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Originally posted by Nspekta
Originally posted by THE_PROFESSIONAL
They will be used to intervene at some point with some 'critical' domestic crime,
Great post! Thx!
Well for what it is worth a drone has already been used against an American that claimed to be a Sovereign Citizen. Seems he had someone else's cow.....
Granted it was not used to kill him but that application will not be far off......
I am tired of swimming up river and will be looking to leave this country as soon as possible.
This is just the beginning. Drones will be flying around surveilling you and gathering private information, all illegaly and against the constitution.
Originally posted by SavedOne
reply to post by Nspekta
This is just the beginning. Drones will be flying around surveilling you and gathering private information, all illegaly and against the constitution.
Everyone seems to be so paranoid about being watched by drones and cameras mounted to light poles and such, like someone is constantly watching them. I don't think anyone stops to think about the logistics of that though. Think about it, how can every single person be watched every minute of every day? It would take one dedicated person for every person being watched, and 99.9% of the time they would be so completely bored about what they saw that they wouldn't be effective enough to report on the 0.1% that might be noteworthy to the authorities. Frankly I find all this paranoia amusing, much as you want to believe otherwise, your life is boring and no one has any desire whatsoever to watch your every move
The Panopticon is a type of institutional building designed by English philosopher and social theorist Jeremy Bentham in the late eighteenth century. The concept of the design is to allow an observer to observe (-opticon) all (pan-) inmates of an institution without them being able to tell whether or not they are being watched.
The Age Of Drones: Military May Share Domestic Surveillance Data With Police According To An Intelligence Report
Source
LOS ANGELES (KNX 1070 NEWSRADIO) — As the Federal Aviation Administration helps usher in an age of drones for U.S. law enforcement agencies, the use of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV’s) domestically by the U.S. military — and the sharing of collected data with police agencies — is raising its own concerns about possible violations of privacy and Constitutional law, according to drone critics.
A non-classified U.S. Air Force intelligence report obtained by KNX 1070 NEWSRADIO dated April 23, 2012, is helping fuel concern that video and other data inadvertently captured by Air Force drones already flying through some U.S. airspace, might end up in the hands of federal or local law enforcement, doing an end-run around normal procedures requiring police to obtain court issued warrants
Originally posted by Nspekta
reply to post by Asktheanimals
Great, thanks for adding that! I'll hafta wait till im done work to watch it though
Also found this today regarding the U.S. Military discussing the possible sharing of domestic data with police forces within the states. So, not only are they going to surveil you illegaly, but they will be sharing that data with other organizations to use against you, illegally!
The Age Of Drones: Military May Share Domestic Surveillance Data With Police According To An Intelligence Report
Source
LOS ANGELES (KNX 1070 NEWSRADIO) — As the Federal Aviation Administration helps usher in an age of drones for U.S. law enforcement agencies, the use of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV’s) domestically by the U.S. military — and the sharing of collected data with police agencies — is raising its own concerns about possible violations of privacy and Constitutional law, according to drone critics.
A non-classified U.S. Air Force intelligence report obtained by KNX 1070 NEWSRADIO dated April 23, 2012, is helping fuel concern that video and other data inadvertently captured by Air Force drones already flying through some U.S. airspace, might end up in the hands of federal or local law enforcement, doing an end-run around normal procedures requiring police to obtain court issued warrants