Young shoppers want to pay with chip in skin (propoganda)

Appollynon

Jedi Master
Looks like the social conditioning for the implanted chips is starting in ernest here in the UK.

They say in the article below that some customers are willing to have microchip implants as a means of paying in stores, but the percentages are tiny in comparison to the amount of unmentioned percentages against such a system.

I think we will start to see more of these type of articles in the MS UK news now as they move towards rolling this type of scheme out as the C's have mentioned. Little pointless articles like this act as a way of getting people programmed and used to these type of fiendish ideas.

Link here : http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=409867&in_page_id=1770

Some customers are willing to have microchip implants as a means of paying in stores, a report out today says.

Teenagers are more open to the idea of having a high-tech shopping experience, the Tomorrow's Shopping World report suggests.

Around 8 per cent of 13 to 19-year-olds were open to the idea of microchip implants while 16 per cent wanted trolleys to be fitted with SatNav systems.

This compared to just 5 per cent and 12 per cent respectively for adults asked the same questions. Two thirds of teenagers and 62 per cent of adults questioned for grocery think tank IGD's report wanted self-scanning systems at shop check-outs.

Some 7 per cent of people in both age groups were willing to use biometric iris or retina recognition payment systems.

On a more low-tech note, 61 per cent of adults and 57 per cent of teenagers wanted staff to pack their bags in shops.

And a "cashless society" is not expected to have materialised within the next decade.

The report says 39 per cent of teenage respondents and 30 per cent of adults said they would still be using cash in 10 year's time.

It adds: "The current and future progress of technology services in store is counter-balanced by the need for shopping with some form of 'human contact'."

One third of adults and 40 per cent of teenagers wanted lots of staff involvement with the shopping experience.

The report, sponsored by technology services company EDS, followed an IGD poll of 500 teenagers and a similar number of adults about their predicted grocery shopping habits for the next decade.
 
Indeed this article only mention "favourable" percentages.

Another trick is that they dilute a very important thing (implanting microchip in human beings) with more casual things (trolley equipped with sat nav for example)

They also mix this microchip concept (quintessence of deshumanizing individuals) with measure serving apparent opposite goals (staff to pack their bags, shopping with some form of 'human contact')

Why not using some paperboard grocery employees ;)
 
Back
Top Bottom