Here's
the new equation: A medicine is a pill is a sensor that reports when you took
the pill.
Achtung!
Take your medication on time!
They're
starting with Abilify, used to treat schizophrenia and depression. The patient
signs up voluntarily to be monitored. The sensor in his pills will inform up to
four designated people.
It's
wonderful. Don't worry, be happy.
The
Surveillance State has a new eyeball, and it's in the patient's mouth, throat,
and stomach.
Otsuka
manufactures the pill, and Proteus makes the sensor, which is composed of
copper, magnesium, and silicon.
The pill
reports when it's taken.
The
elderly, of course, are a main target in this new scheme. They'll sign up for
the program in droves---because they're already drugged to the gills and they
easily forget everyday details.
"Wonderful!
I want all my pills to have sensors in them, so I can be sure I'm doing what my
doctor wants me to."
Pharmaceutical
slaves on parade.
The
overriding principle here is: what starts out as a voluntary program eventually
becomes mandatory, for "the good of all." The voluntary phase is just
the warm-up, to secure general acceptance. The whole vaccination schedule is a
perfect example of the shift from voluntary to mandatory.
Eventually,
you'll hear something like this: "Bob, are you still taking those pills
without sensors? I didn't think they were even making them anymore. What's wrong
with you? Don't you want protection? Last month I forgot to take my
antidepressant on time and thank God my smart phone alerted me. It could have
been a disaster..."
Or how
about this, someday: "The governor of California has signed a bill
mandating that all workers in the state who are prescribed bipolar medicines
take them with embedded sensors. The governor said, 'There is a real danger to
the community when people with bipolar are unmedicated or miss their dosing
schedule. This new law will protect all our people'."
Pharmaceutical
slaves on parade.
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