Dreams Unleashed (27 page)

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Authors: Linda Hawley

Tags: #Irish, #Time Travel, #Pacific Northwest, #Paranormal, #France, #Prophecies, #Science Fiction, #Suspense, #Adventure, #techno thriller, #Dreams, #Action, #Technology, #Metaphysics, #Thriller, #big brother

BOOK: Dreams Unleashed
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The Year 2015

 

 

Our conversation dwindled to a stop soon after that. Paul could tell I was tired, so he kissed me on the forehead and left. I was tired of thinking about the CIA, remote viewing, and anything else about having been a remote spy. I just wanted to go to bed.

As I lay there, I took a deep breath and thought about what Paul had said about RFID.

Radio frequency technology had been around since Marlin Perkins hosted
Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom
on television. That was in the days of rabbit-ear antennas that you had to position correctly in order to see the image on your TV, and you had to get up off the sofa to change the channel. For twenty-seven years, Perkins radio-tagged animals. That's how most older Americans remembered the first use of radio frequency technology. But it was used before then by the allies in World War II, as a means of identifying whether the planes coming in were friend or foe.

The newest generation of RFID tags was called the Mu2 Chip. It was far smaller than the size of a freckle on a person's face, and more than one hundred times thinner than a single piece of paper. The Japanese corporation, Hitachi, developed it. The tiny, mini-dot stored data that could identify and track had no need for battery power, and it could operate in both moisture and heat. With the Mu2 chip, RFID was no longer simply a device to relay information. Now it stored information in a database where that data could be quickly and easily retrieved by computers.

RFID was a global initiative and was always kept quiet. India's secretive RFID initiative, called Aadhaar, was exposed by an article in the
Wall Street Journal
five years ago. India not only had an initiative to tag all its citizens with the Mu chip, but they also added an iris and fingerprint biometric scan to their data collection strategy, then assigned a unique twelve-digit number to every one of their one-point-two billion souls. Rice farmers and rural shop owners who had never even seen a computer or biometric scanner were awakened by officials the night before they were to report to their mobile scan center. It took the government five years and billions of dollars, but India did indeed achieve its goal. Every Indian citizen could now be tracked with a Mu chip embedded in their passports, driver's licenses, ration cards, and health-insurance cards. The Indian government employed fear to convince their parliament to approve the tagging of citizens. It is that same rhetoric of fear that was used to convince governments in countries all around the world to use RFID on their citizens, including America.

In the early part of the new century, the government touted RFID's use for animal disease control, in case of mad-cow disease, hoof-and-mouth disease, swine flu, avian flu, and other outbreaks. The government used the fear of pandemics to make it mandatory that all animals were chipped, including all pets. That was the first step in desensitizing the population to acceptance of RFID. Added to that was the lobbying efforts of the RFID industry---which is worth thirty billion dollars today. Those lobbyists kicked up their persuasiveness after the 9-11 attacks in 2001, using fear to convince the government that they could prevent terrorism in America by tracking everyone in the country. Out of the nineteen terrorists of 9-11, nine of them had obtained Virginia driver's licenses. After 9-11, Virginia was the first State to use terrorism fear to mandate RFID chips in their driver's licenses. After Virginia, many States followed, then the federal government mandated that all states adopt tracking. In 2006, the United States started chipping its citizens through passports, recording the date, time, and place of entries and exits from the USA. After 2014, no one could participate in American society without an RFID. Driving a car, opening a bank account, getting a loan, buying real estate or a new car, or traveling outside the country all required RFID.

GOG was vehemently against using RFID on citizens. From the organization's perspective, civil liberties were forfeited when RFID was employed. Our individuality was lost because governments using RFID expected their citizens to live inside the box; outside-the-box citizens were flagged as non-compliant. With the power granted to the government through the technology, citizens had no second chances. With RFID, it was easy for the government to spy on its citizens domestically, because everyone's movements were charted databases. The newest chips could be read from a few hundred feet away or by satellites, making the peeking threat easier. Peeking could be done by governments, organizations, or individuals---like stalkers who wanted to follow their prey. The GOG underground organization saw RFIDs as a means to punish citizens who didn't follow a conformist way of thinking.

In 2010, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration had approved the use of RFID's in humans, and human trials of implanted chips had begun. First the trials were voluntary. Subjects were implanted with their medical record information, to supposedly speed up care in hospitals. Again the government used fear to entice citizens to voluntarily participate. Then, in 2014, all violent or deviant convicted criminals were required to be implanted with an RFID upon their parole from prison, for a period of time determined by each parole board. Politicians raved about this mandate, saying it was the end to repeat offenders, especially in crimes against children. With this positive spin, the idea of chipping humans seemed viable for community safety.

Once a person was chipped, there was little escape, which was why GOG fought against it so vehemently. There were ways to disable an RFID, such as the sharp tap from a hammer, or by cooking it in your microwave. But as soon as the technology was disabled, it would go off-line in the government's database, and the person it belonged to was flagged for non-compliance. So far there was no viable way to disable the chip without getting caught.

What would Marlin Perkins think of tagging humans
? I wondered.
Maybe it's best that he's not around to see the results
.

 

 

Chapter 25

BELLINGHAM, WASHINGTON

The Year 2015

 

 

It was nearing my birthday, and I was dreading going to the DMV to renew my driver's license. It wasn't just the jail-like photo they would take, but the grief I felt over the loss of my privacy, knowing that I was surrendering myself to an RFID tracking chip. Not to mention the fact that dealing with DMV employees was like walking into a hive of African bees; they were just waiting for a reason to sting you.

I parked, then went into the building, took my wait-till-hell-freezes-over number, and took a seat in the third row from the back, on the end. I wanted to sit in the back row, or I would have settled for the one in front of it, but every seat was taken in the back two rows. The first eight rows were empty, with the exception of one pimply-faced high school eager beaver, who had no idea what was in store for him when he took the driving test.

Thirty-five minutes later, I heard number forty-nine called. I was up. I rose and shot for the lighted arrow, maneuvering into my lane.

"Yes?" the woman behind the counter said blandly, not making eye contact.

Would it kill her to act like a human being
?

"I need my driver's license renewed," I said, impersonating her monotonous voice.

"Got the form?" she asked, still not looking up.

I passed my paper across the wide counter.

"Is this address correct?"

"Yes."

She punched some things into the computer.

"The computer says it's wrong."

"Huh?" I responded, dumbfounded.

"The computer says this address is wrong," she repeated, slower this time, as though I was dense.

"Well it's the only one I have, regardless of whether the computer likes it or not," I responded curtly.

"If it's not a valid address, you can't use it."

"It
is
a valid address."

"Todd," the woman shouted, apparently to a higher-up. "Can you come here?"

Great
.

Todd approached, not looking at me, and asked the woman, "What's wrong?"

"Her address isn't valid."

"Yes it is," I countered, standing firmly.

Both Todd and the woman ignored me.

"The form says 'Lane,' and you typed in 'Street,'" Todd said.

I could have sworn I heard him mutter "...you idiot" under his breath.

Todd walked away, scorning. The woman's head ducked slightly, her cheeks blooming in pink.

"Sixty-eight dollars," she demanded, averting her eyes.

I slid a hundred-dollar bill over the counter.

"Don't you have something smaller?" she asked with disgust, not touching the bill, but staring at it.

"Nope," I said curtly, though I knew I did.

She took the edge of the bill and disdainfully put it in the bottom of her cash drawer, then gave me thirty-two dollars back by simply setting it on the counter. I took the money and put it in my wallet.

"Wait over there until your name is called for your photo," she said, pointing.

I waited again. No shocker there.

In fifteen minutes, my name was called to have my photo taken.

I really wanted to take a pair of those google-eyed glasses and put them on for the photo, surprising the amateur photographer, but I guessed she probably wouldn't think it was funny. I decided to go the depressed, straight-face route.

After my picture was taken, I waited again. My name was finally called, my prison photo was released, and I had my new driver's license in hand, tracking me wherever I went.

When I got into my BYD, I sat in the driver's seat and looked at the license. At a glance, it seemed perfectly harmless. But in this one piece of plastic, my civil liberties were violated, and it was mandatory in order to participate in American society. I could not drive out of the parking lot in the car that I owned free and clear without this card. As I sat there, I thought about the nameless Canadian whom I had challenged before he became a member of GOG. He'd said, "...if I attend a gun show, all a government employee has to do is hold an RFID reader nearby, and he can ID me, because my driver's license is in my wallet...this is an invasion of my privacy..." He was right. I had done nothing but serve my country faithfully, and I was being tracked, just because I was an American.

I thought about what I knew about disabling RFID's. I knew people who had disabled the tag through various methods, but the complication was that the government would know about it immediately by the Driver's License number going off-line. The best option was to clone your RFID chip---but the risk of being found out was pretty high. The government had a dedicated team of developers, constantly working on refining their cloning-detection software, and if you
were
found out, it was an automatic felony with prison time. None of these options seemed very appealing to me.

I felt the Herkimer diamond around my neck, removed it, and looked at it in the sunlight coming through the car window. The prisms made me think of how quartz could create an electric field, making it act like a circuit. Paul said that voltage was produced across the crystal's face, making it vibrate at a certain frequency, the crystal maintaining that constant frequency. If regular quartz crystals could be a circuit, creating a force field, and could create a frequency, could a phantom Herkimer do even more? I looked at the crystal in my hand and noticed how it was so clear, with one perfect crystal formed inside the outer one.

Can this super-charged crystal be used to disrupt RFID
? I wondered, looking at the phantom Herkimer in one hand and my new driver's license in the other.

I looked at the DMV building out the car window.

All that personal information was stored in a database somewhere. I wondered if the database itself could be disrupted and corrupted using my Herkimer.
But that would be destruction of government property
, I thought.
I could be thrown in jail for that
.

The Canadian RFID program was run the same way as ours, with a database holding personal information. I wondered if I could use remote viewing, bringing my Herkimer with me, to disrupt the Canadian RFID database and its backup. It would be my first test---if I could do it.

I pulled the safe phone out of my purse, assembled it, and placed my call to the Canadian contact number I had memorized.

"B40 for coordinates, soon," I said, leaving the message.

I set my watch timer for the four-minute window I had.

One minute later, my phone rang.

"Yes?" I answered.

"Code?"

"Salmon."

"Victoria," she confirmed.

"I need map coordinates for the B.C. driver's license data center and the backup location."

"I'll call you back."

I pulled out the small clipboard that I started carrying in my purse, along with a pencil, to record the longitude and latitude of the data centers. I'm sure they knew where the Canadian government stored its primary database that held citizens' RFID data, but they'd have to pull up the actual coordinates, and the same for the backup data center.

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