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Last week I had dinner with two friends, one of whom is what the mainstream
would call a conspiracy nut. Over the course of a couple of hours and a bunch
of margaritas he walked us through everything from the government's role in
9/11 to the FEMA internment camps to the surge in gun regulations, all of which
are scary, but also mostly beyond my experience. I'm a finance guy who gets
the monetary side of what's coming, but I don't own guns (yet) and have no
first-hand knowledge of 9/11 or FEMA camps. So -- while some or all of these
things might be true -- it was still a bit academic.
Then we got to something I could relate to: Apparently the U.S. is getting
ready to require every citizen who owns even a single backyard chicken to register
their livestock and implant them with a microchip that will allow both identification
and tracking. The chicken (or goat or pig) owner will be required to notify
the government when the animal is moved, say to the county fair 4-H barn. And
when the animal dies the owner will have to fill out a form and submit it to
the authorities within 24 hours. AND the owner will be required to register
visitors to their property, whether they come into contact with the livestock
or not.
This sounded too ridiculous to be real. The other conspiracies at least have
plausible, if dark, rationales, like setting us up for a war, containing troublesome
mobs of unemployed private sector workers, or putting gun owners under the
thumb of the ATF. But why would a would-be dictator care about the neighbor's
chickens?
So I googled NAIS, for National Animal Identification System, and discovered
that it is indeed real, has been around for a while, and calls for pretty much
everything mentioned above, though initially on a voluntary basis. See this
2005 article by Justin & Franklin Sanders of the The
Money Changer newsletter. And watch these videos:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wu9oKmqQpD4&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ERO_g9duCCo&NR=1
NAIS' stated purpose -- to be able to track animals back to their source in
case of a disease outbreak -- is something the USDA would obviously like to
have, in the same way that the FBI would love to be able to monitor all telephone
calls and emails without a warrant. But the downside of handing this kind of
power to the government is so huge and so obvious that anybody with a sense
of history has to suspect that the public rationale for NAIS is a smokescreen
for some darker motive, of which several possibilities come to mind.
First, the per-animal cost of the chips and the paperwork (not to mention
the loss of privacy) goes up exponentially as the number of animals per square
meter goes down. So motive number one is clearly to enable big factory farmers
and chip makers to squeeze fast-growing local farmers by raising their costs.
NAIS will also make it harder for individuals to raise chickens for eggs or
cows for milk, making consumers more reliant on the ag/industrial complex.
Meanwhile, people who keep animals and buy local produce also frequently own
guns, and by and large would like to be left alone to pursue their own interests.
Many of them own gold because they don't trust the government to protect their
dollar savings. This is clearly a dangerously subversive subculture, and knowing
where they are would be very helpful in case of a, ahem, public health crisis.
There's also the monetary angle. As Catherine Austin Fitts, whose Solari
Network is doing great work in fields like financial freedom and
sustainable communities, puts it:
"Oil is not sufficient to provide the backing for a global virtual currency.
For that you need to control food; which means corporate ownership and control
of seed and food production and distribution. NAIS is designed to help facilitate
the roll up of control in the United States in the most economic manner."
And here's Ron Paul's take:
http://lewrockwell.com/paul/paul326.html
A Step Back
This month, after apparently getting an earful from local farmers, Congress
voted to scale back funding for NAIS. They didn't kill it, which
means agribusiness (and Homeland Security?) will now start lobbying to
get funding restored. But this at least gives more people a chance to start
paying attention. According to Catherine Austin Fitts, the best source
for keeping up with NAIS is the Weston
A. Price Foundation.
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