Forced Inoculation/Microchipping Pushed By UK State-Run Media

BBC confirms Bill Gates’ agenda for all travelers to be inoculated and micro-chipped to travel, work or leave home

It’s 2022 and you’ve just arrived at the travel destination of your dreams.

As you get off the plane, a robot greets you with a red laser beam that remotely takes your temperature.

You’re still half asleep after a long transoceanic flight, so your brain barely registers the robot’s complacent beep.

You had just passed similar checks when boarding the plane hours ago so you have nothing to worry about and can just stroll to the next health checkpoint.

As you join the respiratory inspection queue, a worker hands you a small breathalyser capsule with a tiny chip inside.

Conceptually, the test is similar to those measuring drivers’ alcohol levels, but this one detects the coronavirus particles in people’s breath, spotting the asymptomatic carriers who aren’t sick but can infect others.

By now you know the drill, so you diligently cough into the capsule and drop it into the machine resembling a massive microwave.

You wait for about 30 seconds and the machine lights up green, chiming softly.

You may now proceed to immigration, so you fumble for your passport and walk on.

These technologies may sound like science fiction, yet they are anything but.

If you had travelled earlier this year when countries began locking down, you may have already spotted the remote infrared thermometers used in airports.

However, while thermometers are helpful, they aren’t ideal.

People can have fevers for others reasons or may harbour coronavirus without symptoms.

To spot early infections or asymptomatic carriers, one has to check for the coronavirus particles in their breath.

That’s where the breathalyser comes in. You haven’t yet seen it at transit hubs, but it already exists at the photonics lab of Gabby Sarusi, professor at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev in Israel.

When Covid-19 struck and hospitals worldwide struggled to build fast and accurate biological diagnostic tests, Sarusi looked at the problem differently.

As a physicist, he viewed the coronavirus’ spiky sphere not as a biological agent but as a nano-sized particle that can be sensed by specialised electrical equipment.

When tossed into the midst of an electromagnetic field, the particles cause certain “interference” to the flow of electromagnetic waves, which can be detected.

That’s what happens when the capsule is dropped into the microwave-resembling machine.

“We are taking the chip inside the capsule and we’re measuring it with a spectrometer that’s radiated with the magnetic waves,” Sarusi explained.

If coronavirus particles are present, he said, “we can sense the shift.”

His team has already compared the device’s performance against the standard swab tests on 150 patients and found it was 92% accurate.

That’s pretty high, Sarusi notes, given that many approved medical tests have lower accuracy than that.

However, because the breathalyser results will have high stakes – travellers may be denied boarding or quarantined – the team wants to improve the device further.

Once it’s ready, they hope to get an expedited approval from the FDA because it could revive the travel industry.

Sarusi expects the machines to start appearing in airports and train stations soon. “Maybe by the end of this year. Or next year,” he said.

Of course the best thing to put everyone’s worries to rest would be a vaccine.

Experts think the vaccine may become available in 2021, as reported in Scientific American, so those travelling would have to keep their vaccination records.

Even today, some countries require proof of recent vaccination for diseases like yellow fever, and the coronavirus may join that list.

Travellers would present the customs officers with an entrance visa and a vaccination record.

That could be a paper card – or a tiny tattoo on their arm, invisible to the naked eye but readable by an infrared scanner.

This technology already exists and has been tried on live animals and human cadaver skin, said researcher Ana Jaklenec at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Their method uses micro-needle patches that can deliver both the vaccine and a squirt of an invisible ink under the person’s skin, storing the vaccination record.

“The macro-needles don’t leave scars and are less invasive than the regular needles – it’s like putting on a Band-Aid,” Jaklenec said.

That subdermal record is readable by a simple scanner, she added. “It can even be done with a modified phone.”

Supported by The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the technology was aimed to help in the developing world where paper or electronic records aren’t always reliable.

The goal is to try it on humans with a measles vaccine soon, but the tech may come handy for other proofs of immunisations – for example at the immigration point.

After finding your passport and proceeding to immigration, an officer greets you.

Now it’s time to get your bag. At the carousel, a worker offers to spray your luggage with some smelly industrial sanitiser, but you politely decline.

Instead you pop out a bottle of an eco-conscious Veles cleaner scented with bergamot, lavender and mint – an aroma that can soothe the worst jetlag.

Developed by Amanda Weeks, who grew up on Staten Island next to New York’s infamous rubbish dump, Veles is made from food waste that’s fermented akin to a brewing process, yielding alcohol.

“It’s like making kombucha or beer,” said Weeks, who opened a pilot bio-refinery plant in 2018, aiming to divert truckloads of leftovers from landfills and reduce the amount of rotting food and the greenhouse gases it emits.

Currently Veles is designated as a household cleaner and not a sanitiser because Weeks hasn’t put it through the EPA-required tests (sanitisers kill microorganisms so they’re considered pesticides and must be approved by the EPA).

“Only a handful of labs can do that and they charge six figures for the tests,” Weeks explained, but she plans to do it as soon as she has the money.

With sweet-smelling, clean bags, you proceed to the taxi stand. In the meantime, the aeroplane you disembarked from is also being disinfected – by GermFalcon.

A lean, mean, ultraviolet light cleaning machine, GermFalcon was built by father and son Arthur and Elliot Kreitenberg, frequent flyers turned citizen scientists.

A medical doctor, Arthur Kreitenberg knew aeroplanes can spread disease; they’re notoriously difficult to clean because of tight schedules, flight delays and hard-to-reach nooks and crannies. He also knew that hospitals use UVC lights to disinfect surfaces and instruments.

There are three types of ultraviolet light: the milder UVA and UVB present in the sunlight, and the more damaging UVC, which is filtered by the Earth’s atmosphere and has the ability to destroy germs’ DNA.

So the father-son team built a UVC machine that can be wheeled through the planes’ aisles, shining the germ-killing light onto the tables and seat cushions.

With its slender cart-like body and two “wings” spread over the rows of seats, GermFalcon indeed looks like a bird of prey and can disinfect a Boeing 737 in less than five minutes.

“We recommend doing 30 rows per minute,” said Elliot Kreitenberg. “At that rate we can provide the 99% of reduction of influenza and coronavirus.”

The two have worked with professional labs to test the results. GermFalcon will start “hunting” germs on aeroplanes later this year, he added.

“UVC light is used for disinfecting in a lot of applications and is a pretty effective disinfectant,” said Andrea Silverman, assistant professor at New York University’s Tandon School of Engineering and College of Global Public Health.

“And it works well for bacteria and viruses,” she added, as long as the organisms receive enough of the light, which most UVC devices are able to produce.

UV-cleaning devices may also become commonplace in disinfecting hotels, cruise ships and taxis, so when you climb into one you don’t have to worry about the germs in the air.

As you read the driver your hotel address from your smartphone, you realise how dirty the screen is.

When was last time you cleaned that thing?

Probably on the plane, hours ago. Meanwhile, you’d put it down at the customs counter and the vaccine scanner, so it’s also due to be sanitised.

You pat your pocket for PhoneSoap: a miniature UV disinfectant chamber designed by two college friends Daniel Barnes and Wesley LaPorte.

They started making PhoneSoap in 2009 when they read that people’s phones were dirtier than public toilets.

That left a big impression on LaPorte, who at the time was doing immunology research at Brigham Young University.

The Utah-based duo devised a portable UV disinfectant box that kills 99.9% of viruses and bacteria.

“We test to make sure our chambers have enough light and 360-degree reach, including the edges, because you wouldn’t clean only eight of your fingers,” Barnes explained.

Early on, the demand grew steadily, but in March 2020, as Covid-19 cases increased, it surged dramatically.“It became more of a necessity than luxury,” he said.

As your phone takes a UV bath, you lean back into your seat and take a nap.

With all the compulsory steps passed, your holiday can now start. Travelling may be more cumbersome in 2022, but it will likely be cleaner and safer than ever.

Passengers will be less likely to board dirty planes, skip hand washing or leave phones unclean for months. And they will be a lot more concerned about diseases than before.

“People will not want to fly with people who have the flu,” Sarusi said. “This pandemic will change the culture of how people are travelling.”

But perhaps it’s a small price to pay to stay well and healthy.

Future of Travel is a series from BBC Travel that investigates what the world might look like to travellers in the coming years and meets the people living on the frontlines of change.


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