1 (edited by montalk 2004-04-04 08:34:11)

Topic: RFID tags

I saw this on Rense.com today:

http://www.matrics.com/products/tags.shtml

One of their plastic RFID tags looks like this:

http://www.matrics.com/images/lvl2/products/tags/RO_DD_General_Plastic_Tag.gif

What does this look like to you? What's with these guys so blatantly putting symbolisms into their enslavement schemes (like the Denver Airport being in the shape of a swastika)?

On a related note, this technology always starts out in the military and is applied in secret, then it's passed off decades later as a technological breakthrough to the mass market.

For example, a friend of mine worked for the defense industry back in the 60s and 70s where he recalled seeing documents diagraming the rice-sized tracking implants that during the 80s and 90s showed up in some military abductees. Now they've hit the mass market and are known known as digital angel RFID implants.

Acquiring fringe knowledge is like digging for diamonds in a mine field.

Re: RFID tags

Saw that one, too. Impossible to overlook. It's like it's saying "Ha Ha Ha, gotcha again! Aren't we clever?"

Re: RFID tags

montalk wrote:

like the Denver Airport being in the shape of a swastika?

How so?

Re: RFID tags

Like this:

http://66.226.83.248/ap/03267
from http://www.airnav.com/airport/KDEN

Acquiring fringe knowledge is like digging for diamonds in a mine field.

Re: RFID tags

oh boy, how creative these designers are... sad

Re: RFID tags

Man! I've seen it in local bank interiors, but that is whack. It rotates clockwise, I notice. This helps send out a vibration of control based on their schedule and ideas.
My dad taught me about this hidden way of affecting the mind. Dots in a pattern hidden among other dots will affect one, because these symbols go way back into man's collective unconscious. In this case it is hidden in plain sight. I wonder if it is seeable from a plane taking off from the airport, or if it tends to be distorted from those angles, still eluding detection from the conscious mind. Tom, did you take this picture, and/or can you tell us anything more about it?

Re: RFID tags

No, you can't detect this from a plan.  (got to have those pics around here somewhere...)

Re: RFID tags

Cameron, do you mean plane? If you have pics, I'd love to see them if you can possibly put them up!

Re: RFID tags

This picture is from http://www.airnav.com/airport/KDEN a website for pilots. Lyra showed me this link after seeing it on another message board, where it was posted by a commerical (747) pilot who confirmed noticing the swastika as he circled in for landing.

Acquiring fringe knowledge is like digging for diamonds in a mine field.

10 (edited by cameron 2004-04-05 14:00:45)

Re: RFID tags

(still looking for those elusive photos I took...)

http://bbwd.net/txp/images/16.jpg

Re: RFID tags

Coming into the Denver International Airport, these photos were taken.  One from the air, one from on foot, and one from the car leaving the airport.

12 (edited by SednaSphere 2007-05-06 21:09:36)

Re: RFID tags

This just beats all! I LOVE this stuff. Thanks you guys! Wow, Lyra, fantastic find.

Re: RFID tags

good pictures, Cameron.

Dots in a pattern hidden among other dots will affect one, because these symbols go way back into man's collective unconscious. In this case it is hidden in plain sight.

VERY interesting...

...I Love peanut butter cookies...

14 (edited by cameron 2004-05-08 11:48:09)

Re: RFID tags

How does the PayPass technology work?
A MasterCard card enhanced with PayPass contains a chip and a tiny antenna inside the card.

PayPass.com

  Yeah, that makes sense.  The magnetic strip just isn't enough.  Just put a RFID chip in the card and know where the happy consumer is at all times.  That's the ticket...

Re: RFID tags

Here we go...