http://theeconomiccollapseblog.com
http://albertpeia.com/surveillancegrid.htm
‘What do speed traps, parking tickets, toll
roads, speed cameras and red light cameras all have in common? They are
all major revenue sources for state and local governments. All over
America today there are state and local governments that are drowning in
debt. Many have chosen to use "traffic enforcement" as a way to
raise desperately needed revenue. According to the National Motorist
Association, issuing speeding tickets raises somewhere between 4.5 billion and
6 billion dollars in the United States each year. And the average price
of a speeding ticket just keeps going up. Today, the national average is
about $150, but in many jurisdictions it is far higher. For example, more
than 16 million traffic tickets are issued in the state of California each
year, and the average fine is approximately $250. If you are wealthy that
may not be much of a problem, but if you are a family that is barely scraping
by every month that can be a major financial setback. Meanwhile,
America's roads are also being systematically transformed into a surveillance
grid. The number of cameras watching our roads is absolutely exploding,
and automated license plate readers are capturing hundreds of millions of data
points on all of us. As you drive down the highway, a police vehicle
coming up behind you can instantly read your license plate and pull up a whole
host of information about you. This happened to me a few years ago.
I had pulled on to a very crowded highway in Virginia and within less than a
minute a cop car had scanned me and was pulling me over because one of my
stickers had expired. But these automated license plate readers are being
used for far more than just traffic enforcement now. For example,
officials in Washington D.C. are now using automated license plate readers to
track the movements of every single vehicle that enters the city. They
know when you enter Washington, and they know when you leave. So where is
all of this headed? Do we really want to live in a "Big
Brother" society where the government constantly tracks all of our
movements?
Back in the old days, the
highways of America were great examples to the rest of the world of the
tremendous liberties and freedoms that we enjoyed. Americans loved to hop
into their vehicles and take a drive. But now government is sucking all
of the fun out of driving. The control freak bureaucrats that dominate
our political system have figured out that giant piles of money can be raised
by turning our roads into revenue raising tools.
At this point things have gotten
so bad that even some police officers are admitting what is going on.
Just check out what a few of them told Car and Driver...
The
president of a state police union isn’t pretending it doesn’t happen. James
Tignanelli, president of the Police Officers Association of Michigan union,
says, “When elected officials say, ‘We need more money,’ they can’t look to the
department of public works to raise revenues, so where do they find it? Police
departments.
“A
lot of police chiefs will tell you the goal is to have nobody speeding through
their community, but heaven forbid if it should actually happen—they’d be out
of money,” Tignanelli says.
Police
Chief Michael Reaves of Utica, Michigan, says the role of law enforcement has
changed over the years. “When I first started in this job 30 years ago, police
work was never about revenue enhancement, but if you’re a chief now, you have
to look at whether your department produces revenues,” he says. “That’s just
the reality nowadays.”
And
as the economy has gone downhill, many jurisdictions have massively jacked up
traffic fines. According to the Los Angeles Times,
various traffic fines in the Los Angeles area are far higher than they once
were...
If
you're caught running a red light in Los Angeles, be prepared to shell out
$446, up from $271 eight years ago. Make a rolling right turn at a stoplight
and the ticket comes to $381 -- more than double what it cost in 2008.
And
of course the cost to the driver does not end with the ticket. Your car
insurance will likely go up as well. In fact, one study found that a
driver that just gets one speeding ticket will pay an additional 20 percent for car insurance for the
next three to six years.
That
can add up to a lot of money.
But
politicians just keep wanting to find a way to issue even more tickets.
One of the hottest trends all over the country is to automate the issuing of
traffic tickets by installing cameras. According to USA Today, this has become a huge growth
industry...
Sales
of the cameras have nearly quadrupled since companies moved to digital and
wireless technology in the mid-2000s. The number of local contracts for cameras
was up to 689 last year, from 155 in 2005, according to industry data complied
by market leader American Traffic Solutions (ATS).
And
these automated traffic cameras can raise an enormous amount of cash.
Just check out what has been happening in Washington D.C....
The
speeding and traffic light cameras have become more lucrative as their number
in the District has increased. Combined, they issued tickets valued at $24.4
million in 2007. That figure more than doubled by 2010, to $50.9 million, and
it reached $84.9 million in the last fiscal year.
But
as annoying as those traffic cameras are, automated license plate readers are
perhaps even more insidious.
The
amount of data that these automated license plate readers are capturing is
astounding. The following is from a recent article by the Electronic Frontier Foundation...
Photographing
a single license plate one time on a public city street may not seem
problematic, but when that data is put into a database, combined with other
scans of that same plate on other city streets, and stored forever, it can
become very revealing. Information about your location over time can show not
only where you live and work, but your political and religious beliefs, your
social and sexual habits, your visits to the doctor, and your associations with
others. And, according to recent research reported in Nature, it’s possible to identify 95% of
individuals with as few as four randomly selected geospatial datapoints
(location + time), making location data the ultimate biometric identifier.
Our
license plates have essentially become "our papers" which the
government can read whenever it would like without even asking for our
permission.
According
to L.A. Weekly, local police agencies in
the L.A. area have captured more than 160 million data points
on private citizens using these automated license plate readers...
L.A. Weekly
has learned that more than two dozen law enforcement agencies in Los Angeles
County are using hundreds of these "automatic license plate
recognition" devices (LPRs) — units about the size of a paperback book,
usually mounted atop police cruisers — to devour data on every car that
catches their electronic eye.
The
L.A. County Sheriff's Department and the Los Angeles Police Department are two
of the biggest gatherers of automatic license plate recognition information.
Local police agencies have logged more than 160 million data points — a massive
database of the movements of millions of drivers in Southern California.
Each
data point represents a car and its exact whereabouts at a given time. Police
have already conducted, on average, some 22 scans for every one of the
7,014,131 vehicles registered in L.A. County.
As
the use of these devices becomes more widespread and they become even more
sophisticated, eventually the government will know where almost all of us are
and what almost all of us are doing at all times.
The
following is a brief except from a Washington Post article
that detailed how automated license plate readers are now being used to create
a "dragnet" that will track the movements of all vehicles from the
time that they enter Washington D.C. to the time that they leave...
More
than 250 cameras in the District and its suburbs scan license plates in real
time, helping police pinpoint stolen cars and fleeing killers. But the program
quietly has expanded beyond what anyone had imagined even a few years ago.
With
virtually no public debate, police agencies have begun storing the information
from the cameras, building databases that document the travels of millions of
vehicles.
Nowhere
is that more prevalent than in the District, which has more than one
plate-reader per square mile, the highest concentration in the nation. Police
in the Washington suburbs have dozens of them as well, and local agencies plan
to add many more in coming months, creating a comprehensive dragnet that will
include all the approaches into the District.
This
is just the beginning.
For
now, as long as you carefully obey all traffic laws and you don't work in a
major city like Washington D.C., the changes that are happening probably do not
affect you too much.
But
the key is to see where all of this is going. Our roads are slowly but
surely being transformed into a revenue generating control grid. And this
is just yet another example of how government feels the need to constantly
watch, monitor, track and regulate everything that we do.
Does
anyone else feel like the life is slowly being choked out of our society, or am
I alone?’