Originally posted by: Hacp
Originally posted by: DrPizza
Originally posted by: Darwin333
There's nothing wrong with regulation to protect consumers.
One could argue that the camera's are the same thing. Just something to protect the consumer (people).
Out of curiousity (because I really don't know), does Israel use tons of cameras to monitor its citizens? Plenty of terrorist attacks there... maybe they're smart enough to realize that the cameras DON'T prevent attacks - they only solve the question of "who's responsible" after the attack occurs. (Of course, I suppose in that way, they may prevent a second attack.)
Yes I have been watching the news, and I haven't noticed anything that even remotely mirrors the series of events resulting in the emergence of Stalin's regime.You're kidding, right? Checks and balances? Not lately. Or haven't you been watching the news?
Originally posted by: Darwin333
In all reality, cameras will be used much more for crime than terrorism. A camera can deter some thug from robbing you at gunpoint. As well as help LEO get criminals off the street and therefor prevent them from committing more crimes.
Originally posted by: Starbuck1975
I fail to see how tracking vehicles for patterns of suspicious behavior is an invasion of personal liberty.Good for you. You might not care if your personal liberties are breached, but millions of Americans do care.
Originally posted by: Triumph
Absolute power corrupts absolutely. Since it's difficult to gain absolute power in one fell swoop, governments instead practice taking a little bit at a time, so that nobody notices. The slippery slope argument may be cliche, but that doesn't mean it isn't true.
Originally posted by: Atheus
Get this. Here in London people use public transport a lot, we need a convenient way to pay, and this comes in the form of an RFID card which you wave at a reader device when you get on the subway. The use of this card is encouraged by making the cash fare around twice as expensive in comparison. This is notable because your name is associated with your card in most cases - they can track where you are on the public transport system at all times, and perhaps even track you locally by communicating with the card from range. Maybe it could prevent another bomb on the tube, just maybe, but how can we guarentee it won't be used for anything else? People tend to use all the resources they have to get what they want.
Your scenario plays on emotional fears but has no basis in reality.Until you are the one in an interrogation room with guys with guns wanting to know why your name is on a terror watch list along with an 8 yr old boy or 90 yr old woman. And why you went to Walmart 3 times in one hour, with no lawyer, no guns, no phone calls, no say, no rights, and with absolutely no recourse except to admit to what they said you did just to get it over with after you've gone insane from being interrogated for months non stop without seeing the light of day.
I don't shop at Wallmart, but I may stop at Target on the way home from work to pick up some tin foil...maybe then your theory will make some sense to me.How do I know you were just buying cookies and forgot the milk, then got charged twice for the milk? You could have been buying small unnoticeable quantities of fertilizer or something to make a bomb with, or staking the place out. What do you do in the above situation when there is nobody to take your side, nobody to help you, nobody to speak for you?
Originally posted by: Starbuck1975
Your scenario plays on emotional fears but has no basis in reality.Until you are the one in an interrogation room with guys with guns wanting to know why your name is on a terror watch list along with an 8 yr old boy or 90 yr old woman. And why you went to Walmart 3 times in one hour, with no lawyer, no guns, no phone calls, no say, no rights, and with absolutely no recourse except to admit to what they said you did just to get it over with after you've gone insane from being interrogated for months non stop without seeing the light of day.
I don't shop at Wallmart, but I may stop at Target on the way home from work to pick up some tin foil...maybe then your theory will make some sense to me.How do I know you were just buying cookies and forgot the milk, then got charged twice for the milk? You could have been buying small unnoticeable quantities of fertilizer or something to make a bomb with, or staking the place out. What do you do in the above situation when there is nobody to take your side, nobody to help you, nobody to speak for you?
Let's take your Wallmart scenario for a walk. Assume for a moment that I do frequent a Wallmart several times in one day...or perhaps loiter outside the entrance, walking back and forth without entering...there are security cameras covering the entrances to most large retail chain stores...let's say that security notices the suspicious patterns in my behavior, and contact authorities...I'll even shoot for the stars, and assume that they contact the FBI because they think I am a terrorist.
The FBI pays me a visit, interrogates me, and comes to the very quick conclusion that I simply like spending time at Wallmart...what incentive do they have to keep me under their control or supervision...given my associations, job and normal routine, why would they continue to harass me if it garners them nothing???
Originally posted by: Bumrush99
What people passed off as small invasion of their privacy has now expanded into the Government knowing where they drive nearly all the time. Of course its all in the name of terror... but with cameras popping up in major US cities how long before the Feds step in and get access to the footage in real time?
Originally posted by: Bumrush99
Originally posted by: Shivetya
The leaked document also reveals the scale of possible national surveillance with ANPR. The police can compare details of vehicles entering the London congestion charge zone against a hotlist of target vehicles, and identify cars that have been at several sites at key times. The police say this could help pinpoint finds of terrorist material. At present the police can apply for the London congestion zone records only on a case by case basis. The new power will give police live access to all the data.
What people passed off as small invasion of their privacy has now expanded into the Government knowing where they drive nearly all the time. Of course its all in the name of terror... but with cameras popping up in major US cities how long before the Feds step in and get access to the footage in real time?
This irrational fear of government amazes me...
Originally posted by: sirjonk
are you now or have you ever been a member of the communist party?
