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Politics : Sharks in the Septic Tank -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: jlallen who wrote (44282)2/18/2002 1:54:36 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 82486
 
NYTIMES



February 18, 2002

The Great Unwatched

By WILLIAM SAFIRE

WASHINGTON -- Stipulated: The
protection of our capital, its
monuments and centers of authority, is a
vital national interest.

Early in our history, when faced with a
potential rebellion of unpaid officers, one of
our leaders employed an uncharacteristic
emotional trick — pretending to be going blind — to appeal to the infuriated
military men not to march on the capital. He soon had them in tears and in
hand.

In another time, another leader risked all by turning the capital's defense over
to the man most opposed to his political aims, gambling that he could later
overcome the nation's gratitude to a man on horseback.

In our time, after the Pentagon was hit, the White House targeted and the
Capitol anthraxed, D.C. again saw itself besieged. But now, in terror of an
external threat, our leaders are protecting our capital at the cost of every
American's personal freedom.

Surveillance is in the saddle. Responding to the latest Justice Department
terror alert, Washington police opened the Joint Operation Command
Center of the Synchronized Operations Command Complex (S.O.C.C.). In
it, 50 officials monitor a wall of 40 video screens showing images of
travelers, drivers, residents and pedestrians.

These used to be the Great Unwatched, free people conducting their private
lives; now they are under close surveillance by hundreds of hidden cameras.
A zoom lens enables the watchers to focus on the face of a tourist walking
toward the Washington Monument or Lincoln Memorial.

The monitoring system is already linked to 200 cameras in public schools.
The watchers plan to expand soon with an equal number in the subways and
parks. A private firm profits by photographing cars running red lights; those
images will also join the surveillance network.

Private cameras in banks and the lobbies and elevators of apartment
buildings and hotels will join the system, and residents of nursing homes and
hospitals can look forward to an electronic eye in every room. A commercial
camera atop a department store in Georgetown catches the faces of
shoppers entering malls, to be plugged into omnipresent S.O.C.C.

Digital images of the captured faces can be flashed around the world in an
instant on the Internet. Married to face-recognition technology and tied in to
public and private agencies around the world, an electronic library of
hundreds of millions of faces will be created. Terrorists and criminals — as
well as unhappy spouses, runaway teens, hermits and other law-abiding
people who want to drop out of society for a while — will have no way to
get a fresh start.

Is this the kind of world we want? The promise is greater safety; the tradeoff
is government control of individual lives. Personal security may or may not be
enhanced by this all-seeing eye and ear, but personal freedom will surely be
sharply curtailed. To be watched at all times, especially when doing nothing
seriously wrong, is to be afflicted with a creepy feeling. That is what is felt by
a convict in an always- lighted cell. It is the pervasive, inescapable feeling of
being unfree.

As the law now stands, there is no privacy in public places; that's why sports
stadiums are called "Snooper Bowls." A whisper to your spouse on your
front porch is the public's business, say the courts; and on that intrusive
analogy, long-range microphones may soon be allowed to pick up voice
vibrations on windowpanes.

When your government, employer, landlord, merchant, banker and local
sports team gang up to picture, digitize and permanently record your every
activity, you are placed under unprecedented control. This is not some
alarmist Orwellian scenario; it is here, now, financed by $20 billion last year
and $15 billion more this year of federal money appropriated out of sheer
fear.

By creating the means to monitor 300 million visits to the U.S. yearly, this
administration and a supine opposition are building a system capable of
identifying, tracking and spying on 300 million Americans. So far, the
reaction has been a most un-American docility.

It's Presidents' Day. To save the capital and thus the nation, the leader who
manipulated his rebellious officers with an emotional pretense of incipient
blindness was George Washington, and the one who risked creating a
Caesar out of a necessary general was Abraham Lincoln. Neither would
sacrifice our freedom to protect his monument.

CC



To: jlallen who wrote (44282)2/18/2002 5:21:28 PM
From: Neocon  Respond to of 82486
 
I understand....Back from shopping for glasses. My first pair will be ready tomorrow. I am now on the downside of the hill.....LOL!