Tag civil liberties

Somewhere In East Germany, The Former Head Of The Stasi Weeps

i see it all

Proving once again that there is nothing that can’t be turned into a way to make a buck (or, in this case, a pound), a British company called Internet Eyes wants to launch a service where ordinary people are given access to the literally millions of CCTV feeds from all around the U.K. so that they can spend their time looking for people doing illegal things. The money is made by charging the people who own the closed-circuit cameras for this “service”, and the viewers are incented by a monthly £1000 prize given to the person who spots the most actual crimes being committed.

The U.K. winds hands-down for the sheer number of CCTV cameras installed all around the country, with the largest concentration being in London. You see a lot of different numbers bandied about, since there is no real accounting of them, but the consensus is that there are about 4.2 million cameras nationwide, and about 1.5 million of those in London alone. However, it turns out that the cameras do virtually nothing to prevent crime: of those 1.5 million cameras, about 10,000 are official police cameras, but a 2007 report showed that the rate of unsolved crimes in London hovered around 80% and that the cameras were not utilized in either preventing crime or solving cases.

This article in the September issue of Washington Monthly takes an in-depth look at the issue of CCTV monitoring in Britain. The author, Jamie Malanowski, found that the police look at the cameras less as a crime-fighting tool and more as yet another form of security theater — people, they say, are put at ease by the thought of the cameras watching over them, and that is more important than actually, you know, catching criminals and stuff. I think Malanowski too readily dismisses the potential for significant abuse with the argument that there’s no centralization of all these surveillance systems at the moment, because along comes this company who demonstrates EXACTLY how they can all be linked up through their business model, and even offers to “crowdsource” the necessary manpower to create a much more active and coordinated surveillance. Further, the recent revelation that CCTV cameras are being installed inside the homes of people who have been tagged with ASBOs seem to indicate a greater willingness on the part of local governments to use the threat of surveillance as a tool for manipulating behavior.

Jumping back over to our side of the pond, it turns out that the American city with the largest installation of CCTV cameras is Chicago. The Chicago Police have 1500 cameras, which is a drop in the bucket compared to London, but the linked article cites a U of I professor who says that the overall network of cameras is more like 15,000, which puts Chicago just about on par with London. Unlike Scotland Yard, however, the Chicago Police have a much more active program called (quite ominously) Operation Virtual Shield, and they claim that the network has “aided in thousands of arrests” (quote from WSJ article attributed to an unnamed, but official, Chicago Police spokesperson).

You can see where this is going. If the Internet Eyes program is the least bit successful in Britain, how long will it take for some Web 2.0 entrepreneur with a wad of VC cash to launch a similar thing in this country? And how easy would it be for a cash-strapped municipality like Chicago to turn over their surveillance system to a private enterprise? Now imagine the next phase, where the startup decides that they can take this to the next level by offering bigger and bigger cash prizes, and maybe even launching some viral marketing to promote the idea. Maybe even, say, staging bogus crimes to demonstrate the “effectiveness” of the service. Now, let’s say that really catches on big, and a year down the line a television or cable network buys in and starts producing a TV show featuring how ordinary people sitting at home are winning big money and “solving crimes”. How long do you think it would take before there was a CCTV camera in every imaginable corner of the United States, each one being watched ALL DAY by some teabagger-type self-proclaimed “vigilante” ratting out anyone and everyone he doesn’t like?

I give it about two years before that’s exactly what starts happening, just in time for the Republicans to pick it up and run with it as a “law-and-order” issue in the 2012 elections. And President Palin will be ALL OVER that shit, you betcha.

How To Create Terror

bobby

You could strap a belt full of sticks of C4 and a detonator on your waist and blow yourself up on a crowded bus. Or, you could do what the London Metro Police have done: under the rubric of the so-called “Section 44″ anti-terror law, London police stopped and searched more than 170,000 people in 2008. Of those 170,000 stopped, only 65 were actually arrested under suspicion of terrorist activities. However, apparently nobody at New Scotland Yard, the Ministry of Justice, or the Home Office was able or willing to say if any of those 65 arrests resulted in convictions, which almost assuredly means that NONE of those 65 people were convicted of being terrorists.

A couple of years ago, I ranted a bit about the random bag searches that the MBTA police were conducting as an “anti-terrorism” measure, and what I said about the T cops then applies to the London police now. By abusing their powers for the sake of creating a good show of things, or by misapplying the law as a catch-all to deal with any situation that doesn’t neatly fit into a category of actual crime, not only do the London police diminish the value of actually looking for real terrorists, they are creating their own version of terror through the intimidation of the general public. The people of the U.K. do not have the same broad set of constituional protections of civil liberties that we have in the U.S. in the first place, and modern Britain seems particularly fond of an astonishingly high degree of state coercion in the lives of its citizens, from “ASBO” laws to the vast network of CCTV cameras constantly surveilling the public and now to capricious application of broadly-drawn “anti-terror” laws. About the only thing America still has over Britian in the brutality and opression race is throwing more people in prison.

During the 2008 election season, much of the overblown adoration for Barack Obama came from an assumption that immediately upon assuming office he would sweep away all the encroachments on American civil liberties that Bush (whom my daughter has dubbed “George Asscrack Bush”) and Cheney shoved through the Justice Department under the guise of “anti-terror” policy. As Glenn Greenwald pointed out in a recent Salon article, though, BarryO hasn’t exactly been in all that much hurry to undo things, and has even maintained the previous administration’s assertions for things like wiretapping anyone and everyone. That change we were supposed to believe in still hasn’t found its way off the campaign trail, I guess. What this particular bit of news out of London does, though, is act as a reminder on a couple of levels: first, it reminds us that our own civil liberties are not nearly as curtailed as they could be, which is a good thing. Second, it reminds us that the path from freedom-loving society to ham-fisted police state is a short one with only a few easily-abused justifications, and that even a velvet-covered fist is still a fist. Third, it should scare us all senseless that the transfer of power out of the hands of people committed to abusing it into the hands of people who promised to end that abuse not only hasn’t taken place but that the new administration seems to want to hang on to some of those powers. If you’re a nerd, let me give you the metaphor of Luke Skywalker and his robotic hand and his eventual temptation by the Emperor to destroy Darth Vader as the final push to the Dark Side. Even if you’re not a nerd, I’ll leave you with that thought and the suggestion that Britain is Anakin Skywalker.

whoever-lays-his-hand-on-me

A Very SEXY Terrorist

Did you know that Eliot Spitzer and his $5000/hour “date” were threats to Our Father..um..Homeland?

This Newsweek story details how the FBI used the provisions of the PATRIOT Act to demand transaction records from banks so that they could look for “suspicious” activities. The FBI did this to the tune of 1.23 MILLION times last year, and the banks, quivering in fear of facing stiff penalties for not complying, bent over like a Republican senator in an airport bathroom. Not a one of those activity reports turned up any terrorist activity, but one DID turn up Spitzer’s shuffling around of cash to cover his visits to “Kristen”, and the FBI had themselves a sweet little investigation fall right into their laps.

Or did they?

This piece on the political news website In These Times asks how is it that only Spitzer’s dalliances merited an investigation. In fact, the article points out, the Justice Department actually went out of its way to cover up parts of the infamous “DC Madam” scandal, including a list of well-connected Washington clientele and 10 years’ worth of documented phone records. And the questions continue to linger as to why Palfrey’s attorney didn’t call Republican senator David Vitter to the stand in what was all but guaranteed to be a political tidal wave of bad news.

In These Times editor Joel Bleifuss, who wrote the piece, doesn’t really wonder about any of this at all. The Bush Justice Department, he points out, goes after Democratic politicians FIVE TIMES more often than Republican politicians through the so-called “Public Integrity Section”. Former Alabama Governor Don Siegelman could probably tell you a little about that, too.

The FBI’s own internal audit admits to at least 1000 cases where the PATRIOT Act was used in violation of its actual intent, and who knows what the real number of violations is. Not unlike the majority of the million-plus banking transaction reports, there’s a pretty high probablity that the FBI simply used this power to troll for information and most often came up with nothing. While nobody will argue that Spitzer wasn’t actually guilty of his inappropriate and illegal behavior, did the FBI have any credible suspicion that he or the call girl represented a danger to public safety? Or did his stupidity and lust simply play into the hands of a political juggernaut in the White House which saw an opportunity to knock out an adversary?

You Know How Those Jews Are

I don’t know if you caught wind of this news story a couple of weeks ago, but a Florida state legislator wants to add this license plate design to the 109 specialty plates already available to Florida drivers. (No, really, I counted them) He also has several other similarly religious-themed choices he’d like to add.

As you would expect, there’s some opposition from some obvious parties, like the ACLU. They argue that a plate design like this means that the state might be compelled to make the same offer available to virtually any group, including hate groups like the Ku Klux Klan, and that might be a slippery slope they don’t want to find themselves on.

A similar agrument is being made by State Rep. Kelly Skidmore of Boca Raton, who says that as a Catholic she doesn’t want to see these plates approved because then the Jews might want them, too. How charming. This is the second time in just a few weeks where some Democratic state legislator has put her foot firmly in her mouth in the name of religious bigotry. Just goes to show that the Republicans don’t have a lock on stupidity and hate, I guess.

P.Z. Myers weighed in on this yesterday, pointing out that not only is this a case of the Christians expecting special treatment as “THE Only Religion”, but also asking how much flak do we think this would have caused if an atheist group had petitioned for an “I DON’T Believe” plate.

When enough people share a delusion, it loses its status as a psychosis and gets a religious tax exemption instead. – Ronald de Sousa

All Original Content Copyright © BrianKaneOnline
All Other Content Copyright © Its Original Authors

Built on Notes Blog Core
Powered by WordPress