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Microchip pill announced, rights violation

Microchipping for all of humanity well underway

Proteus Biomedical, an American technology firm based in Redwood City, California, is taking a microchip pill, a "smart pill" called Helius, to the British public, a potential grave human rights abuse planned for everyone who takes the pills. Thousands of Americans are already having their rights to privacy abused by having had microchips implanted in their bodies covertly. They struggle to survive, according to noted private investigator William Taylor.

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"A new pharmaceutical program that many Britons might find literally hard to swallow, has been announced," reports Medical Xpress.

“We have tested the system in hundreds of patients in many different therapeutic areas," said Andrew Thompson, chief executive of Proteus. "It’s been tested in tuberculosis, in mental health, in heart failure, in hypertension and in diabetes.”

"Ultimately, the plan is for every one of the many pills taken each day by some of the most chronically-ill patients, especially those with mental health problems, to be digitally time-stamped as they are digested within the body," Steve Connor of The Independent reported.

(Watch the YouTube by Spychips,org video on this page that demonstrates the human rights abuses regarding microchipping.)

Pharmacy chain Lloydspharmacy has partnered with Proteus Biomedical to take to the British public the tiny microchip to be swallowed in pill form.

Marketing the smart pill as a humanitarian aid has begun. The purpose of the pill, called Hellius, is being marketed as an aid that "helps" remind patients to "take their medications on time and to offer bio-feedback such as body temperature, heart rate and even sleeping patterns." Such is the gist of some 30,600,000 articles about smart pills listed in a Google search.

The tiny microchip is swallowed in pill form according to Medical Xpress.

"The microchip, which becomes active when subjected to water, can be either embedded directly in regular medication pills, or placed in a placebo meant only to deliver the pill to the stomach in conjunction with regular medication. In either case, the microchip, or "ingestible event marker" (IEM) as Proteus calls it, is powered by a thin film non-toxic battery.

"Once activated, the IEM sends a tiny uniquely modulated high frequency electrical signal throughout the body, using the body as a conduit, thus, no radio frequency is used. Instead, a patch is applied to the skin on the outside of the body to listen for bodily interactions with the electrical signal, allowing for measurement of the heart-beat rate, internal body temperature, respiration rate, posture and sleeping patterns.

"All of this information is relayed via Smartphone app to a web site that provides statistics in graph form. Thus, patients can simply check their chart to see if they have taken all of their pills or not. The information could also be sent to the doctor who prescribed the medication to see if it’s having the desired effect. (Medical Xpress)

A number of companies that have looked at putting technologies on pills for "sensing inside the body," according to Jonathan Cooper, a biomedical-engineering researcher at the University of Glasgow, Scotland, and founder of the medical company Mode Diagnostics.

"NASA developed ingestible thermometers in the 1980s to measure astronauts’ core temperatures. These thermometers have lately been adopted by some athletes. Other researchers have created cameras in pills to image the digestive system from the inside." (Nature)

The privacy issue, a potential grave human rights violation, exists as "patients would have to rely on promises made by corporations that may or may not be securing their medical histories as well as patients would expect."

According to noted private investigator William Taylor, thousands of Americans, many of whom are innocent targeted individuals, are already covertly chipped, without their knowledge or consent, including children, most of whom struggle to survive no-touch torture that the chips enable.

Taylor has helped to detect secretly forced microchips in dozens of victims.

, Human Rights Examiner

Deborah Dupre' holds American and Australian science and education graduate degrees plus thirty years human rights, environmental and peace activism; led Aboriginal Pacific Islander and Australian research; holds pivotal role in FUEL; co-founded America's Green Team, FUEL; lectures on Ancient...

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