mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-12-28 00:39:23 -05:00
358 lines
21 KiB
XML
358 lines
21 KiB
XML
<xml><p>
|
|
I scanned this excerpt in from the book, "The Delicate Balance" ,
|
|
written by John Zajac. 1989-1990 . ISBN Number 0-910311-57-9 .</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>** Begin Excerpt **</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Automation
|
|
----------</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>To understand how 666 relates to this discussion, one needs to explore
|
|
technology. One pertinent contributor to this technology is the
|
|
International Business Machines Corporation. IBM developed a laser method
|
|
of information transfer that has now become universally accepted. Lasers are
|
|
used for many different applications in society today, such as measuring
|
|
distances, detecting structural flaws, determining straightness, and so
|
|
forth. You can see the IBM system at your local supermarket quickly reading
|
|
prices and controlling inventory as it prints out a list of all purchased
|
|
items. Since checkers no longer have to punch keys on a register, check-out
|
|
time and errors are reduced. This system also provides the shopper with an
|
|
itemized receipt. That receipt information is stored in a central computer,
|
|
which keeps inventory and indicates what products the store should order, as
|
|
well as which products should no longer be carried.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>But the use of automation is going considerably further. In fact, in Fresno,
|
|
California, one of eight regional test cities, a new computer system called
|
|
Behavior Scan gives shoppers a bar code card that is read at each purchase.
|
|
The computer then keeps a detailed list of all purchases made by a family,
|
|
including brands and quantity of each product. This same computer is also
|
|
attached to the user's home television set to monitor what is being watched.
|
|
It then selects commercials to be shown to that customer to affect his
|
|
specific buying habits. While most customers claim that they are not
|
|
affected by these commercials, the advertising companies have spent a lot of
|
|
money on research proving otherwise. Is this the start of a more modern
|
|
version of George Orwell's "1984," the complete control depicted in Vance
|
|
Packard's 'The Hidden Persuaders' ? Certainly, computers are powerful and
|
|
indispensable tools. Thanks to computers, paychecks are deposited
|
|
automatically into checking and savings accounts at predefined rates while
|
|
many bills and loans are automatically paid on time every month. The system
|
|
works so well that many institutions give a discount on loans and insurance
|
|
payments if automatic payment is used (they are more confident that they
|
|
will be paid and on time). This can convenientiy save time, postage, and
|
|
worry. The world is positioned to facilitate the ever growing requirements
|
|
for increased automation and convenience.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>The convenience of computers is everywhere. Even a simple inexpensive $3
|
|
watch contains a computer. No longer does it merely tell time; it also can
|
|
add and subtract, keep time in three different zones, give the day and the
|
|
date, and beep at predetermined intervals. Computerized voices in fancy cars
|
|
warn you if you have not fastened your seat belt, that your oil is low, or
|
|
that you are almost out of fuel. The proliferation of computers has created
|
|
a strong dependence on them, for real need and pure convenience. The average
|
|
American's name is accessed 35 times a day by computer, and this is only the
|
|
beginning as we become plugged into the ever-growing system.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Our credit card system is also very convenient. Carrying cash is unnecessary
|
|
and sometimes useless, for example, when renting a car or cashing a check.
|
|
With a credit card, transactions are easier, and banks are now able (and
|
|
more then willing), to deduct payment of your credit card bill automatically
|
|
from your main account.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>In fact, paper money soon may become a thing af the past for three reasons:</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>1. The government is concerned about the advances being made in color
|
|
xerographic technology. Advanced copy machines will soon be able to produce
|
|
counterfeit bills that are indistinguishable from government issues. The
|
|
FBI reported that up to 20 percent of people having access to advanced color
|
|
copiers will produce some counterfeit bills.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>2. The successful introduction of the Smart Card in France and U.S. test
|
|
cities such as Washington, D.C., and Norfolk, Virginia, may render cash
|
|
obsolete. This Smart Card, manufactured by Motorola and Toshiba carries a
|
|
complete history of the user, including a physical description and health
|
|
record. The card allows direct payment to the seller by instantaneously
|
|
deducting the purchase amount and any service charges directly from the
|
|
cardholder's account. Thus, not only is the seller paid immediately but,
|
|
also, the card companies save millions of dollars by eliminating bad
|
|
payments and personal bankruptcy debts. Reducing credit card fraud should
|
|
also save card companies large sums of money. For example, MasterCard could
|
|
save $25 million annually by eliminating fraudulent cards. By the end of
|
|
1990, 20 million fraud-resistant cards will be in use in France. Seventeen
|
|
other countries have agreed to a standard card for all bank machines. Visa,
|
|
Eurocheque, Eurocard and MasterCard have already agreed to a method to make
|
|
their cards, systems, and money access interchangeable. Thus, by eliminating
|
|
checks and voluntary payments, the credit card industry would save 3.2
|
|
billion dollars per year.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>3. The Federal Government is paying close attention to methods for taxing
|
|
the $300 billion underground economy in the United States. Unreported income
|
|
costs the U.S. Treasury $90 billion per year. If cash were eliminated,
|
|
computers could keep track of all income.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Evidence that cards may soon replace cash (and checks) was provided by Arco
|
|
service stations and Lucky supermarkets, which announced in September 1986
|
|
that their pumps and check-out stands now accept automatic teller bank
|
|
cards. With this system, payment is deducted electronically from the user's
|
|
bank account before the user received his purchase. Within one month, 6400
|
|
service stations and supermarkets in 23 states were fitted with the system.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>The gentlemen who came up with the laser reader in supermarkets for IBM
|
|
also invented the means of placing the same kind of bar code beneath living
|
|
tissue in one-billionth of a second. This marking is totally invisible to
|
|
the naked eye, and it can be read only by a certain type of laser. The
|
|
writing and reading is totally harmless and painless. The inventor
|
|
demonstrated this system in 1979 by marking salmon as they swam downstream.
|
|
The fish were totally unaware of the process as the laser burned a code into
|
|
their flesh. The computer then keeps track of the codes. Years later, these
|
|
fish will be detected by the same system as they swim back upstream and are
|
|
forced through fish ladders and chutes. *</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Just as impressive is what Walter Wriston, the chairman of CitiCorp did in
|
|
1983. He passed a rule within the bank that was later withdrawn as a result
|
|
of public outcry. His rule stated that unless you were a depositor of $5000
|
|
or more, you were not entitled to a teller. This meant that the vast
|
|
majority of depositors would have to stand in line outside the bank and
|
|
"talk" to machines. This was an economic move, of course, because banks have
|
|
had some problems of late. But its message was that people would no longer
|
|
talk to people. If banks could establish such a policy, then they could make
|
|
the minimum deposit higher and higher. Finally everything for everyone would
|
|
be done by machines. The concern is that we are reaching a highly automated
|
|
state, which if followed to the next logical step might have profound
|
|
impacts on how we rate life.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Even more startling was an "off the cuff"' statement made by an other
|
|
chairman of an eastern megabank: He announced that a method is in place that
|
|
can imprint in human hands a silicon chip the size of the head of a pin.
|
|
That chip will include not only the person's identification number, Social
|
|
Security number, name and birthplace, but also his criminal background,
|
|
educational level financial worth in the community, and his political
|
|
affiliations.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>* Such a system is currently manufactured by Taymar, Inc., Westminster, CO
|
|
The U.S. Agriculture Department uses the product for cattle. Will it be
|
|
used for people in the future?</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>With such a system, the minute someone walked through the door of the bank,
|
|
he would be sensed and the bank would know who he was, where he came from,
|
|
what he did, and how much he was worth. All this would occur before a person
|
|
could reach the counter.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Now this was one step further than even progressive thinkers envisioned.
|
|
There had been discussions about placing codes on the hand to be used as
|
|
identification marks, like fingerprints, similar to package bar codes in
|
|
supermarkets. With such a system you would not need cash or a validated
|
|
check or even a Smart Card. You could put your hand through a laser and be
|
|
read by the computer. The store would automatically deduct the amount of the
|
|
purchase from your account. The method would be efficient in terms of cost,
|
|
speed, thoroughness, and elimination of bad checks. * But the price of all
|
|
this automation is individual independence from nameless bureaucrats looking
|
|
over your shoulder and approving (allowing) every transaction.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>The amount of control would be unprecedented: however, the government would
|
|
immediately know how to put this control to use. People would no longer be
|
|
able to cheat the government because every time anyone had any money, the
|
|
government would know about it. The government could collect taxes each time
|
|
you spent your money, and, thus, there would be no more filing on April
|
|
15th. It also means that advanced printing and photocopying machines could
|
|
not be used for counterfeiting. Even a law breaker who traded with stolen
|
|
goods would have his purchase and sale traced by computer as he tried to
|
|
move or "spend" funds. The government would monitor every transaction,
|
|
knowing precisely everyone's location, actions, and worth. Instant
|
|
evaluations, approval or disapproval, and tax deductions on every individual
|
|
would be made.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>* Such systems are not in the distant future. Six thousand people in Sweden
|
|
have accepted a mark on their right hands in a test of a totally cashless
|
|
society. Tests also have been conducted in Japan and the Dominican Republic
|
|
in Latin America.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Small wonder that the government likes this idea.
|
|
Governments have always liked control. They would like to control
|
|
everything, even the areas they say they do not want to control, such as
|
|
business, transportation, education, religion, entertainment, and other
|
|
governments. If this sounds the least bit exaggerated just look at our
|
|
government's actions regarding the restrictions of business concerning tax
|
|
credit, labor laws, advertising, antitrust, and corporate subsidies. Even in
|
|
deregulation, transportation requires licensing, registration, inspection,
|
|
subsidies, price controls, flight approval, and government flight
|
|
controllers. Although there may be talk of eliminating the Federal
|
|
Department of Education there is no attempt to reduce control of school
|
|
curriculum, subsidies, and even school lunches. Most universities are
|
|
dependent on federal aid and research grants.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>The government controls religion by granting tax exemption to "desired
|
|
religions" and by making it illegal to pray in school. The government
|
|
exercises control of entertainment by licensing and or censoring television,
|
|
radio, movies, and books. The Federal Government also seeks to control other
|
|
governments by rewarding or threatening them with trade concessions,
|
|
military or econonic aid, sanctions, or war. The highest people in
|
|
government, it would seem, want the government to have total control of
|
|
everything.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>In Orwell's 1984, the government "took over," and everyone was controlled by
|
|
"Big Brother." In reality, government may take over, not through control of
|
|
transportation and censorship, but through the economy, the lending
|
|
institutions, and every financial transaction. Is it too far-fetched to
|
|
imagine that you may have to take a mark on your hand to be able to buy and
|
|
sell and exist in a modern society? The technology exists. The chairman of
|
|
the megabank was asked what it would take to motivate people to put little
|
|
pieces of silicon under their skin. He answered, "a major catastrophe." He
|
|
knew people would not do it voluntarily.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Of course if there was a financial or national emergency (catastrophe), the
|
|
government would exercise unprecedented control, and compliance of citizens
|
|
would be anything but voluntary.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Central Computing
|
|
-----------------</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>As mentioned earlier, the impact of computers on society has been enormous.
|
|
However, their likely future role may be overwhelming. As powerful as
|
|
computers are, their effectiveness is greatly multiplied when they can
|
|
communicate with other computers. For example, missile launch command
|
|
computers talk to U.S. Weather Bureau computers to update the possible
|
|
flight paths of thousands of Minuteman missiles every hour. Thus, to enhance
|
|
a system's capabilities, computers need to talk to computers. To sort out
|
|
the enormous amount of cross-references, a central computer is needed.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>The central computer for America is in Texas, and the international computer
|
|
that ties all the national central computers together is situated in
|
|
Brussels, Belgium. The Brussels computer is housed in a 13 story building,
|
|
the first three floors of which are occupied totally by this system's
|
|
hardware. Because of its size. the Brussels computer is referred to
|
|
affectionately as "the Beast."</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>This immense computer has enough capacity to store every detail about the
|
|
lives of every human being on Earth, the information contained in the
|
|
Library of Congress, and every book ever printed. Having operated for years,
|
|
it stores a growing volume of information as additional countries tie into
|
|
it ever more heavily. This allows international banking, interstate banking,
|
|
and quick credit references. Money can be moved from New York to California
|
|
or London in minutes. If a deposit is made in a bank other than where the
|
|
check was drawn, banks usually impose a 5 to 10-day holding period.
|
|
Actually, this practice is just a means for banks to increase their "float"
|
|
and thus to increase their profits, since the money is transferred within
|
|
one day. What happens to the money for the other days? The bank uses it to
|
|
float shorter loans by which the bank earns interest. Banks typically wait
|
|
longer to issue credit because they want to use the money for as many days
|
|
as possible.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Daily manipulation of funds by banks is common. Many banks are forced to
|
|
move their funds around the globe with the sun to have their reserves where
|
|
they are needed-in the banks that are open. Even the CIA likes the
|
|
capability of the central computer because it can check on personnel
|
|
mobility, foreign trading, and all financial transactions.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Many advanced computers are available with many designations, but one is
|
|
especially interesting. NCR produced a six-core memory computer with 60
|
|
bytes per word in conjunction with six bits to the character. It is named
|
|
and advertised as the 6-60-6 which defines the size and shape of the
|
|
computer. The only way this can be pronounced is six sixty-six (666). In
|
|
computer language, 666 has a unique significance.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>A computer is an information retrieval system, and all of its information is
|
|
stored as numbers. A computer's memory cell has only two states-on and off,
|
|
or mathematically 1 and 0. Thus, every number must be represented in 1's and
|
|
0's. We use a decimal system based on 10; thus, it has 10 symbols: 0, 1, 2,
|
|
3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9. Computers use a binary system using two symbols (0
|
|
and 1). To manage large numbers, computers use a binary coded decimal system
|
|
(BCD) which consists of groups of four digits, to make up all numbers. By
|
|
comparing the groups of number listed below one can find each system's
|
|
equivalent symbol. Thus, 0011, 0111, 0101 in the binary coded decimal system
|
|
is equal to our decimal system number 1375.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Decimal System Binary System</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> 0- 0000
|
|
1- 0001
|
|
2- 0010
|
|
3- 0011
|
|
4- 0100
|
|
5- 0101
|
|
6- 0110
|
|
7- 0111
|
|
8- 1000
|
|
9- 1001</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>(For various reasons, some computers use Base 8 (0-7) and therefore do not
|
|
use the last two symbols shown.)</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>As shown in the BCD system, the number 6 is represented by 0110. This is
|
|
unique because 0110 written backwards or upside-down is still 0110. The
|
|
only other number in the BCD system with the same property is its complement
|
|
1001, or 9. (However, not every computer counts past 7.) This consistency is
|
|
the same in every country in the world, unaffected by language because every
|
|
computer speaks the same language of "1's" and "0's." Thus, 011001100110
|
|
is 666 universally.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>In the Book of Revelation; John said that 666 is the mark of the beast. This
|
|
number also represents the universal consistency of the computers that will
|
|
be required to control the world's finances and thus the world's people.
|
|
When John wrote 1900 years ago, he did not know anything about the binary
|
|
number system, computers, or why computers would require binary coded
|
|
decimals. Yet, he stated emphatically that the mark of the beast is 666.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Is this to say that the endtime beast is merely a building located in
|
|
Belgium? No! The Brussels computer is no more the beast than a general is
|
|
an army. The significance is that computerization for financial dominance is
|
|
the financial beast. The beast is a false god and the worship of that false
|
|
god. Worship means "worth respect." A false god does not have to assume the
|
|
figure of a man: It is the physical representation of that which controls,
|
|
that which is worshipped. So, if people worship the "$" symbol too much for
|
|
what it can acquire, influence, or accomplish, then that can qualify it as
|
|
the false god. The Brussels computer is only the figurehead of a vast,
|
|
soon-to-be indispensable financial network that will control all financial
|
|
transactions and thus all business and people.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>He who controls the system controls all. What is feared by some is that
|
|
whoever is in control wiil demand that all take the code (mark) on their
|
|
hand to be able to buy and sell. Money, credit cards, and checkbooks would
|
|
be totally eliminated. Everything would be done through the government,
|
|
through the computer, giving the government total control. The greatest fear
|
|
is that when receiving the mark, you also may be forced to pledge allegiance
|
|
to your flag and (as in the days of kings) to your ruler, but in this case
|
|
the world leader would be the Antichrist. Of course, to have allegiance with
|
|
the Antichrist is to make a pact with the Devil. If you think that this
|
|
unified system is very far away, then you have missed some intriguing news
|
|
items.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>As you probably are aware, the government has been talking about a national
|
|
identification number for some time. It is supposed to make record keeping
|
|
easier and to provide a means of crosschecking. It will help find deserting
|
|
husbands who owe child support as well as locate tax evaders. Most people
|
|
anticipate that the Social Security number will play a part in this national
|
|
identification code.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>The government's system for identification uses 18 digits, the last nine of
|
|
which are the Social Security number. Virtually every citizen in the country
|
|
over the age of 1 will be forced to have a Social Security number. At
|
|
present, a Social Security number is necessary to have a job or a
|
|
savings/checking account. Starting 1990, every child over one year old must
|
|
have a Sociai Security number to qualify as a dependent on tax returns.
|
|
Preceding this 9-digit Social Security number are 3 digits corresponding to
|
|
one's telephone area code. Obviously, the whole world is tied by phone; even
|
|
barren deserts with no inhabitants have area codes. In front of these
|
|
numbers is a country code; for America it is 110. From this single
|
|
universally consistent number, the government will instantly know a person's
|
|
country, region, and identity. Does that seem logical so far? But that
|
|
accounts for only 15 digits, and the system is based on 18. The missing
|
|
3-digit code specifes that you are in the system: 666.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>All computerized companies are going to 18-digit identification codes.
|
|
According to the report '666 Is Here,' Sears Roebuck is going on this system
|
|
and is committed to changing over all its credit cards. J.C. Penney's is
|
|
reported to be switching over, as well as New York Telephone. The U.S.
|
|
Government used to prefix all the serial numbers of everything it owned with
|
|
the code 451. But that also is changing; the dog tags on every soldier in
|
|
America are to be converted to 666.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Is that enough to concern you? The point is that 666 is a significant and
|
|
important part of what the future is going to hold. The Bible prophesied it.
|
|
Nostradamus explained it, and we are presently at the very edge of seeing it
|
|
become enacted. Rumors abound about people receiving checks with these
|
|
marks, governments admit they need better financial control, and the
|
|
chairman of one of the largest banks says, "It's ready; we just need a major
|
|
catastrophe."</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>** End Excerpt **
|
|
</p></xml> |