New post on Now The End Begins
by NTEB News Desk
The world is now ready to combine their smart device with human microchips implants
"And
he causeth all, both small and great, rich and poor, free and bond, to
receive a mark in their right hand, or in their foreheads: And that no
man might buy or sell, save he that had the mark, or the name of the
beast, or the number of his name." Revelation 13:16,17
It
has only taken the world at large 12 short years to go from the launch
of the first implantable RFID microchip to being mentally ready to
accept being chipped as a means of conducting the daily business of our
active social and professional lives. Get ready for the microchip
revolution which will now be everywhere and in everything. The actual
Mark of the Beast will not appear until the Great Tribulation starts
after the Rapture, but suffice to say, the world is ready to receive
their implants.
A Brisbane man is living the life of the future after having a microchip implanted under his skin so he can control electronic devices
with just a wave of a hand. Ben Slater had a radio-frequency
identification microchip - which has similar measurements to a grain of
rice - injected into his left hand through a syringe two weeks ago at a
Melbourne tattoo parlor.

The
microchip implant may still be new to Australian shores, but it has
become a growing trend in the United States after it was introduced in
2004 when the nation's Food and Drug Administration gave the green light
for its use to carry information about people's medical conditions,
according to The Sydney Morning Herald.
The advertising director's move comes as technology enthusiasts eagerly await the unveiling of the iPhone 6
in two days time. He hopes the new generation of Apple's smart phone
will have the capability to read the microchip implanted in the webbing
between his thumb and forefinger.
The new addition to his body means Mr Slater can swing his front door open, switch on his lights and store personal information with the flick of his hand.'The most obvious thing the chip allows me to do is store my contact information on it, so that I can just touch a phone with NFC and pass my information to their phone. That is a great party trick,' he told Daily Mail Australia.
'But
it can also trigger an action on my phone to turn the house lights off,
open a secure door which is set to recognize the chip or I could - and
probably will - set up my car ignition to be linked to the chip for
key-less entry and start up.'
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