high quality hardware products make for flexible solutions for any application. Solutions are customized to meet the individual customer’s needs and are designed with scalability for long-term application.

Our security solutions products and services solutions permeate commercial and institutional organizations, such as airports, office complexes, prisons, schools, banks, retail stores, hospitals, government agencies, manufacturing facilities, colleges and universities, and utilities."
 
I remember when Applied Digital Solutions first came out with Digital Angel. It was something like late 1999 or early 2000. The product literature for DA read like it came straight out of the damn Antichrist Handbook. As they transitioned their marketing campaign over to Veri-Chip, the rhetoric toned down some 80% from where it was to start, and anything that sounded "apocalyptic" was heavily subdued.

Literally, other than bj72 who probably saw the same stuff I saw, you would not BELIEVE that ADS was saying about Digital Angel back in 1999-2000.

The Y2K concept of DA had onboard GPS and (the Y2k version of) WiFi, claimed the ability to track people whether they knew it, wanted it, or not. Monitor body functions, and could report to the police your whereabouts within a 5 meter radius anytime, and anywhere someone with a master password happened to ask. This function was, of course, "for the children" and to stop kidnapping, or executives who travel to Columbia, or...

I remember at the time the CEO bragged about someone gets lost or kidnapped, and their loved ones go to the police, who punched in a password and voila! Loved one found, and here is their current health status. After some controversy they said, 'well, only the family would have the passwords..." huh.

By the time the thing got re-tooled into Verichip, it had lost the GPS, lost the WiFi/celltower communication, and lost the health monitoring functions. But it was clear to anybody who had tracked it from the start that those things were still on the agenda.

Folks, listen to bj72 - he/she is not feeding you a line. This is a project that they will NOT give up on. This looks to me like just another "retool" like when Digital Angel scared the bejeezus out of people and they retooled into Verichip. Now the Cancer thing has scared people, and the chief interests sold the tech to someone who could further develop it. Imagine that.

I wouldn't be surprised if some group in the near future discovered a cure for certain kinds of cancer behind this development. No, I'm not a tinfoil hatter either, and even though I doubt that big Pharma is really sitting on a cure for cancer in order to profit off of chemo (although that wouldn't surprise me either), I can easily see billions being secretly poured into either "de-cancerfying" this chip, or curing the specific cancer that this chip cuses...or as a last resort just lying to everyone and claiming it's safe when it isn't.
 
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