There is no argument that if this program succeeds, the ElectRx would be a large technological advancement in health care, but how widely people across the nation will accept the new treatment is unpredictable. In some way or form, even if it is done subconsciously, humans question the validity and safety of new, advanced technology. According to Oscar Handlin "The more useful science/technology becomes the more it is respected and feared" (Handlin 184). There is no doubt that this new technology will be useful in many different ways, but there are also many different ways in which it will be feared as well. One fear that would arise would not have anything to do with the technology itself, but with the loss of jobs it could create in pharmacies across the nation. If DARPA is correct in their assumption that the ElectRx will greatly minimize dependence upon pharmaceutical drugs, the nation could potentially gain a surplus of unneeded pharmacists, resulting in low job security in a once popular field of expertise. Another, and more obvious, way in which the ElectRx could be feared is its use of electric impulses to monitor neuromodulation of internal organs and its ability to send these impulses at any time without the awareness of the person. Some people are still resisting change to new technologies. They claim it interferes with their religion or that it is part of a government conspiracy. These beliefs can be viewed already in the comments posted under the article. One commenter wrote: "These chips change God's DNA in us and we are no longer recognizable as His! Don't fall for this lie under any circumstances, people!" while another commented: "Now, what could possibly go wrong with this? Well, did you notice it said it was a military project? I think I will pass." These are only two of the immensely skeptical comments on the proposed ElectRx implant, and right now it is only a project.