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A Computer Surveillance System Today

A Computer Surveillance System Today

The Government Uses a Computer Surveillance System to Watch Our Every Step. We Are Living in a Big Brother Police State Under Total Control by the Banking Elite.


A computer surveillance system that watches over the movements of everything and everyone: Is this how our founders imagined the United States of America?

Unfortunately, this most Orwellian of concepts is coming closer and closer to reality.

There have been numerous times in the past when the government has given reasons to monitor certain members of our society.

They have given the argument that these types of people could be a danger to members of the public or even possibly themselves.

This has then led to further and further intrusions by the federal government into other areas of our daily lives.

Originally, this sort of spying was handled by secretive government groups such as the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).

Now it has spilled over into such groups as local law enforcement agencies.

This spying would not be easily accomplished if it had to be done through the use of manpower alone.

This need for a better method of spying is what has led to the creation of a computer surveillance system.

The government itself is run by an elite shadow government.

This group of wealthy families, sometimes known as the Illuminati, have as their goal a New World Order where they have total control over all of us.




Benefits to the Government

A computer surveillance system benefits the government in many different ways.

First, the system has integrated software that can handle both facial and voice recognition. T

his allows it to recognize individuals targeted by the government. The government then sets its own definition of who are people of interest.  It could be anyone, even you.

Imagine driving through a red light and having a camera take your picture and adding it to a database of individuals with whom you have no connection whatsoever but are now grouped with.

This system can also pick up all telephone calls. As a call is routed through the digital network the numbers are picked up by a computer surveillance system.


In the Name of Safety

Phone numbers are compared to a database of suspects or people of interest and the calls can then be recorded by the computer.

This all takes place in the amount of time it takes for the phone to ring and be answered.

This is being done in the name of public safety, of course. Who holds the government accountable?

Who is to say when the surveillance of an individual would actually begin and when it would end?

With the power lying in the government’s hands it has the full capability to continue this level of spying indefinitely.

Another frightening aspect of a computer surveillance system is the growing use of RFID tracking devices.

These devices look small and harmless but are, unfortunately, just the opposite.

Radio frequency identification devices are able to transmit the location and identity of a person, animal, or object through the use of radio waves.

Unlike a standard barcode this chip can be read from remote distances, even satellites.

It is able to do so through an ID that is made up of a unique serial code tied to a descriptor that is stored within a computer system.

This computer system is the same surveillance system that is watching us all. We are never quite alone.


Lost Privacy Rights

Depending on whose hands it’s in, how are we to trust a computer surveillance system will always work for us?

RFID is becoming more and more popular due to the emphasis big business has placed upon it, which has made it more acceptable to the public.

Today this technology is used to locate missing pets, pay for gasoline at SpeedPay equipped pumps, and for speedier travel through toll booths with EZPass.

The government is suggesting this may be a great technology to use for identifying child molesters as well as other violent individuals who are being released from prison.

They are using the argument that a computer surveillance system can be used to keep up with these individuals in the event they commit a new crime.

How far will this go? Will the public be asked to implant chips to make banking easier or possibly to help rescue workers in the event of an accident or catastrophe?

Unfortunately, the government has had many years of practice at making up a number of reasonable excuses to infringe on the rights of the public.

Doing so only makes their job easier in controlling the masses with the least amount of resistance, as well as streamlining our enslavement to immeasurable debt solely to line the pockets of the banking mafia.

This may be just one more of the rights we end up losing if nothing is done: The right of privacy.





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