A pattern of 1.5-millimeter microneedles that contain vaccine and fluorescent quantum dots are applied as a patch. The needles dissolve under the skin, leaving the encapsulated quantum dots. Their pattern can be read to identify the vaccine that was administered. The project was co-led by Rice University bioengineer Kevin McHugh during his time at MIT. (Credit: Second Bay Studios)
by Peter Penn
You might think that a planned worldwide micro-chipping of people is some far fetched concept, but this is a REAL plan. There’s a website for ID2020.org, and their alliance of partners includes Microsoft, Gavi (a vaccine alliance), The Rockefeller Foundation, Accenture and IDEO.org (that claims to “design products, services, and experiences to improve the lives of people in poor and vulnerable communities”).
ID2020.org’s manifesto claims “In 2018, ID2020 Alliance Partners, working in partnership with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), drafted a formal articulation of our perspective on ethical approaches to digital identity. The landmark ID2020 Alliance Manifesto below lays out these shared principles and forms a starting point to guide the future of digital identity globally.”
This means they’ll start out by targeting the most vulnerable and desperate people and then work their way up to the rest of the global population.
In 2016, at the inaugural ID2020 Summit at the United Nations Headquarters in NY, there were discussions about how to provide a digital identity to everyone on the planet. This meeting included 154 private companies and 11 UN organizations/agencies. The companies included Microsoft, Accenture, Gavi, Google, IBM, Ifosys, Cisco Systems, Barclays, Ernst & Young, JP Morgan, Lexis Nexis and Kaiser Permanente.
Did you notice how the phrase “digital identity” is being used to sidestep any mention of tattooing or micro-chipping?
The Gates Foundation has been funding research at MIT and Rice University for human implantable quantum dot tattoos to hold vaccination records.
Since the Nazis forced tattoos on concentration camp prisoners, the research that The Gates Foundation is funding likely won’t sit well with most people.
According to BioHackInfo.Com: “The quantum-dot tattoos involve applying dissolvable sugar-based microneedles that contain a vaccine and fluorescent copper-based ‘quantum dots’ embedded inside biocompatible, micron-scale capsules. After the microneedles dissolve under the skin, they leave the encapsulated quantum dots whose patterns can be read to identify the vaccine that was administered.”
And apparently, this plan isn’t just for vaccination records, but for all of your medical records.
And who knows what personal information will be added or required using this method in the future.
According to MIT, the researchers use “a new dye, which consists of nanocrystals called quantum dots, that can remain under the skin for at least five years, where it emits near-infrared light that can be detected by a specially equipped smartphone.”
How long do you think it will be before someone figures out how to hack or tamper with these quantum-dot tattoos? So much for the security of a digital identity.
If governments are so worried about people around the world who “lack a means to prove identity” (a reason given by ID2020.org for the need for a digital ID), why don’t they just issue a card or a bracelet to these people, instead of injecting capsules with quantum dots into everyone?