"If You See Something, Blog Something..."
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While the warrantless wiretap scandal continues to hog the headlines, here is a hat trick of lesser but still maddening tales of how the War on Terror is becoming the Hysteria on Terror:
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ITEM: Houston's chief of police wants to recruit more people into law enforcement, starting with your landord --
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ITEM: Another group being drafted into the War on Terror: school bus drivers --people taking pictures and drawing sketches terrorists. And as one critic of the program noted, if we turn school bus drivers into security guards, then who's next? Postal workers? Paper boys? I say again, "If you see something, say something..." is not the same as "It is now part of your job description to look for something..."
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ITEM: You've probably already seen reports of the two county-level [sic] homeland security employees in Bethesda, Maryland, who decided to declare themselves the Porn Police and raid a public library, unconstitutionally seizing a web-surfing patron in the process. "If you see something, say something..." does not mean "If you see something smutty, arrest someone..." I'll just suggest circling back and re-evaluating the first two stories against the backdrop of this one. These county-level [sic] homeland security employees are, um, homeland security employees. One would hope that they are specially trained in homeland security issues, including some basic constitutional law. Now if the bona fide "Warriors on Terror" can't stick to the playbook and limit themselves to "legitimate" surveillance activities, then why should we think that landlords and school bus drivers can and will?
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ITEM: Houston's chief of police wants to recruit more people into law enforcement, starting with your landord --
Houston's police chief Wednesday proposed placing surveillance cameras in apartment complexes, downtown streets, shopping malls and even private homes to fight crime during a shortage of police officers.MY TAKE: According to Grits for Breakfast, Hurtt is proposing that the surveillance cameras actually have a direct feed to police, although the media reports are unclear on this. I hope that's not the case. One can make an argument, although not a very libertarian argument, that simply requiring security cameras is not a significant intrusion on privacy or property rights, comparable to requiring buildings to have fire escapes. But Houston's unwillingness to pay a sufficiently high salary to recruit enough police officers (it was the shortage that prompted Hurtt's proposal) is no excuse to conscript landlords into the War on Terror. There's a big difference between "If you see something, say something..." and "We can't afford to see everything, so we're going to force you to do it..." (Via CrimProf.)
"I know a lot of people are concerned about Big Brother, but my response to that is, if you are not doing anything wrong, why should you worry about it?" Chief Harold Hurtt told reporters Wednesday at a regular briefing.
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Building permits should require malls and large apartment complexes to install surveillance cameras, Hurtt said.
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ITEM: Another group being drafted into the War on Terror: school bus drivers --
School bus drivers around the country are being trained to watch for potential terrorists, in a program financed by the Homeland Security Department. Designers of the program, called School Bus Watch, want to turn 600,000 drivers into an army of observers.MY TAKE: It seems that the best way to protect children on school buses is by having school bus drivers focusing on driving rather than watching out for
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In Virginia, bus drivers were taught how to identify and evaluate unusual activity. What drew your attention to this person in the first place? Is someone unfamiliar taking photographs or drawing sketches of the area? Is the person asking a lot of questions about the bus route?
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ITEM: You've probably already seen reports of the two county-level [sic] homeland security employees in Bethesda, Maryland, who decided to declare themselves the Porn Police and raid a public library, unconstitutionally seizing a web-surfing patron in the process. "If you see something, say something..." does not mean "If you see something smutty, arrest someone..." I'll just suggest circling back and re-evaluating the first two stories against the backdrop of this one. These county-level [sic] homeland security employees are, um, homeland security employees. One would hope that they are specially trained in homeland security issues, including some basic constitutional law. Now if the bona fide "Warriors on Terror" can't stick to the playbook and limit themselves to "legitimate" surveillance activities, then why should we think that landlords and school bus drivers can and will?
Related Posts (on one page):
- "If You See Something, Blog Something..."
- It Isn't Just About Wiretapping
Posted by Kip on
19 February 2006
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