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r Carl W, Sanders is an electronics engineer, inventor, author and consultant to various government organisations as well as IBM, General Electric, Honeywell and Teledyne. He is also a winner of the President's and Governor's Award for Design Excellence. “Thirty-two years of my life was spent in design engineering and electronics— designing microchips in the Bio-Med field. In 1968 I became involved, almost by accident, in a research and development pro- ject in regard to a spinal bypass for a young lady who had severed her spine. They were looking at possibly being able to connect motor nerves, etc. It was a project we were all excited about. There were 100 people involved and I was senior engineer in charge of the project. This project culminated in the microchip that we talk about now—a microchip that I believe is going to be the positive identifi- cation and "the Mark of the Beast". This microchip is recharged by body temperature changes. Obviously you can't go in and have your battery changed every so often, so the microchip has a recharging circuit that changes based upon body temperature changes. Over one-and-a-half million dol- lars was spent finding out that the two places in the body that the temperature changes the most rapidly are in the forehead (primary position), right below the hairline, and the back of the hand (alternative position). Working on the microchip, we had no idea about it ever being an identification chip. We looked at it as being a very humanitarian thing to do. We were all excited about what we were doing. We were doing high-level integration for the very first time. This team was made up of people out of San Jose, people out of Motorola, General Electric, Boston Medical Center—it was quite a group of people. My responsibility had to do with the design of the chip itself, not the medical side of it As the chip began to evolve, there came a time in the project when they said that the financial return on bypassing severed spines is not a very lucrative thing for us to be into, so we really need to look at some other areas. We noticed that the frequency of the chip had a great effect upon behaviour and so we began to branch off and look pos- sibly at behaviour modification. The project almost turned into electronic acupuncture because what they ended up with was embedding a microchip to put out a signal which affected certain areas. They were able to determine that you could cause a behavioural change. One of the projects was called the Phoenix Project which had to do with Vietnam veterans. We had a chip that we called the Rambo Chip. This chip would acwally cause extra adrenaline flow. I wonder how many of you know that if you can stop the output of the pituitary gland (the signal from the pituitary gland that causes oestrogen flow), you can put a person into instant menopause and there is no conception. This was tested in India and other different parts of the world. So here you have got a birth control tool, based on a microchip. Microchips can also be used for migraine headaches, behaviour modification, as upper/downer, sexual stimulant and sexual depressant. This is nothing more than elec- tronic acupuncture, folks! JUNE - JULY 1994? 14¢NEXUS