Pandemic Timeline

Hacker finds database of vaccinated people’s microchip info

The video allegedly shows a person accessing a hacked database of information that was retrieved from injected microchips.  I suspect that this video is a hoax for these reasons:

  • “Thu, Apr 1” is clearly visible in the upper right of the screen.  It is common for hoaxes to appear on April 1 each year.  I have even seen April Fools hoaxes on professional scientific sites.  My sense that something needs to be discerned always goes into overdrive when I see this date on an internet item.
  • I have not seen any other reports of anyone else accessing this database, and I have no intention of exploring the dark web to find it myself.  Surely, someone else would have tried to replicate this by now.
  • The processors that the alleged hacked site includes in its database are known.  This is the Elbrus 2000 family of processors.  As one commenter on the cited article says, “Elbrus-e2k-e2c +. However, the dimensions of the Elbrus-2S + microprocessor case are 37.5 mm × 37.5 mm.”  That will not fit into a needle, nor do I believe that the chip inside the case would fit in a needle.
  • As a technologist myself, I find it highly unlikely that something injectable of this type would use the same name as the known Elbrus processors or that it would be used in a mass vaccination program.  The chip would more likely be something simpler and more complete than an x86 processor.
  • X86 processors generally need other components to make them work.  An injected processor would need to be entirely stand-alone.
  • If this is indeed information originating from a chip injected with the Sputnik vaccines used in Russia, why would this information be in English?

I hesitated to include this story here at all, and I may yet remove this post at a later time.

However, given the presence of the ID2020 initiatives, the reports of magnetism at the injection site and later throughout the body, and the report of someone now being Bluetooth connectable, I felt it was important for people to at least be aware that such a report as this actually exists, even if it is a hoax.  One thing I have learned through doing this research is that the state of the art of nanotechnology and bioengineering is amazingly advanced.  The capability of injecting tiny microchips into people exists.  RFID chips are old technology.  There are several validated articles about this type of technology reported on this site.

In other words, this instance may be a hoax; but at some point in the near future, this may become a real event.  Evidence of intent exists, and it appears that the technology exists.  If I find sufficient evidence that others have successfully accessed this database, I will remove the “hoax” designation.

It appears that someone has indeed found evidence of something similar.

Plus, people have been finding odd items in their Bluetooth lists.

The hacker video reported here still remains a hoax, in my opinion, for the reasons given above in the “Correcting the Record” section.  The tech in the hacker’s video is simply wrong, even though injected tracking technology does exist.  It appears that La Quinta Columna has found at least part of the technology in the jabs.  At least part of this technology is self-assembling.  It is difficult to know if the tracking technology is injected as a chip or if there is something in the jabs that forms itself into the tracking chip.  It is highly likely, though, that jab recipients are chipped.  Anthony Fauci mentioned self-assembling nanoparticle vaccines in a report to Congress, so the idea that self-assembling technology is in the jabs will be difficult for fact checkers to explain away.  If you want to see evidence of such tracking devices, see the Bluetooth post for ideas on how you might do that.

Sources:

See also, on this site:

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