Scientist Push to implement edible RFID tracking chips in Food
Friday,
June 03, 2011 by: Ethan A. Huff, staff
writer
(NaturalNews)
It will monitor your calorie intake, show
from where your food was sourced, and even
let you know when the food in your fridge is
about to go bad -- these are some of the
enticing claims made by the developers of a
new system that embeds edible radio
frequency identification (RFID) chips
directly into food. Its creators insist the
technology will revolutionize the way humans
eat for the better, but critical-thinking
onlookers will recognize the ploy as just
another way to track and control human
behavior.
Developed by Hannes Harms from the Royal
College of Art in London, the "NutriSmart"
system is based on the idea that
RFID wafers
injected directly into
food can help
better track
the food supply
chain, further automate the supermarket
shopping experience, and simplify the
eating experience
by programming data into food so that humans
essentially do not have to think about what
they are
doing.
The
technology makes
both eating and dealing with food in general
mindless, as a person simply needs to plop
an RFID-embedded food item onto a special
RFID-laced plate, which then tells the
person all about the item and how much of it
to eat. RFID ovens and microwaves also
eliminate having to think about how long to
cook an RFID food item -- simply put it in
the RFID
microwave, oven,
or toaster, and the machine will know
exactly how long to cook the item.
As interesting and novel as this might
sound, such technology is actually quite
frightening when taken to its logical ends.
NaturalNews
previously warned that mad
scientists have
already developed edible RFID tags for use
in pharmaceutical drugs (http://www.naturalnews.com/028663_h...).
These tags, of course, can and will likely
be used to monitor patients' compliance with
doctors orders, and alert authorities if a
patient refuses to take certain pills as
prescribed.
And if such technology also ends up in food,
it is safe to assume that evil powers will
seek to control the
food supply with
it, as well as monitor the types of food
people eat. In other words, if authorities
one day decide that vitamin and mineral
supplements are off limits, which is what is
currently happening in Europe (http://www.naturalnews.com/032389_h...),
it is plausible that RFID technology can
assess illegal intake of such nutrients, and
immediately send this data to the
appropriate enforcement agencies.
This 1984-esque scenario appears to be more
than just science fiction -- it is unfolding
before our eyes just a little bit more every
single day. And the NutriSmart system is
just another piece of evidence that those in
power wish to
micromanage every single aspect of our
lives, from the drugs we take to the foods
we eat.
Learn more:
http://www.naturalnews.com/032600_RFID_food.html#ixzz1OKhNJaqR

