In some states in the USA they are already reading your meters without having 
to enter the home.  The meters, however, are at the point where there is the 
shortest distance to a pole or line... not necessarily the bedrooms.
PT
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: bodhisattva 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Monday, April 26, 2010 2:15 PM
  Subject: Re: CS>another question about cell phones


  Think about it, if this feature was for you, you could use it.  It's not for 
you, it is for them. The next logical question is, why do they need or want 
this data?  Get ready for some twilight zone.

  They want us to install a cell repeater in your home. But what they hope you 
don't pay attention to is that this unit also connects to a geo-stationary 
satellite, but more than this, they don't want you to figure out that it stays 
connected or can connect at any time to this satellite.  This is all aside from 
the radiation and monitoring aspects of course. Watch for gas/electrical meters 
to go Wireless, the radiation from these is quite large, and penetrates the 
back of your home - which is where most bedrooms are.

  Seems to be a push to get exposure to this kind of thing higher, if you care 
to notice.  In relation to this topic: Anything you get for free from a 
publically traded corporation or govt. entity should be treated with suspicion 
in my opinion, although not overt paranoia - trust but verify.. The public in 
the UK discovered this when the govt issued "Trash Cans" to them, and some 
sneaky people found out these contained wireless transmitters that weighed your 
trash and gave then information specific to your trash activities. (I'm not 
kidding here)  

  Funny thing, I purchased a new winter coat last year at "Kohls", the lady at 
the checkout whispered to me that there are short range spy chips in most new 
coats. I thought she was insane, but I listened. Then I said "Prove it", and 
she looked through the coat, found a slightly raised area, and said "Cut this 
out when you get home, and take a look"..  I did, and sure enough, there was a 
small transmitter/receiver unit, paper thin and very small built into the 
article. This was not the normal alarm one at the door apparently..  I cut it 
out of course.  At some point, we have to start asking what is going on here, 
and is all of this really necessary?

  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mrITx7_tTT0
  Katherine Albrecht: Spychips

  Even more interesting, a good friend of mine told me to "Check the tags" on 
some clothes you buy.  He found little gobs of toxic film in each tag that are 
"Heat activated" and soak into your skin after a few days of wearing them, the 
evidence disappears.  I thought he was insane, but then I went and purchased a 
new pack of boxer shorts at Kohls, and cut open the tags, and found...   
http://s942.photobucket.com/albums/ad266/bodhisattva123/?action=view&current=spot.jpg
  I purchase all of my clothes used now as a measure of caution, your new 
stuff, chop off the tags.

  
http://www.intomobile.com/2008/12/10/att-to-trial-3g-femtocells-next-year-in-home-cell-towers-coming-to-att.html

  In-home cell towers coming to AT&T
  http://www.livescience.com/technology/060831_technovelgy.html

  Garbage Cans Pack Spy Chips


  Marshall Dudley wrote: 
    The thing that irks me about cell phones is that they have GPS, and they 
will give the information to people you don't want having it, but will not give 
it to you.  Lets say that I am lost on the lake and my son is looking for me 
and has his GPS on the boat on, or I found a great campground and want to tell 
everyone where it is.  Well the phone knows, but there is no way to get it to 
give me the information.  If I call Verizon they tell me the only people who 
can read the gps is if I call 911.  If I call 911 and ask them my co-ordinates 
they say they cannot give me the information on where I am. I pay for the 
ability, but it is disabled to where I cannot use it. It's crazy. 

    Marshall