Saturday, December 20, 2025

TINY PITTER PATTER OF THE POLICE STATE'S LITTLE FEET

 So another lunatic killed some innocents in a classroom at a formerly elite college and I could swear the sphere lit up with demands to know why the police were taking so long identifying the culprit because, and I quote, "THERE'S 800 CAMERAS AT THAT HELLHOLE!!!! WHY IS IT TAKING SO LONG TO IDENTIFY THE SHOOTER?" and I'd just like to associate myself with the rest of us here who really don't want to live in a police state that uses facial recognition and license plate scanners 100% of the time all day, every day and every single night to keep a benevolent eye on us. 

Let's try to limit the powers of the state, hhhmmm? 

 

5 comments:

KurtP said...

Brown had cameras, but they were shut down to give anonymity to palestinian rioters and Brown shirts.

Anonymous said...

You should know better than to criticize the police state. It's for the children....

ruralcounsel said...

Private university can do what they want, just like you in your own home. Not the state and public areas.

HMS Defiant said...

Oh it wasn't a complaint directed at Brown, it was at the citizens we have who demand that the police have the ability to do total surveillance 24/7 without any hint that any crime has been committed. What happens when the AI fake video starts getting used to convict innocent people who simply didn't have the alibi to detail their exact whereabouts 32 years ago?
I've long since reached the point where I'd be reluctant to accept any witness from the FBI on any technology solution to the crime. It is clear to me now that people just make stuff up and even when caught, never get punished.

Michael said...

AI is getting to be a real problem with "Crime Solving". Just as HMS said about folks (even Police *&^%$#@) just making stuff up the powers of AI can indeed make it look that Michael was the perpetrator of this or that heinous crime.

Unless Michael could prove he was in jail at the time or such, that's a problem.

"Show me the man, and I'll show you the crime" is attributed to Lavrentiy Beria, the head of the Soviet secret police under Stalin, reflecting the abuse of power in totalitarian regimes.

Stalin would have LOVED our surveillance systems, even be more impressed we pay for our own personal cellphone state listening system.

Bad moon rising for freedom vs security state aka totalitarism.