A bill sponsored by State Rep. Babette Josephs banning the forced implementation of computer chips into humans unanimously passed the state House last week.
California, North Dakota, and Wisconsin have already enacted similar laws to the one in Pennsylvania.
“I’m doing, I think, what the legislature does too little of,” she said. “This is a problem on the horizon, and I want to address it before it becomes a societal disgrace.”
Unfortunately, State Rep. Dan Moul amended the law to allow the chipping of certain people, such as rapists and murderers, by court order.
Josephs called Moul’s changes “inflammatory” and “sensational” and hopes the Senate throws them out when it considers the measure.
The senate version of the bill, however, is not scheduled for immediate action, so it may never become a law in Pennsylvania. This is not a good thing for the state of Pennsylvania. Once you open the door to allowing “certain individuals” to be chipped, the door will never close. It will be abused. If Mr. Moul thinks that certain people can’t be trusted, then they should remain in prison and not put out onto the streets with a chip implant. It’s not a hard concept to understand, yet lawmakers still can’t figure it out.


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