Guest guest Posted October 1, 2008 Report Share Posted October 1, 2008 From the September 2008 Idaho Observer: http://www.proliber ty.com/observer/ 20080915. htm Tagged at Birth—Entering "the System" Cradle to grave monitoring and control has long been the hallmark of a servile society wherein people are reduced to property of the state. Now, before even reaching the cradle, dripping wet infants, fresh from the birth canal, can be tagged, monitored, inventoried and "protected" with this latest institutional technology. From www.xmark.com—Xmark announced that its Hugs® infant protection system helped to protect more than one million infants in 2007, representing approximately a quarter of all infants born in the United States. The Hugs system is the most chosen product for infant protection, thanks to its comprehensive security, ease of use through a wealth of automatic features, and wide range of support services and programs offered by Xmark. HUGS The Hugs System Advantage is an easy-attach tag which attaches in seconds and automatically enrolls the infant in the software. Protection can start right in the delivery room. The Hugs system requires no manual checks of infant tags or other devices to make sure they’re working. The Hugs system software continually monitors the status of all devices, and will generate an alarm if something goes wrong. With the Kisses® option, the Hugs system automatically confirms that the right baby is with the right mother. There are no buttons to push, no numbers to match and no wall-mounted lamps to check. The By Your Side™ program for the Hugs system ensures that every customer will be successful with infant protection. Xmark is with you every step of the way as you implement and use your system, with a wide range of materials and services. The Hugs system offers a wide range of viewing options. Users only see the menus and commands they need, all in a standard Windows-based PC environment. The integrated CCTV option enables you to see what is happening at an exit during a door alarm, right from within the Hugs user interface—you have the essential information you need to respond appropriately. The Hugs system ensures full supervision of all components, including the tag, with each tag sending a Heartbeat® status message every 10 seconds. If the system doesn’t receive these messages for a specified time period, an alarm is automatically generated. The Halo™ system is not just the leading infant protection product based on skin-sensing technology. It’s also the only system that offers staff tags for easy and secure bypass of exits, and the ability to locate infants at any time. The distributed intelligence of the halo system architecture ensures that exits are covered even in the event of a PC failure or a problem with the hospital network. The Halo system makes it easy to move infants around your facility. They can be transported via a computer or at a keypad at the door. While wearing the optional pendant tag, you don’t have to do anything at all just take the infant through the doorway and the system will record the event. The tag also features tag pulse technology: it emits a regular signal that is monitored by the system. If for any reason this signal is not received, a warning is generated in the Halo™ software. The Halo tag can be attached using a number of different bands, including Velcro straps and 3M Coband. The staff tag enables staff members to move a monitored infant through an exit without pressing a button. The system automatically unlocks the door, and records the identity of the staff member and the infant he/she is escorting. The Door Controller monitors exits from the safe area (usually the OB unit). Installed above or beside the doorway, the Door Controller emits a detection field that covers the opening. When a Halo tag approaches the open exit, an alarm is immediately generated in the Halo software. The Door Controller also includes a keypad for staff to escort an infant through the exit without causing an alarm. An Elevator Controller provides door coverage in elevators. The Elevator Controller travels with the elevator car, providing protection for all floors. This saves on installing a door controller on every floor of a multi-floor facility. The Halo system is controlled by a central Server PC, which monitors all devices and reports all alarms. In addition, the system supports any number of Consoles to provide reporting of alarms at multiple locations. The Receiver is a radio frequency reception device that picks up tamper alarm and pulse signals from Halo tags, and relays them to the Halo server PC. Receivers are installed at regular intervals throughout the monitored area of the facility, usually out of sight above the ceiling. So if you chose to have a hospital birth in a Halo™ equipped hospital, whose child is it anyway? If you don’t approve of the treatment they will automatically administer after birth, can you leave with your child? Are we to become property of the institutional state starting now literally at birth? Besides monitoring infant vitals, location and transfers, what other data and information does the Halo™ system store or implement? Their "By Your Side™ program … is with you every step of the way as you implement and use your system, with a wide range of materials and services." With advancing technology, Big Brother is waiting for you, even as you emerge into this world. Click to join TheFrontPage Researching Our Perilous Times Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 1, 2008 Report Share Posted October 1, 2008 From the September 2008 Idaho Observer: http://www.proliber ty.com/observer/ 20080915. htm Tagged at Birth—Entering "the System" Cradle to grave monitoring and control has long been the hallmark of a servile society wherein people are reduced to property of the state. Now, before even reaching the cradle, dripping wet infants, fresh from the birth canal, can be tagged, monitored, inventoried and "protected" with this latest institutional technology. From www.xmark.com—Xmark announced that its Hugs® infant protection system helped to protect more than one million infants in 2007, representing approximately a quarter of all infants born in the United States. The Hugs system is the most chosen product for infant protection, thanks to its comprehensive security, ease of use through a wealth of automatic features, and wide range of support services and programs offered by Xmark. HUGS The Hugs System Advantage is an easy-attach tag which attaches in seconds and automatically enrolls the infant in the software. Protection can start right in the delivery room. The Hugs system requires no manual checks of infant tags or other devices to make sure they’re working. The Hugs system software continually monitors the status of all devices, and will generate an alarm if something goes wrong. With the Kisses® option, the Hugs system automatically confirms that the right baby is with the right mother. There are no buttons to push, no numbers to match and no wall-mounted lamps to check. The By Your Side™ program for the Hugs system ensures that every customer will be successful with infant protection. Xmark is with you every step of the way as you implement and use your system, with a wide range of materials and services. The Hugs system offers a wide range of viewing options. Users only see the menus and commands they need, all in a standard Windows-based PC environment. The integrated CCTV option enables you to see what is happening at an exit during a door alarm, right from within the Hugs user interface—you have the essential information you need to respond appropriately. The Hugs system ensures full supervision of all components, including the tag, with each tag sending a Heartbeat® status message every 10 seconds. If the system doesn’t receive these messages for a specified time period, an alarm is automatically generated. The Halo™ system is not just the leading infant protection product based on skin-sensing technology. It’s also the only system that offers staff tags for easy and secure bypass of exits, and the ability to locate infants at any time. The distributed intelligence of the halo system architecture ensures that exits are covered even in the event of a PC failure or a problem with the hospital network. The Halo system makes it easy to move infants around your facility. They can be transported via a computer or at a keypad at the door. While wearing the optional pendant tag, you don’t have to do anything at all just take the infant through the doorway and the system will record the event. The tag also features tag pulse technology: it emits a regular signal that is monitored by the system. If for any reason this signal is not received, a warning is generated in the Halo™ software. The Halo tag can be attached using a number of different bands, including Velcro straps and 3M Coband. The staff tag enables staff members to move a monitored infant through an exit without pressing a button. The system automatically unlocks the door, and records the identity of the staff member and the infant he/she is escorting. The Door Controller monitors exits from the safe area (usually the OB unit). Installed above or beside the doorway, the Door Controller emits a detection field that covers the opening. When a Halo tag approaches the open exit, an alarm is immediately generated in the Halo software. The Door Controller also includes a keypad for staff to escort an infant through the exit without causing an alarm. An Elevator Controller provides door coverage in elevators. The Elevator Controller travels with the elevator car, providing protection for all floors. This saves on installing a door controller on every floor of a multi-floor facility. The Halo system is controlled by a central Server PC, which monitors all devices and reports all alarms. In addition, the system supports any number of Consoles to provide reporting of alarms at multiple locations. The Receiver is a radio frequency reception device that picks up tamper alarm and pulse signals from Halo tags, and relays them to the Halo server PC. Receivers are installed at regular intervals throughout the monitored area of the facility, usually out of sight above the ceiling. So if you chose to have a hospital birth in a Halo™ equipped hospital, whose child is it anyway? If you don’t approve of the treatment they will automatically administer after birth, can you leave with your child? Are we to become property of the institutional state starting now literally at birth? Besides monitoring infant vitals, location and transfers, what other data and information does the Halo™ system store or implement? Their "By Your Side™ program … is with you every step of the way as you implement and use your system, with a wide range of materials and services." With advancing technology, Big Brother is waiting for you, even as you emerge into this world. Click to join TheFrontPage Researching Our Perilous Times Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 1, 2008 Report Share Posted October 1, 2008 From the September 2008 Idaho Observer: http://www.proliber ty.com/observer/ 20080915. htm Tagged at Birth—Entering "the System" Cradle to grave monitoring and control has long been the hallmark of a servile society wherein people are reduced to property of the state. Now, before even reaching the cradle, dripping wet infants, fresh from the birth canal, can be tagged, monitored, inventoried and "protected" with this latest institutional technology. From www.xmark.com—Xmark announced that its Hugs® infant protection system helped to protect more than one million infants in 2007, representing approximately a quarter of all infants born in the United States. The Hugs system is the most chosen product for infant protection, thanks to its comprehensive security, ease of use through a wealth of automatic features, and wide range of support services and programs offered by Xmark. HUGS The Hugs System Advantage is an easy-attach tag which attaches in seconds and automatically enrolls the infant in the software. Protection can start right in the delivery room. The Hugs system requires no manual checks of infant tags or other devices to make sure they’re working. The Hugs system software continually monitors the status of all devices, and will generate an alarm if something goes wrong. With the Kisses® option, the Hugs system automatically confirms that the right baby is with the right mother. There are no buttons to push, no numbers to match and no wall-mounted lamps to check. The By Your Side™ program for the Hugs system ensures that every customer will be successful with infant protection. Xmark is with you every step of the way as you implement and use your system, with a wide range of materials and services. The Hugs system offers a wide range of viewing options. Users only see the menus and commands they need, all in a standard Windows-based PC environment. The integrated CCTV option enables you to see what is happening at an exit during a door alarm, right from within the Hugs user interface—you have the essential information you need to respond appropriately. The Hugs system ensures full supervision of all components, including the tag, with each tag sending a Heartbeat® status message every 10 seconds. If the system doesn’t receive these messages for a specified time period, an alarm is automatically generated. The Halo™ system is not just the leading infant protection product based on skin-sensing technology. It’s also the only system that offers staff tags for easy and secure bypass of exits, and the ability to locate infants at any time. The distributed intelligence of the halo system architecture ensures that exits are covered even in the event of a PC failure or a problem with the hospital network. The Halo system makes it easy to move infants around your facility. They can be transported via a computer or at a keypad at the door. While wearing the optional pendant tag, you don’t have to do anything at all just take the infant through the doorway and the system will record the event. The tag also features tag pulse technology: it emits a regular signal that is monitored by the system. If for any reason this signal is not received, a warning is generated in the Halo™ software. The Halo tag can be attached using a number of different bands, including Velcro straps and 3M Coband. The staff tag enables staff members to move a monitored infant through an exit without pressing a button. The system automatically unlocks the door, and records the identity of the staff member and the infant he/she is escorting. The Door Controller monitors exits from the safe area (usually the OB unit). Installed above or beside the doorway, the Door Controller emits a detection field that covers the opening. When a Halo tag approaches the open exit, an alarm is immediately generated in the Halo software. The Door Controller also includes a keypad for staff to escort an infant through the exit without causing an alarm. An Elevator Controller provides door coverage in elevators. The Elevator Controller travels with the elevator car, providing protection for all floors. This saves on installing a door controller on every floor of a multi-floor facility. The Halo system is controlled by a central Server PC, which monitors all devices and reports all alarms. In addition, the system supports any number of Consoles to provide reporting of alarms at multiple locations. The Receiver is a radio frequency reception device that picks up tamper alarm and pulse signals from Halo tags, and relays them to the Halo server PC. Receivers are installed at regular intervals throughout the monitored area of the facility, usually out of sight above the ceiling. So if you chose to have a hospital birth in a Halo™ equipped hospital, whose child is it anyway? If you don’t approve of the treatment they will automatically administer after birth, can you leave with your child? Are we to become property of the institutional state starting now literally at birth? Besides monitoring infant vitals, location and transfers, what other data and information does the Halo™ system store or implement? Their "By Your Side™ program … is with you every step of the way as you implement and use your system, with a wide range of materials and services." With advancing technology, Big Brother is waiting for you, even as you emerge into this world. Click to join TheFrontPage Researching Our Perilous Times Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 1, 2008 Report Share Posted October 1, 2008 From the September 2008 Idaho Observer: http://www.proliber ty.com/observer/ 20080915. htm Tagged at Birth—Entering "the System" Cradle to grave monitoring and control has long been the hallmark of a servile society wherein people are reduced to property of the state. Now, before even reaching the cradle, dripping wet infants, fresh from the birth canal, can be tagged, monitored, inventoried and "protected" with this latest institutional technology. From www.xmark.com—Xmark announced that its Hugs® infant protection system helped to protect more than one million infants in 2007, representing approximately a quarter of all infants born in the United States. The Hugs system is the most chosen product for infant protection, thanks to its comprehensive security, ease of use through a wealth of automatic features, and wide range of support services and programs offered by Xmark. HUGS The Hugs System Advantage is an easy-attach tag which attaches in seconds and automatically enrolls the infant in the software. Protection can start right in the delivery room. The Hugs system requires no manual checks of infant tags or other devices to make sure they’re working. The Hugs system software continually monitors the status of all devices, and will generate an alarm if something goes wrong. With the Kisses® option, the Hugs system automatically confirms that the right baby is with the right mother. There are no buttons to push, no numbers to match and no wall-mounted lamps to check. The By Your Side™ program for the Hugs system ensures that every customer will be successful with infant protection. Xmark is with you every step of the way as you implement and use your system, with a wide range of materials and services. The Hugs system offers a wide range of viewing options. Users only see the menus and commands they need, all in a standard Windows-based PC environment. The integrated CCTV option enables you to see what is happening at an exit during a door alarm, right from within the Hugs user interface—you have the essential information you need to respond appropriately. The Hugs system ensures full supervision of all components, including the tag, with each tag sending a Heartbeat® status message every 10 seconds. If the system doesn’t receive these messages for a specified time period, an alarm is automatically generated. The Halo™ system is not just the leading infant protection product based on skin-sensing technology. It’s also the only system that offers staff tags for easy and secure bypass of exits, and the ability to locate infants at any time. The distributed intelligence of the halo system architecture ensures that exits are covered even in the event of a PC failure or a problem with the hospital network. The Halo system makes it easy to move infants around your facility. They can be transported via a computer or at a keypad at the door. While wearing the optional pendant tag, you don’t have to do anything at all just take the infant through the doorway and the system will record the event. The tag also features tag pulse technology: it emits a regular signal that is monitored by the system. If for any reason this signal is not received, a warning is generated in the Halo™ software. The Halo tag can be attached using a number of different bands, including Velcro straps and 3M Coband. The staff tag enables staff members to move a monitored infant through an exit without pressing a button. The system automatically unlocks the door, and records the identity of the staff member and the infant he/she is escorting. The Door Controller monitors exits from the safe area (usually the OB unit). Installed above or beside the doorway, the Door Controller emits a detection field that covers the opening. When a Halo tag approaches the open exit, an alarm is immediately generated in the Halo software. The Door Controller also includes a keypad for staff to escort an infant through the exit without causing an alarm. An Elevator Controller provides door coverage in elevators. The Elevator Controller travels with the elevator car, providing protection for all floors. This saves on installing a door controller on every floor of a multi-floor facility. The Halo system is controlled by a central Server PC, which monitors all devices and reports all alarms. In addition, the system supports any number of Consoles to provide reporting of alarms at multiple locations. The Receiver is a radio frequency reception device that picks up tamper alarm and pulse signals from Halo tags, and relays them to the Halo server PC. Receivers are installed at regular intervals throughout the monitored area of the facility, usually out of sight above the ceiling. So if you chose to have a hospital birth in a Halo™ equipped hospital, whose child is it anyway? If you don’t approve of the treatment they will automatically administer after birth, can you leave with your child? Are we to become property of the institutional state starting now literally at birth? Besides monitoring infant vitals, location and transfers, what other data and information does the Halo™ system store or implement? Their "By Your Side™ program … is with you every step of the way as you implement and use your system, with a wide range of materials and services." With advancing technology, Big Brother is waiting for you, even as you emerge into this world. Click to join TheFrontPage Researching Our Perilous Times Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2008 Report Share Posted October 12, 2008 Ummmm...no. This sounds incredibly scary and end of the worldish to me. Mark of the beast is what this is like. There's no way I'd let ANYONE tag my baby. It's none of their business! Pretty scary and indicitive of the times we live in > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > From the September 2008 Idaho Observer: > http://www.proliber ty.com/observer/ 20080915. htm > > > > Tagged at Birth—Entering " the System " > Cradle to grave monitoring and control has long been the hallmark of a servile society wherein people are reduced to property of the state. Now, before even reaching the cradle, dripping wet infants, fresh from the birth canal, can be tagged, monitored, inventoried and " protected " with this latest institutional technology. > From www.xmark.com—Xmark announced that its Hugs® infant protection system helped to protect more than one million infants in 2007, representing approximately a quarter of all infants born in the United States. The Hugs system is the most chosen product for infant protection, thanks to its comprehensive security, ease of use through a wealth of automatic features, and wide range of support services and programs offered by Xmark. > HUGS > The Hugs System Advantage is an easy-attach tag which attaches in seconds and automatically enrolls the infant in the software. Protection can start right in the delivery room. The Hugs system requires no manual checks of infant tags or other devices to make sure they're working. The Hugs system software continually monitors the status of all devices, and will generate an alarm if something goes wrong. > With the Kisses® option, the Hugs system automatically confirms that the right baby is with the right mother. There are no buttons to push, no numbers to match and no wall-mounted lamps to check. > The By Your Side™ program for the Hugs system ensures that every customer will be successful with infant protection. Xmark is with you every step of the way as you implement and use your system, with a wide range of materials and services. > The Hugs system offers a wide range of viewing options. Users only see the menus and commands they need, all in a standard Windows-based PC environment. The integrated CCTV option enables you to see what is happening at an exit during a door alarm, right from within the Hugs user interface—you have the essential information you need to respond appropriately. > The Hugs system ensures full supervision of all components, including the tag, with each tag sending a Heartbeat® status message every 10 seconds. If the system doesn't receive these messages for a specified time period, an alarm is automatically generated. The Halo™ system is not just the leading infant protection product based on skin-sensing technology. It's also the only system that offers staff tags for easy and secure bypass of exits, and the ability to locate infants at any time. > The distributed intelligence of the halo system architecture ensures that exits are covered even in the event of a PC failure or a problem with the hospital network. The Halo system makes it easy to move infants around your facility. They can be transported via a computer or at a keypad at the door. While wearing the optional pendant tag, you don't have to do anything at all just take the infant through the doorway and the system will record the event. > The tag also features tag pulse technology: it emits a regular signal that is monitored by the system. If for any reason this signal is not received, a warning is generated in the Halo™ software. The Halo tag can be attached using a number of different bands, including Velcro straps and 3M Coband. > The staff tag enables staff members to move a monitored infant through an exit without pressing a button. The system automatically unlocks the door, and records the identity of the staff member and the infant he/she is escorting. > The Door Controller monitors exits from the safe area (usually the OB unit). Installed above or beside the doorway, the Door Controller emits a detection field that covers the opening. When a Halo tag approaches the open exit, an alarm is immediately generated in the Halo software. The Door Controller also includes a keypad for staff to escort an infant through the exit without causing an alarm. An Elevator Controller provides door coverage in elevators. The Elevator Controller travels with the elevator car, providing protection for all floors. This saves on installing a door controller on every floor of a multi-floor facility. > The Halo system is controlled by a central Server PC, which monitors all devices and reports all alarms. In addition, the system supports any number of Consoles to provide reporting of alarms at multiple locations. > The Receiver is a radio frequency reception device that picks up tamper alarm and pulse signals from Halo tags, and relays them to the Halo server PC. Receivers are installed at regular intervals throughout the monitored area of the facility, usually out of sight above the ceiling. > So if you chose to have a hospital birth in a Halo™ equipped hospital, whose child is it anyway? If you don't approve of the treatment they will automatically administer after birth, can you leave with your child? Are we to become property of the institutional state starting now literally at birth? > Besides monitoring infant vitals, location and transfers, what other data and information does the Halo™ system store or implement? Their " By Your Side™ program … is with you every step of the way as you implement and use your system, with a wide range of materials and services. " > With advancing technology, Big Brother is waiting for you, even as you emerge into this world. > > > > > Click to join TheFrontPage > Researching Our Perilous Times > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2008 Report Share Posted October 12, 2008 I've told this story before... When I was pregnant with our first son, during a tour of the hospital we were to birth in, a staff member pointed out a device clamped to a newborn's umbilical cord. She very excitedly explained that the device was a security feature that would tell them, among other things, if I was carrying my baby around (they didn't want me, the mother, to carry my baby in the hospital for fear that I'd drop him after being so weak from the " trauma " of childbirth - I was only to push him around in the little bed cart thing), and would also sound an alarm if the baby was taken out of the OB unit, as kidnapping prevention. My husband and I were mortified. First of all, that they'd tell me I couldn't carry my OWN child around because they EXPECTED me to go through trauma during childbirth, but also attach a device to my child's umbilical cord stump that would emit EMFs in order to keep us in compliance! We immediately became skeptical that any of our wishes would be carried out and had horror images in our heads of leaving the hospital with a child that had been poked, prodded and vaccinated. We RAN out of that hospital and hired a homebirth midwife when I was 32 weeks along, just five weeks before my son made his entrance into the world... I can't tell you how happy I was to be able to carry my child from the birth tub to my bedroom MYSELF! LOL On Sun, Oct 12, 2008 at 1:29 PM, <ladams9200@...> wrote: > Ummmm...no. This sounds incredibly scary and end of the worldish to > me. Mark of the beast is what this is like. There's no way I'd let > ANYONE tag my baby. It's none of their business! Pretty scary and > indicitive of the times we live in > > > > >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> From the September 2008 Idaho Observer: >> http://www.proliber ty.com/observer/ 20080915. htm >> >> >> >> Tagged at Birth—Entering " the System " >> Cradle to grave monitoring and control has long been the hallmark of > a servile society wherein people are reduced to property of the state. > Now, before even reaching the cradle, dripping wet infants, fresh from > the birth canal, can be tagged, monitored, inventoried and " protected " > with this latest institutional technology. >> From www.xmark.com—Xmark announced that its Hugs® infant protection > system helped to protect more than one million infants in 2007, > representing approximately a quarter of all infants born in the United > States. The Hugs system is the most chosen product for infant > protection, thanks to its comprehensive security, ease of use through > a wealth of automatic features, and wide range of support services and > programs offered by Xmark. >> HUGS >> The Hugs System Advantage is an easy-attach tag which attaches in > seconds and automatically enrolls the infant in the software. > Protection can start right in the delivery room. The Hugs system > requires no manual checks of infant tags or other devices to make sure > they're working. The Hugs system software continually monitors the > status of all devices, and will generate an alarm if something goes wrong. >> With the Kisses® option, the Hugs system automatically confirms that > the right baby is with the right mother. There are no buttons to push, > no numbers to match and no wall-mounted lamps to check. >> The By Your Side™ program for the Hugs system ensures that every > customer will be successful with infant protection. Xmark is with you > every step of the way as you implement and use your system, with a > wide range of materials and services. >> The Hugs system offers a wide range of viewing options. Users only > see the menus and commands they need, all in a standard Windows-based > PC environment. The integrated CCTV option enables you to see what is > happening at an exit during a door alarm, right from within the Hugs > user interface—you have the essential information you need to respond > appropriately. >> The Hugs system ensures full supervision of all components, > including the tag, with each tag sending a Heartbeat® status message > every 10 seconds. If the system doesn't receive these messages for a > specified time period, an alarm is automatically generated. The Halo™ > system is not just the leading infant protection product based on > skin-sensing technology. It's also the only system that offers staff > tags for easy and secure bypass of exits, and the ability to locate > infants at any time. >> The distributed intelligence of the halo system architecture ensures > that exits are covered even in the event of a PC failure or a problem > with the hospital network. The Halo system makes it easy to move > infants around your facility. They can be transported via a computer > or at a keypad at the door. While wearing the optional pendant tag, > you don't have to do anything at all just take the infant through the > doorway and the system will record the event. >> The tag also features tag pulse technology: it emits a regular > signal that is monitored by the system. If for any reason this signal > is not received, a warning is generated in the Halo™ software. The > Halo tag can be attached using a number of different bands, including > Velcro straps and 3M Coband. >> The staff tag enables staff members to move a monitored infant > through an exit without pressing a button. The system automatically > unlocks the door, and records the identity of the staff member and the > infant he/she is escorting. >> The Door Controller monitors exits from the safe area (usually the > OB unit). Installed above or beside the doorway, the Door Controller > emits a detection field that covers the opening. When a Halo tag > approaches the open exit, an alarm is immediately generated in the > Halo software. The Door Controller also includes a keypad for staff to > escort an infant through the exit without causing an alarm. An > Elevator Controller provides door coverage in elevators. The Elevator > Controller travels with the elevator car, providing protection for all > floors. This saves on installing a door controller on every floor of a > multi-floor facility. >> The Halo system is controlled by a central Server PC, which monitors > all devices and reports all alarms. In addition, the system supports > any number of Consoles to provide reporting of alarms at multiple > locations. >> The Receiver is a radio frequency reception device that picks up > tamper alarm and pulse signals from Halo tags, and relays them to the > Halo server PC. Receivers are installed at regular intervals > throughout the monitored area of the facility, usually out of sight > above the ceiling. >> So if you chose to have a hospital birth in a Halo™ equipped > hospital, whose child is it anyway? If you don't approve of the > treatment they will automatically administer after birth, can you > leave with your child? Are we to become property of the institutional > state starting now literally at birth? >> Besides monitoring infant vitals, location and transfers, what other > data and information does the Halo™ system store or implement? Their > " By Your Side™ program … is with you every step of the way as you > implement and use your system, with a wide range of materials and > services. " >> With advancing technology, Big Brother is waiting for you, even as > you emerge into this world. >> >> >> >> >> Click to join TheFrontPage >> Researching Our Perilous Times >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 13, 2008 Report Share Posted October 13, 2008 > > Ummmm...no. This sounds incredibly scary and end of the worldish to > me. Mark of the beast is what this is like. There's no way I'd let > ANYONE tag my baby. It's none of their business! Pretty scary and > indicitive of the times we live in > > At our hospital we had a tagging system but it was a bracelet thing they put on the baby's foot along with other ID tags to ensure that no one could steal her without an alarm going off at the door. They removed it when we left and there was no problem that I know of. The whole " end times " stuff is about the mark of the beast or number of his name on the head or hand which would allow people to buy and sell. I don't think the infant protection system, if it is simply an alarm system for use only in the hospital, counts as anything like that. We already allow ourselves to have bracelets with our ID number and name etc. on it when we go to the hospital. I don't know of a hospital that doesn't use those. I have a bracelet from when *I* was a baby. I wouldn't allow my child to be marked or permanently implants with anything. But I think an alarm bracelet isn't something to freak out about or think it is demonic. Jerica Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 14, 2008 Report Share Posted October 14, 2008 Jerica, We had the same thing at our hospital and they removed it when we left. That's not what I have the problem with. The article that I was referring to went way beyond the current system that we know. And it was very scary and very indicitive of the end times. I wasn't sure if you had read that article or not. > > > > Ummmm...no. This sounds incredibly scary and end of the worldish to > > me. Mark of the beast is what this is like. There's no way I'd let > > ANYONE tag my baby. It's none of their business! Pretty scary and > > indicitive of the times we live in > > > > > > At our hospital we had a tagging system but it was a bracelet thing > they put on the baby's foot along with other ID tags to ensure that > no one could steal her without an alarm going off at the door. They > removed it when we left and there was no problem that I know of. The > whole " end times " stuff is about the mark of the beast or number of > his name on the head or hand which would allow people to buy and > sell. I don't think the infant protection system, if it is simply an > alarm system for use only in the hospital, counts as anything like > that. We already allow ourselves to have bracelets with our ID number > and name etc. on it when we go to the hospital. I don't know of a > hospital that doesn't use those. I have a bracelet from when *I* was > a baby. I wouldn't allow my child to be marked or permanently > implants with anything. But I think an alarm bracelet isn't something > to freak out about or think it is demonic. > > Jerica > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 14, 2008 Report Share Posted October 14, 2008 I read it too and totally do not see the connentation....considering the source it's easy to make it more into it then it actually very well could be. Lori Re: Tagged at Birth-Entering " the System " Jerica, We had the same thing at our hospital and they removed it when we left. That's not what I have the problem with. The article that I was referring to went way beyond the current system that we know. And it was very scary and very indicitive of the end times. I wasn't sure if you had read that article or not. Recent Activity a.. 9New Members b.. 1New Files Visit Your Group Health Asthma Triggers How you can identify them. Meditation and Lovingkindness A Group to share and learn. Biz Resources Y! Small Business Articles, tools, forms, and more. . ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG - http://www.avg.com Version: 8.0.173 / Virus Database: 270.8.0/1721 - Release Date: 10/12/2008 12:00 PM Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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