China to Issue High-Tech ID Cards

Back to the China: Hell on Earth Page

The Associated Press
Tuesday, June 12, 2001; 12:24 a.m. EDT

Bob's Notes: This is what people who understand Freedom fear for the citizens of America. Imagine a system where credit lines, your bank accounts, health care, where you live, work, play, who your friends are, and everything else in your life can be controlled and denied to you by a central authority. Imagine you can't escape from your country because leaving is punishable by death. Imagine you simply want to worship Christianity and the authorities don't agree. They can cut you off from your life. And they can do it much more easily if they force you to carry a computerized card that you absolutely MUST HAVE just to go shopping and they send a signal that tells the local block master to deny anything to you. It is all possible. Some have called it "the mark of the beast". With this article you are witnessing the beginning of the end of the resistance within China. They can simply starve people to death who want to demonstrate by denying them all the functions of life and the ability to escape. Congratulations BJ Clinton. You sold the Chinese monsters the supercomputers with a special executive order to allow them to do this to their own people. They will murder more thousands and millions with the help of democraps like Clinton in America.

BEIJING –– China plans to issue new high-tech identification cards to its 1.26 billion people.

The plastic cards embedded with a microchip to store personal information will replace existing plastic-coated paper ID cards that are relatively easy to counterfeit, the official China Daily reported Tuesday.

The cards will likely be tested this year in a couple of cities and may be issued first for college students next year so they can use them to apply for bank loans, the newspaper said. China's Cabinet has "basically approved" the new ID system, it reported.

Issuing the new cards to all 1.26 billion Chinese will take up to five years, it said. Old ID cards will remain valid until the switch is complete, it said. The current cards have an ID number, and the holder's photograph, name, sex and birth date.

© Copyright 2001 The Associated Press