Are we security pigeons?

| No Comments

a Normal shot at dusk blog.JPG
photo by Gary D. Brune copyright (c) 2008

it crossed the New York Times silicon this morning that they have a new security program under the headline of "City Would Photograph Every Vehicle Entering Manhattan and Sniff Out Radioactivity". Project Sentinel will install over 3,000 public and private security cameras to keep track of traffic in the moneyed section of New York City, Manhattan.

This isn't any different from the new camera badges approved for Paradise Police. While the official excuse for both is Homeland Security, which will satisfy most of the pigeons out there, the real reason these measures exist is to collect information and intimidate the citizenry. As long as the powers that be can keep the masses at arms length from the classes, they can exploit the masses without worry.

I've already written on this as all of the technology used here, until directly challenged in the United States Supreme Court, has in effect obsoleted the Constitution of the United States. When did security become one of the Bill of Rights, or for that matter its need become part of the Constitution? Is life more important than honor?

Or more likely, is all this a means to keep the people in control so that any possible objection to what they want to do will be flagged for early warning so that they can do something about it without difficulty, or without serious consequence to the uber-rich?

Pigeons in debate blog.jpg

One of my jpgmag correspondents calls pigeons rats with wings. but as this picture shows, even they have concerns. Well, if the shoe fits...


Leave a comment


Type the characters you see in the picture above.



Gary D. Brune

About Me: Let's rake it up.

Advertisement


Tag Cloud

More NorCalBlog Entries

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Gary D. Brune published on August 18, 2008 2:19 PM.

Another Smart car spotted in Paradise was the previous entry in this blog.

New buses with balconies hit Paradise is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.