1.5 Million Fans Willingly RFID-Chipped at Lollapalooza Raises Debate [video included]

by Deborah Dupre
Before It’s News
August 5, 2013
Hundreds of thousands of young and old alternative music fans lined up to willingly be tracked with RFID micro-chips at Lollapalooza in Chicago’s Chi-town on Friday.
The chipped “non-removable wristbands” were provided by organizers so that attendees could gain entrance to Lollapalooza music festival in Chicago’s Grant Park, that began Friday August 2nd, according to LibertyFight.com’s Martin Hill, whose article appeared on the Daily Paul website.
[Watch the YouTube video below, courtesy of We The People Will Not Be Chipped.]
The chipping of people’s wearables is old hat, but the fact that many Americans voluntarily do so raises debate about being tracked and newer tactics used to chip people.
For years, innocent targeted individuals (TIs) have seemingly outlandishly complained of being involuntarily covertly micro-chipped, not just by small chips left in personal belongings, but also via “non-removable” injection.
“Hitachi holds the record for the smallest RFID chip, at 0.05mm × 0.05mm,” according to Wkipedia.
Some of those TIs have provided medical evidence of injected RFID chips to courts, such as James Walbert in Kansas.
[See: Secretly forced brain implants, a four-part series]
Some were selected to appear before Obama’s Bioethics Commission where they recounted their miseries.
[Click here to watch a video of TI Lisa Becker providing her testimony to the Bioethics Commission]
“In what has become a controversial story as time goes on, due to the increasing research into RFID technology, it still remains a little unclear as to exactly why Mythbusters was not able to do a show discussing RFID technology,” says Joe Martino for IntelHub.
At North Dakota State University, “researchers developed a new way of embedding traceable chips within ‘smart’ paper — raising the possibility of banks and governments guarding against counterfeiting and even tracking the usage of paper money,” IEEE Spectrum reporeted in May.
On the Lollopalooza festival website, organizers “put a positive spin on the RFID tags, explaining, ‘We’re saving paper and saving you the hassle of redeeming a paper ticket for your wristband!’
A warning to fans was issued: If you remove the wristbands for any portion of the three day event, it is automatically invalidated and can not be re-used. No refunds or replacements are given.
The event warns of their “crack security” team and an infamous “trouble” table if any anomalies are noticed in a wristband, which “will be confiscated” if they appear “messed with.”
Could such control and violation of privacy happen outside the arena of a music festival, without knowledge or consent, or is this fear overblown?
Due to overwhelming complaints in Missouri about the capacity to implant RFID without knowledge or consent, the state became the fourth to ban their use on employees.
The Associated Press reported that ”Missouri has passed HB 2041, which makes it a misdemeanor for any employer to ‘require an employee to have personal identification microchip technology implanted into the employee for any reason.’ Radio frequency identification (“RFID”) technology transmits data wirelessly and is usually used to track packages in warehouses or pets.”
Missouri joined California, North Dakota (pdf) and Wisconsin (pdf), both of which also passed legislation forbidding mandatory RFID implantation in humans.
A number of other states are reviewing RFID privacy issues.
Washington state passed a law to prevent “skimming” (unauthorized gathering of data from RFID tags), and California has also debated similar legislation.
Alaska and New Hampshire have also considered legislation and a bill that would create penalties for illegal use of RFID technology, prohibit electronic tracking of individuals without valid court order or consent, and prohibit forced implantation of RFID devices in humans, according to the AP.
Some conceptualize a future where every movement is tracked by the government, says Wikipedia:
“In the book SpyChips: How Major Corporations and Government Plan to Track Your Every Move by Katherine Albrecht and Liz McIntyre, one is encouraged to “imagine a world of no privacy. Where your every purchase is monitored and recorded in a database and your every belonging is numbered. Where someone many states away or perhaps in another country has a record of everything you have ever bought. What’s more, they can be tracked and monitored remotely”.
Others worry that the chip can be used not only for passive information gathering, but is also reversable: Used to send signals to the chipped human.
Beware: PSA prostate cancer screening test is a dangerous hoax, warns discoverer of prostate specific antigen
by Paul Fassa
Natural News
August 27, 2013
(NaturalNews) Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in men. By the age of 50, most men have some cancerous prostate cells, although many will never know it unless they are screened, and most will not die from it.
Luckily, it’s a slow growing cancer. Although prostate cancer cases increase with age, still, only about 3% of men actually die from it.
The American Cancer Society states that in 2013, approximately 238,590 new cases of prostate cancer will be diagnosed and estimates that about 29,720 men will die from it.
Interestingly, they also state, “Prostate cancer can be a serious disease, but most men found to have prostate cancer do not die from it. In fact, more than 2.5 million men in the United States who have had prostate cancer at some point are still alive today.”
PSA screening disaster
The standard PSA (prostate specific antigen) test was approved by the FDA in 1994, and each year millions of men are screened via a blood test for the PSA antigen, which is manufactured exclusively by the prostate gland.
For many men, this is when the serious life threatening trouble begins. Early, aggressive allopathic prostate cancer treatment can and does cause permanent damage, including impotence, heart attacks, incontinence and even death from a disease that is, ironically, statistically unlikely to kill them.
No-Holds-Barred indictment of PSA testing
In 1970, Richard J. Ablin discovered the PSA. In a 2010 N.Y. Times Op-Ed piece titled, “The Great Prostate Mistake,” Mr. Ablin sets the record straight.
“As I’ve been trying to make clear for many years now, PSA testing can’t detect prostate cancer and, more important, it can’t distinguish between the two types of prostate cancer – the one that will kill you and the one that won’t.”
Ablin explains that a PSA test merely measures how much PSA or prostate specific antigen is in your blood. Although elevated levels of PSA can be detected, that alone does not necessarily indicate prostate cancer.
Why? Because common over-the-counter medications like Ibuprofen, benign prostate enlargement (an inevitable part of aging) and infections also elevate PSA levels. Men with high PSA readings can be cancer free, while those with low readings can actually have cancer!
Ablin exclaims, “I never dreamed that my discovery four decades ago would lead to such a profit-driven public health disaster. The medical community must confront reality and stop the inappropriate use of PSA screening. Doing so would save billions of dollars and rescue millions of men from unnecessary, debilitating treatments.” (Emphasis added)
The respected British medical journal, Lancet, reported on 13 February 1993 early screening often leads to unnecessary treatment and “33% of autopsies show prostate cancer but only 1% die from it.”
Dr. Tim O’Shea, a maverick Doctor of Chiropractic, holistic health lecturer, author and founder of the doctorwithin.com website states: “This means that the immune system can hold many problems in check, as long as it is not compromised by powerful [and/or toxic] procedures.”
Gina Kolata of the New York Times cited two studies published in the March 2009 edition of the prestigious New England Journal of Medicine that concluded PSA screening increased mortality!
Ginger root: Prostate cancer prevention and potential miracle cure
If you’re concerned about prostate cancer, start consuming fresh ginger now. Ginger root kills prostate cancer cells. This study confirms it: (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov).
Sources for this article include:
http://www.thedoctorwithin.com
http://science.naturalnews.com
About the author:
Paul Fassa is dedicated to warning others about the current corruption of food and medicine and guiding others toward a direction for better health with no restrictions on health freedom. You can visit his blog at http://healthmaven.blogspot.com
VIDEO — NZ Dentist Blows Whistle on Fluoridation
YouTube — FluorideFree Nz
April 28, 2012
Dentist John Jukes from Waipukurau talks about fluoridation in NZ and why it should be stopped.
[hat tip: Anti Fluoride SK.]
Sage Herb Shown to Significantly Improve Memory and Recall
by Elizabeth Renter
Natural Society
August 27, 2013
A plant offering countless health benefits, sage is an herb as old as time. And while it’s commonly used in cooking, the herb has been heavily utilized in medicine and even spirituality as well. Some of the more recent studies on sage indicate that the herb can improve memory and even possibly prevent Alzheimer’s disease.
The study, published in the June 2003 Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior, looked at the effects of sage on memory recall tests. The researchers used 45 individuals in two groups; one group received a placebo while others received sage essential oil at dosages between 50 and 150 microls. Following the administration, memory tests were given. Even those who were given the smallest amount of sage oil saw notable memory improvements.
VIDEO — Sinkhole Salt Dome’s 940000 Barrels of Butane Moving, Seismic Activity Goes Wild, ‘Are We NUTS
tatoott1009 NO NONSENSE
August 24, 2013
Hail, Flooding Knock Out Colorado Towns
ABC News Blogs – Yahoo!
August 23, 2013

Heavy rain and hail, some golf ball-sized, combined to make it look like Christmas in August in Colorado.
Accumulations of up to two feet of hail in the Denver area Thursday evening left at least one car trapped and closed local streets until the county could get a snowplow out to the scene.
“The water just takes my car rushing up over the hood, and was like, ‘Mom, I gotta go,'” Bryndon Jackson, whose car was totaled after filling with water and hail, told ABC affiliate KMGH.
“I was forced to open the door and all the water came rushing in and I knew I had to get out of there quick,” he said.
Four inches of rain feel in just over an hour, racing through neighborhoods and forcing the National Weather Service to issue a flash flood warning until 1 a.m.
[hat tip: Dutchsinse and Tatoott1009]
VIDEO — London GeoEngineering Demo August 25 2013 – re uploaded
108morris108
August 25, 2013
Part of an international day of protests. A cross of evidence and believers is presented.
Re Uploaded – apologies for the confusion – had to edit something out of the old one.
