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Paging George Orwell: Watch LA Mayor Announce Spy Program to Threaten Open Businesses During COVID-19 Scare
This Wuhan virus scare is unleashing any number of politician's inner fascist. This is a most worrisome development.
ZitatCalifornia is bracing for its turn as the nation's hotspot for the COVID-19 outbreak and the state's leaders are flexing their statist muscles with all manner of edicts, spy programs, and threats of prosecution.
The state is currently in shut-down mode, with only "essential businesses" open and people ordered to socially distance from other possible germ carriers. Restaurants can serve only take-out orders, grocery stores require people to line up outside until the crowds thin out inside. In the beach communities, "outsiders" are being told to stay out. Hiking trails, parks and even the beaches – the open-air beaches – are closed. In the City of Laguna Beach, where drones are forbidden for you to use in public, cops are using drones to monitor whether scofflaws have hit the beaches and if people are keeping a socially acceptable distances from others. So ingrained are these admonitions that if you're seen walking in a group, citizens will think nothing of calling the cops.
[Note: Laguna Beach is in Orange, not LA county. Principle is the same though.]
Up the freeway in LA County, people there are currently in a state of confusion about what is an essential business and what's not. The Los Angeles County Sheriff singlehandedly decided this week that he would start shutting down all gun stores because he didn't trust new gun owners. No, really, that was his reason. Besides getting blowback from Second Amendment supporters, he got word from the county's counsel that gun stores were never listed as "non-essential," so the sheriff backed off. For now.
If all this isn't Orwellian enough for you, the Los Angeles mayor, Eric Garcetti, is now openly threatening businesses open during the COVID-19 scare with what is tantamount to a spy program.
Things are getting downright weird.
In an update on Wednesday evening, the LA Mayor said open businesses will be "facing misdemeanor charge [sic]." Mind you, this is in the same county where the sheriff has been freeing prisoners and urging cops not to arrest anyone on a crime for which the bail is more than $50,000. He's just let 1,700 people out of jail. You know, for our health and everything.
But now the mayor, whose city cops use the jails, is threatening to be a tough guy on people running businesses who may be confused if they're essential businesses. Garcetti isn't saying which businesses he's talking about, but warned Wednesday, "You know who you are. You need to stop it. This is your chance to step up and to shut it down because if you don't we will shut you down."
That's tough talk from a guy dubbed Mayor Yoga Pants by local radio hosts.
But here came Garcetti's follow up:
"If we see continued non compliance [business owners will] end up facing misdemeanor charge [sic] and DWP [Department of Water and Power] will shut off their water and power." [emphasis added in original]
What may be the worst part of his plan, however, is Garcetti's stasi-like group of prosecutors who would walk precincts in search of scofflaw businesses. No doubt they'll be glad to take your complaint.
What may be the worst part of his plan, however, is Garcetti's stasi-like group of prosecutors who would walk precincts in search of scofflaw businesses. No doubt they'll be glad to take your complaint.
Garcetti calls this group of business-busters "The Safer at Home Business Ambassadors Program." Apparently the City of Los Angeles Double-Speak Department is working overtime at City Hall.
A scary part of the whole Wuhan virus thing is the opportunity for explosion of surveillance, expansion of petty tyranny, and suppression of free speech.
Snowden: AI Plus Coronavirus Is ‘Turnkey To Tyranny’ Posted By: Thomas Macaulay via TNW March 27, 2020
ZitatTechnocrat-minded surveillance companies are ‘in the zone’ with governments more willing than ever to buy their AI and surveillance technologies. Once embedded into society, they will be used against citizens long after the coronavirus has subsided. ⁃ TN Editor
Governments around the world are using high-tech surveillance measures to combat the coronavirus outbreak. But are they worth it?
Edward Snowden doesn’t think so.
The former CIA contractor, whose leaks exposed the scale of spying programs in the US, warns that once this tech is taken out of the box, it will be hard to put it back.
“When we see emergency measures passed, particularly today, they tend to be sticky,” Snowden said in an interview with the Copenhagen International Documentary Film Festival.
The emergency tends to be expanded. Then the authorities become comfortable with some new power. They start to like it.
Supporters of the draconian measures argue that normal rules are not enough during a pandemic and that the long-term risks can be addressed once the outbreak is contained. But a brief suspension of civil liberties can quickly be extended.
Security services will soon find new uses for the tech. And when the crisis passes, governments can impose new laws that make the emergency rules permanent and exploit them to crack down on dissent and political opposition.
Take the proposals to monitor the outbreak by tracking mobile phone location data.
This could prove a powerful method of tracing the spread of the virus and the movements of people who have it. But it will also be a tempting tool to track terrorists — or any other potential enemies of the states. AI becoming ‘turnkey to tyranny’
Artificial intelligence has become a particularly popular way of monitoring life under the pandemic. In China, thermal scanners installed at train stations identify patients with fevers, while in Russia, facial recognition systems spot people breaking quarantine rules.
The coronavirus has even given Clearview AI a chance to repair its reputation. The controversial social media-scraping startup is in talks with governments about using its tech to track infected patients, according to the Wall Street Journal.
A big attraction of AI is its efficiency by assigning probabilities to different groups of people. But too much efficiency can be a threat to freedom, which is why we limit police powers through measures such as warrants and probable cause for arrest.
The alternative is algorithmic policing that justifies excessive force and perpetuates racial profiling.
Snowden is especially concerned about security services adding AI to all the other surveillance tech they have.
“They already know what you’re looking at on the internet,” he said. “They already know where your phone is moving. Now they know what your heart rate is, what your pulse is. What happens when they start to mix these and apply artificial intelligence to it?
ZitatThe former CIA contractor, whose leaks exposed the scale of spying programs in the US, warns that once this tech is taken out of the box, it will be hard to put it back.
Precisely. The Wuhan virus can be seen as a test run.
ZitatThe former CIA contractor, whose leaks exposed the scale of spying programs in the US, warns that once this tech is taken out of the box, it will be hard to put it back.
Precisely. The Wuhan virus can be seen as a test run.
You are not the only one to have considered that.
Illegitimi non Carborundum
During times of universal deceit, telling the truth becomes a revolutionary act.- Orwell
The further a society drifts from the truth, the more it will hate those who speak it - Orwell