Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Cameras in Cars is Just Another Indicator of Tyranny

America, if you let this one go through, you deserve what you are going to get.

Come on guys. This isn't about government "helping" you.

Powerful people are tempted beyond their ability to restrain themselves. This is the structure of tyranny shaping up all around you.

God destroyed the Tower of Babylon and gave us diverse languages because humans can't handle positions of obscene power consolidation.

This won't end well. No historical or spiritual or logical reference point can argue that this is a good thing. Naked body scanners, RFID chips, global currency, gene splicing and ownership of life as property, wars of terror, bailing out the bankers with trillions ... isn't this all just part of the same eerie trend towards consolidation of power away from the 99% and towards the 1%.



Are we going to rely on the 1% to "help" us when they own the whole world? This is really silly.

A man on the moon looking at us reading the mainstream media would have a decade long belly laugh at how stupid we are to accept this "help" from the bankers and globalist elites. With "help" like that, who needs slavery?

- Tate Ulsaker

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Proposed Law Would Put Video Cameras In CarsPosted by Swtnlovabl on August 10, 2010 at 10:16pm


View Swtnlovabl's blog

.SACRAMENTO (CBS13) ―

Lawmakers are considering controversial new legislation this week that would allow vehicles to be equipped with dashboard cameras to record the moments leading up to accidents.

The proposed law, AB1942, would promote safer driving habits and reduce accidents by permitting video recorders to be installed on the windshield.
The bill currently allows devices to record video, audio, how fast and which direction the vehicle is traveling, a history of where your car has been, steering and brake performance and seat belt usage.

The devices would record in a continuous loop and would only save information if there is unusual vehicle motion or a crash. They could also be capable of transmitting the information to a central control center the moment of the accident.

Proponents say there are enough safety measures to avoid an invasion of privacy, but others call the proposal a huge overreach of government power.

"Having devices like that, I think infringes on our privacy," said Patricia Lewis. "We have less of that as it is."

The American Civil Liberties Union said they are not opposed to the bill, but have a number of issues they would like to see addressed, including making sure the video monitor is the property of the car owner and ensuring the technology has an on-and-off switch.

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