In our Brave New World, whereas the government grants itself carte blanche to surveil its subjects โ often in defiance of basic Fourth Amendment protections โ its subjects will no longer be permitted to surveil, in precisely the same way, even property they theoretically own โ because racism.
โCameras for me, but not for theeโ: the ethos of the parasitical ruling class.
As I covered earlier today elsewhere, the diverse mayor of Charlotte, Vi Lyles, lavished praise on her media โpartnersโ that declined to show the damning image of the public transit stabbing of a defenseless 23-year-old woman from behind by a gargantuan African-American goon with 14 prior arrests for violent crime.
Her excuse for her censorship advocacy, of course, was โrespect for Irynaโs family.โ
But one look at the still image of the knife in the hands of the thug, waiting to be plunged into the girlโs throat, and we all know the true motivation.
Related: BLMers Launch GoFundMe For Subway Stabber, Charlotte Mayor Urges Video Censorship
As reported by CHCH-TV, a Canadian man recently received an order from the city of Hamilton to remove a series of private cameras on his property, mounted to thwart criminality.
Via CHCH-TV (emphasis added):
โA local Hamilton man has been ordered by the city to take down his security cameras that he has on the outside of his house, despite his claim that his footage has been useful in crime investigations.
Dan Myles says he has 10 security cameras outside his home on MacNab Street North in downtown Hamilton, and he says he needs them.
โBecause we had a lot of break and enters into our home and homes around us,โ said Myles.
Myles has posted videos of break-ins online.
He also says police have asked him for his videos over the years to help with investigations.
CHCH News reached out to Hamilton police, and they say they canโt confirm the use of Mylesโ videos, but said they often work with homeowners, businesses and drivers to get footageโฆ
But last week, Myles received an order to comply with the City of Hamiltonโs fortification by-law, which asked him to remove his cameras.
The by-law says homeowners are not permitted to view or listen beyond the perimeters of their own property.
โI got a notice from by-law and I thought โhow could this beโ,โ said Myles. โEverybody has Ring doorbells pointed at the street, and my neighbours have cameras pointed at my house, and we all point cameras at each other.โโ
In this case, the city offered no explanation for the order.
However, Canadian state media has decried the general racism allegedly promulgated by recording minorities committing crime.
Viaย CBCย (emphasis added):
โThe Ring doorbell camera is sold as a great way to monitor whoโs at the door, whether you’re home or not. But preying on consumersโ fears of having their package deliveries stolen, or worse, is having far-reaching impacts on communities and policing practices around the world.
Director Brett Gaylor meets community activists in Skid Row, Los Angeles, where law enforcement has partnered with Amazonโs Ring, with some unintended consequences. On a map, obtained from the police, the activists notice that โhot spots’ where police predict crimes will occur is based on usersโ โreports of suspicisionโ are often not found in the heart of Skid Row, but on the outskirts, where gentrifying communities live closest totheir less fortunate, often non-white neighbours. โThe map was really a gate,โ says Pete White of the StopLAPD Spying Coalition, โ(it) wasnโt (for) the protection of people inside Skid Row, it was making sure that the people inside Skid Row were unable to travel outside of its boundaries.โโ
Related:ย Denver Councilwoman Floats Whites-Only Business Tax
Similarly, an app relying on Ring footage called Neighbors, which allows citizens to share intel on crimes committed in their neighborhoods, is allegedly racist because they catch DEI people acting anti-socially, which โreflects people’s biases about marginalized peopleโ and which obviously cannot be allowed.
Viaย CBSย (emphasis added):
โIn May 2019, the El Monte Police Department in California began a partnership with Ring, the Amazon-owned company best known for its motion sensor video doorbells and home security cameras. Ring cameras can be linked to its crime-sharing social media app called Neighbors. Police Chief David Reynoso explained, “If someone has a Ring camera, they download the software and then they choose to be part of the El Monte Police Department Neighbors Portal, then not only can the police department see it, but every other neighbor who’s part of that portal gets to see it also.”
The Neighbors Portal is an extension of the Neighbors app that allows police officers to view and comment on public posts as verified law enforcement. Police departments can share information about crime and safety events. They can also ask for help on active investigations by creating a so-called “geofence” around a crime location and requesting video footage captured on home security cameras filmed at specific timesโฆ
But for many, the growing popularity of these digitized versions of neighborhood watch programs is cause for alarm.
In 2019, Motherboard individually reviewed more than 100 user-submitted posts in the Neighbors app over two months in the New York City area. They found that the majority of people reported as “suspicious” were people of color. Nextdoor, an app originally meant for communication between neighbors, also had its share of controversies with complaints about racial profiling by some using the app.
“These apps are dangerous because they not only reflect people’s biases about marginalized people, but these apps legitimize that bias as an effective guide for addressing crime,” wrote Myaisha Hayes, campaign director at Media Justice, a civil rights organization focused on equity in the digital age.
Hayes warns these apps are digitizing the same type of racial profiling associated with traditional neighborhood watch programs. “We know, given the murder of Trayvon Martin, that this bias can have life-threatening consequences for Black and brown people who may be passing through your neighborhood,” she wrote in a statement to CBS News.โ