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Articles
Forwarded to Chapter Leader
Lois Halsey
Breaking from NewsMax.com
Implanted Chips
in Our Troops?
A Florida company wants to get under the
skin of 1.4 million U.S. servicemen and women. VeriChip Corp, based
in Delray Beach, Fla., and described by the D.C. Examiner as "one of
the most aggressive marketers of radio frequency identification
chips," is hoping to convince the Pentagon to allow them to insert
the chips, known as RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) chips
under the skin of the right arms of U.S. servicemen and servicewomen
to enable them to scan an arm and obtain that person’s identity and
medical history. The chips would replace the legendary metal dog
tags that have been worn by U.S. military personnel since 1906.
The device is usually implanted above the triceps area of an
individual’s right arm, but can also by implanted in the hand if
scanned at the proper frequency. The VeriChip responds with a unique
16-digit number, which can correlate the user to information stored
on a database for identity verification, medical records access and
other uses. The insertion procedure is performed under local
anesthetic, and once inserted it is invisible to the naked eye.
The company, which the Examiner notes has powerful political
connections, is "in discussions” with the Pentagon, VeriChip
spokeswoman Nicole Philbin told the Examiner. "The potential for
this technology doesn’t just stop at the civilian level,” Philbin
said. Company officials have touted the chips as versatile, able to
be used in a variety of situations such as helping track illegal
immigrants or giving doctors immediate access to patient’s medical
records.
On Monday the Department of State started to issue electronic
passports (e-passports) equipped with RFID chips. According to
reports the U.S. government has placed an order with a California
company, Infineon Technologies North America, for smart
chip-embedded passports.
The Associated Press said the new U.S. passports include an
electronic chip that contains all the data contained in the paper
version name, birth date, gender, for example and can be read by
digital scanners at equipped airports. They cost 14 percent more
than their predecessors but the State Department said they will
speed up going through Customs and help enhance border security.
The company's hefty political clout is typified by having former
secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, Tommy
Thompson, on its board of directors.
Thompson assured the Examiner that the chip is safe and that no one
— not even military personnel, who are required by law to follow
orders — will be forced to accept an implant against his or her
will. He has also promised to have a chip implanted in himself but
could not tell the Examiner when.
"I’m extremely busy and I’m waiting until my hospitals and doctors
are able to run some screens," he told the newspaper.
Not everybody agrees with Thompson, the Examiner reported, noting
that the idea of implanting the chips in live bodies has some
veterans’ groups and privacy advocates worried.
"It needs further study,” Joe Davis, a retired Air Force major and a
spokesman for the D.C. office of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, told
the Examiner.
And Liz McIntyre, co-author with Katherine Albrecht of "Spychips:
How Major Corporations and Government Plan to Track your Every Move
with RFID," said that VeriChip is "a huge threat” to public privacy.
"They’re circling like vultures for any opportunity to get into our
flesh,” McIntyre told the Examiner. "They’ll start with people who
can’t say no, like the elderly, sex offenders, immigrants and the
military. Then they’ll come knocking on our doors.”
In an e-mail to the Examiner, Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., wrote: "If
that is what the Defense Department has in mind for our troops in
Iraq, there are many questions that need answers. "What checks and
balances, safeguards and congressional oversight would there be?”
Leahy asked. "What less-invasive alternatives are there? What
information would be entered on the chips, and could it endanger our
soldiers or be intercepted by the enemy?”
The company, the Examiner wrote, is also unsure about the
technology. According to company documents, radio frequencies in
ambulances and helicopters could disrupt the chips’ transmissions.
In a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, VeriChip
also said it was unsure whether the chip would dislodge and move
through a person’s body. It could also cause infections and "adverse
tissue reactions,” the SEC filing states.
But Philbin downplayed the danger of the chips.
"It’s the size of a grain of rice,” she said. "It’s like getting a
shot of penicillin.”
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