View Full Forums : Automatic Scanning Of Every License Plate


Swiftfox
01-16-2007, 06:45 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VvsvPz03VXc&eurl=

And people wonder why I'm paranoid. Yeah, I can see the benefits. And I'm not hiding anything, currently, but what if I accidentally forget to pay my insurance a couple days late. Now a cop is banging on my door, to ensure that not only do I have a pending insurance bill but a fine on top of it. Next thing it will be you have an unpaid parking ticket from there the officer deems you should be subject to a drug search. You don't have any but your right protecting you from unreasonable search has been tread on. Maybe you were smoking with your kid in the car, here, have another fine. Looks like a way to tighten the chains to me.

FROM A READER....

Once again a predatory police state society is being created. Police policing everyone now? Searching Everyone will be the norm. What's the purpose for this? Mega income generation from catching everyone who has expired tags and or plates??

Of course they will be highlighting the car involved in the robbery, etc to get the public to support there own enslavement.

As the officer said in the short video: "ALPR is going to revolutionize the way we police in North America."
Notice he didn't say United States, but North America - yes my friends the North American Union where the Constitution will be shredded for a Treaty which is illegal and the American people don't have a clue.

Is this what will become of the "Land of the Free, Home of the Brave?"

And while this is being developed so is the use of:
1. Camera surveillance everywhere
2. RFID Tracker chips in cars
3. RFID tracking chips in things you buy at the store
4. Biometric ID cards which will become law in every state come 2008 which will contain all your biometric data, financial info including your credit and banking, your medical data, criminal record if any, education, and travel behaviors - if you do not have this card you will not be able to drive or travel and eventually will not be able to buy or sell or work
5. Ground penetrating radar that can see through walls for law enforcement
6. Wiretapping all phones including cell technology using extensive keyword software
7. Bio and body scans at all airports, train stations, malls, etc
8. Eventual implantable micro-chips for tracking all people, buying patterns and travel patterns.

This is a cage, a prison being erected around us and sold as security. It is a huge Lie!
Of course there will be those feeble minded zombies who have bought into the propaganda that "this is all good and you shouldn't have a problem as long as you have nothing to hide!"
This is blasphemy to our nation's founding principles and the honor of our founders who fought tyranny and control.
We are throwing it all away in a little over 200 years since our independence was fought for by far braver men then we have today.
All of this technology will be used for control and tyranny as it always has. It is sickening and it is totally unconscionable, yet it is being erected all around us. The American people are cheering it on and those that work in these industries are selling out their neighbors and country to this predatory police state.



Doctor alleges plans underway to "Microchip" Newborns in U.S. and Europe (http://www.agoracosmopolitan.com/home/Frontpage/2007/01/08/01290.html)

Are you prepared to live in a world in which every newborn baby is micro-chipped? And finally are you ready to have your every move tracked, recorded and placed in Big Brother's data bank? According to the Finnish article, distributed to doctors and medical students, time is running out for changing the direction of military medicine and mind control technology, ensuring the future of human freedom.

Historian 'pinned to ground by US police and beaten for jaywalking' (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml;jsessionid=RBFS5JC2PRHEZQFIQMGCFF4AVCBQ UIV0?xml=/news/2007/01/11/nhistorian11.xml)


A distinguished British historian claims he was knocked to the ground by an American policeman before being arrested and spending eight hours in jail — because he crossed the road in the wrong place.

Felipe Fernandez-Armesto said he had been the victim of "terrible, terrible violence" after he inadvertently committed the offence of "jaywalking" in Atlanta, Georgia, last week and failed to realise the man telling him to stop was an officer.

At this rate an unpaid parking ticket might have you on the ground with a gun to your head, much like my friend had after not noticing an unmarked police car behind his rig.

cladari
01-16-2007, 08:34 PM
I am looking foward to all products be fitted with an RFID, will save me a lot of time deciding which house to break into, I can just cruise the area and up it pops on my laptop. I'll even be able to tell if the owner is armed !

Or sitting in my car scanning the sidewalk, "hey bubba, that one has a Rolex, lets roll".

Can't wait......

Cladari

Tudamorf
01-16-2007, 09:32 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VvsvPz03VXc&eurl=So? It's just a technological convenience to allow cops to do what they're already allowed to do.

Your objection, that it will now be harder to get away with violating the law, is ridiculous. No one should be getting away with it in the first place.Doctor alleges plans underway to "Microchip" Newborns in U.S. and Europe (http://www.agoracosmopolitan.com/home/Frontpage/2007/01/08/01290.html)Who is "Dr. Kilde", and how does he know that? Is this paper the Canadian version of World Net Daily?Historian 'pinned to ground by US police and beaten for jaywalking' (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml;jsessionid=RBFS5JC2PRHEZQFIQMGCFF4AVCBQ UIV0?xml=/news/2007/01/11/nhistorian11.xml)He was probably a libertarian.

Aidon
01-17-2007, 02:26 AM
So? It's just a technological convenience to allow cops to do what they're already allowed to do.

Your objection, that it will now be harder to get away with violating the law, is ridiculous. No one should be getting away with it in the first place.

I dispute this notion, entirely. There have always been, and will always be, laws of a nature so ridiculous that breaking them is perfectly acceptable. There are also situations in which a law is broken, but no harm comes about.

Just because we have a law...doesn't mean it ought to be enforced rigorously. If no one incurs a loss because of the violation, who cares if there was a violation?

Tudamorf
01-17-2007, 04:50 AM
There have always been, and will always be, laws of a nature so ridiculous that breaking them is perfectly acceptable. There are also situations in which a law is broken, but no harm comes about.Then your real complaint is that the law shouldn't exist in the first place. You shouldn't complain about overzealous enforcement, but rather overzealous legislation.

Fyyr Lu'Storm
01-17-2007, 06:01 AM
I dispute this notion, entirely. There have always been, and will always be, laws of a nature so ridiculous that breaking them is perfectly acceptable. There are also situations in which a law is broken, but no harm comes about.

Every once in a great while I still have hope for you.

Thicket Tundrabog
01-17-2007, 12:15 PM
Rightly or wrongly, this has been around for a long time.

I remember getting a speeding ticket in the mail when I lived in the Netherlands over 20 years ago. The automated speed trap took a picture of my license plate.

Panamah
01-17-2007, 12:40 PM
They do it all the time here in CA at intersections because people tend to run red lights and we've had zillions of terrible accidents due to that. They also do it on toll roads when you go throught the FastTrack lane and you don't have the RFID gizmo. It happened to me... traffic wouldn't allow me to get over to the toll booth lane and so a few days later, I got a ticket in the mail. *grump*

Aidon
01-18-2007, 11:18 AM
Then your real complaint is that the law shouldn't exist in the first place. You shouldn't complain about overzealous enforcement, but rather overzealous legislation.

The complaints can be for both.

Just as a law can be held unconstitutional on its face or by enforcement.

Crappy laws are bad enough....when the police start enforcing crappy laws, especially so they can make more money, that compounds it.