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RFID Tracking: 140 Feet of Surveillance
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| I'm Gigi Ornette with an InfoWars News Bulletin. | |
| Last week, the Texas House of Representatives passed a new bill, the Animal ID Bill, HB 2311, which puts the government one step closer to requiring RFID on every animal in the state. | |
| Farmers in other states are already calling it the mark of the beast. | |
| The Texas state requirement will be more rigid than federal requirements, and it opens a doorway for adoption of future federal requirements, which could include every animal. | |
| Small farmers are already saddled with heavy regulations and fees written by large agribusiness, and this is just another pointless regulation to drive them out of business, killing competition. | |
| As with most laws, this has nothing to do with safety, as claimed. | |
| Putting a completely new spin on overreaching boundaries. | |
| Not only are they trying to RFID cattle, but they want to RFID our children. | |
| Yes, they're trying to do that through the form of badges that have RFID on them. | |
| They claim that it's for safety. | |
| Attendance is how public schools get funding. | |
| So of course they want to RFID chip the children. | |
| But this is also training students to never expect privacy and be good citizens of the prison planet. | |
| But what's the difference between RFID tags around the neck and ankle monitoring bracelets used by probation officers? | |
| Heather Fazio, Executive Director of Texans for Accountable Government claims that these transponders could also be used by pedophiles to track children. | |
| However, anyone else with an RFID reader that you can buy online for $500 and a little bit of hacker skills to determine the protocol can track these students anywhere they go up to 140 feet. | |
| Now, that combined with the information that is made public through the directory information with the school, these predators can go directly to these children's houses with a radiation of 140 feet. | |
| They can get the identification number and they can track the student whether they're at the mall, at the library, or at home. | |
| Some students in San Antonio have already started revolting against the new RFID requirement. | |
| The government's solution was to expel students that wouldn't assimilate to their ways. | |
| So, the gears of the new world order are turning. | |
| Who's watching your children? | |
| For more information on the war on our farmers, check out Farmageddon at InfoWarsStore.com. | |
| Do that today. | |