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Comment from UTT:
 
The discussion of micro chipping professional athletes is one more example of where society is headed as part of a system to control and monitor human beings on a global basis. While this would have been considered absurd a decade or so ago, now the idea is being widely upheld without concern.

 

October 15 - "We Microchip Dogs, So Why Not Athletes" - Olympics Suggest Implants To Prevent Doping

Article: Technology For A Global Monetary System
 

Companies in Scandinavia and the US have already embraced microchipping as a way to make the office experience more seamless by allowing employees to easily unlock doors or pay for food in the cafeteria. Of course, while workers say they've welcomed the technology (one Russian hobbyist has reported self-implanted six microchips), and companies not to abuse the technology, the temptation to do so should make people nervous. But the use of microchips in the workplace likely won’t be limited to corporate environments. Pretty soon, microchipping might become a common tool for monitoring professional and amateur athletes as sports leagues try to eradicate the use of banned performance-enhancing drugs.
 
At least that’s what recent remarks from Mike Miller, chief executive of the World Olympians Association, appeared to suggest. Speaking Tuesday to anti-doping leaders at a Westminster forum on integrity in sport, Miller said the Olympic Games should begin microchipping athletes to try and prevent the type of state-sponsored evasion of anti-doping rules purportedly organized by the Russian government ahead of the winter games in Sochi, the Guardian reported.

 

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