While we remain in a complete standoff between Lori Lafond, the Palm Springs Police and others, people in the State of Michigan are taking notice of the growing problem of mandatory microchipping of employees. We all know that Lori implanted officers at the PSPD by stating that it was mandatory that they become microchipped for the job using Bryan Anderson as her cover. Police officers were breaking the law that the City of Palm Springs had in place about electronic communication devices on the job and Lori privately contracted with these officers without informed consent. The secret went on for years and years without anyone asking why or stopping this crime from happening.
The mandatory microchipping of employees is something that has happened in other areas of the government and with government employees. I met a man in Los Angeles that was microchipped while he worked for the space program many years ago. He was certain that this was the only time that he was able to have been chipped. This was probably done for secrecy with whatever the company he worked for was working on. Rockets is what I recall. In Akwei vs. NSA, the plaintiff was also mandatorily microchipped then later sued the NSA for spying on him. He was successful. I've spoken with him and he is a friend of mine, he knows the dangers of this kind of spying and has his own successes with this kind of prosecution.
The new Michigan law does something that most people don't realize, it shows people that these implants are being used. They aren't imaginary they are real and the privacy rights of the people that are either required or not to use them is a question of law. To me this is old news, but I thought you all might get a kick out of knowing what this was all about. The people in the State of Michigan are way ahead of the rest of this country in this field. They must have had problems there.
You can read the article and download the .pdf for the new law at:
http://www.legislature.mi.gov/documents/2019-2020/billengrossed/House/pdf/2020-HEBH-5672.pdf
If you would like to read more about the concept of microchipping employees, something that has happened for over thirty years at the PSPD, you can read an article here:
The moral and ethical dilemmas posed by the introduction of microchips into the workplace should be tempered with what has already happened here in Palm Springs, California. What the consequences are seem to be far too high for the LGBTQ community, but what happens when it gets into the 90%-ers that have no idea what these chips are capable of? I'm deeply saddened by the parents and police that refuse to protect this country with their own experiences being hidden away from public view. It's a sad day when money controls everything that makes us human.