In an age of 'wearables' everything you say can and will be used against you
With the maker of an invasive and intrusive AI wristband about to be acquired by Amazon, you can bet we're about to get inundated with ads for 'wearables', targeting the young, gullible and naive.
Amazon is reportedly preparing to acquire AI bracelet-maker Bee in a major move to dominate the next wave of personal tech, or as Robert F. Kennedy Jr. calls it, “wearables.”
You’ll recall that RFK, director of Trump’s Department of Health and Human Services, stunned MAGAland last month when he said it was his mission to have all Americans hooked up to AI-based “wearables” by 2030.
The Bee wristband is just one of many such devices hitting the market. It records everything you say, whether you’re talking to a friend, family member or even yourself, and syncs with your phone via Bluetooth.
Powered by AI models from Anthropic, Google and Meta, the Bee turns each day, week — your whole life — into one big beautiful and highly searchable database. It takes your personal data and uses it to create personalized to-do lists and even tracks how many times you utter a curse word.
Watch this promotional video touting the wristband as “personal AI designed for you!” It literally logs everything you do and everything you say. All for $49.99. What a steal!
Jacob Thompson at The Winepress notes that, unlike Amazon's Alexa, which is designed to listen only after you give it a command, or “wake word,” Bee's bracelets are always on, always listening, and continuously gathering user data to train its AI models.
Bee CEO Maria de Lourdes Zollo said she was “excited” to be joining Amazon and to bring “truly personal, agentic AI to even more customers.”
“When we started Bee, we imagined a world where AI is truly personal, where your life is understood and enhanced by technology that learns with you,” she wrote on LinkedIn.
This is just one of many wearables about to saturate the market. The younger generations, and some older folks, will likely snap these devices up without a thought as to how they will affect their privacy.
Meta is pushing its Ray-Ban AI glasses and Google has launched Gemini-powered earbuds.
This is part of the globalist plan to replace humans with transhumans, or “Humanity 2.0,” as they like to call it. Wearables are seen as the next step to bring technology into closer integration with the human body, creating an “internet of bodies” similar to the already populated “internet of things.” We’ve gone from cellphones to watches to now all sorts of gradually more invasive technology. Where will it end? Likely with a chip injected just below the skin.
Remember, World Economic Forum advisor and Israeli historian Yuval Harari predicted nearly four years ago that the globalist plan is to have 24/7 surveillance “under the skin” of all people. Watch below and weep for the ignorant, the gullible and the naive who lack not only information but spiritual discernment.
A great many people are already submitting themselves to intense surveillance through use of social media platforms while exposing themselves constantly to microwave radiation from their devices. Why would Bee be a special problem for them?
Ever try to warn anyone about social media surveillance, profiling, and sale of personal information? Ever had anyone listen?
It was in the Summer of 1994 in Southern California, when the first debit card readers were installed at the major grocery stores. My best friend and I knew then, that here is proof of the soon-coming "mark of the beast". With the introduction of the AI wristbands in mind: I often travel locally on public busses and it is eye-opening to see everyone in the under forty crowd, swipe their smart phones to pay the bus fare, with a "beep" as they board the public bus.
Redemption Draws Nigh:
The verse "When you see these things look up, for your redemption draws nigh" is found in Luke 21, where Jesus speaks about the signs that will precede His return and the redemption of His followers. This passage is part of a larger discourse where Jesus/Yeshua describes the events that will occur before the end of "the age of the Gentiles", including signs in the heavens, distress on earth, and the coming of the Son of Man in a cloud with power and great glory. The context of this verse is part of Jesus' teachings on the end times, where He uses the metaphor of a fig tree to illustrate that just as the fig tree's leaves signal the approach of summer, so too will the signs He describes signal the nearness of His return as King of kings.