*sigh* I wish I could post throughout the day...please bear with me
And why are you worried about a camera collecting public information? Do these cameras you're so worried about see anything you couldn't if you were sitting on top of this car? Does anyone located where these cameras can see have any expectation of privacy? In other words on a busy public street and sidewalk:
Can people force others not to take their picture?
Is it a crime to jot down the license plate of a car parked on the street?
GPS locations? Really? You have some problem with recording the physical location of a patrol car 24/7?
I am concerned because the police have no articulable reason to be conducting reconnaissance on law-abiding citizens, that's why (one of the primary differentiators between a policed state and a Police State). There is an important distinction between monitoring (CC cameras) and tracking (scanning/databasing). Aside from the fact it is wasteful, it sows distrust between police and the community, and for very little benefit (see: ongoing NSA scandals/outrage). There sure are people who can force me not to take pictures of them; the police (and state/fed workers). Also, it
is illegal to broadcast police operations to the public at large (I forget if it was a national law or a local one, but it was a case involving a phone app to let 'the crowd' report traffic cop locations, and there was another case of a man tipping off drivers ahead of a speed trap who was also forbidden from doing so). Apparently official public police duties are deserving of extra privacy ("for the protection of those being detained in public," no less, LOL). Once again, "rules for thee, not for me" is a poor way to convince me my police enforcement is deserving of respect, or authority. It teaches me to fear them, though, which as we all know is ultimately counterproductive to police goals.
Allowing police to further scrutinize and investigate you for no cause
cannot render you a benefit, and
may be used against you rightly or wrongly. There is no reward for being innocent. There is absolutely no reason to submit on this front, even if you feel that providing police with more information is helpful to them (a "pleaser"), because it is not for your benefit. It's not a conspiracy, it's just that it is not collected for your benefit but rather the officers', and therefore not something you should yield for free. You don't have to take a civil rights law class or run Game Theory to figure this out.
Yes, you are calling attention to equipment, and then implying to outright claiming they universally reveal specific mindsets. I.e. that police have some piece of equipment- armor, surveillance, automatic weapons- that reveals their mindset includes the desire to act like a rights crushing police state organization bent on genocide, political prisoners, and totalitarianism.
Okay, basic American civics here; when you present authorities with the means to power, they will seize them. When that power comes without accountability, it will tend toward abuse. Allowing police to simultaneously expand their capabilities through equipment purchases as well as their budget resources to maintain them is a recipe for abuse; can't see it ending any other way. That's not to say it happens immediately, but it is like fighting gravity or thermodynamics. It
will be easier for the police force to test their legal authority and enforcement capabilities, therefore at large the police force will inevitably do so. Making a black hole more massive will not reduce its attraction. Forget 'need' for a moment since it is distracting; for what purpose would a police force want militaristic equipment, weapons, and tactics? What would they likely tend toward given these elements?
Poster 1: "Why do the police need body armor, military-style assault rifles, and armored Humvees? Nobody needs that stuff! If they get military-style equipment, they'll start acting like soldiers!"
That SAME poster will find no cognitive dissonance in posting in another thread:
Poster 1: "Michael Bloomberg has no right to tell me what kind of rifle I need RAWR the difference between an AR-15 and a Mini-14 is only cosmetic anyway military-style assault rifle is a made-up term by rabid Communist antigunners RAAAAAAAAGE my AK-47 has never killed anybody my modern sporting rifles don't make me some frothing mercenary commando killer WHIIIINE."
Poster Me: I know
my weapons will not be used offensively against human beings. I know
my weapons were paid for with my own money. I know
my personal choices in guns have zero impact on the community at large. I know I reject the concept that anyone should be able to go about in peaceful society with militaristic regalia and weaponry without scorn, though their actions be legally permitted. And that goes double for police, who, besides being 'ordinary civilians' like the rest of us, are not paying for their kit, either.
Will you see armored Humvees on patrol in your neighborhood? I doubt it.
Well, it's already occurring, though I imagine the scale will be limited by the pervasiveness of elected sheriffs who actually have to justify their acquisitions periodically. Dallas bought some type of MRAP recently to serve warrants
Did your local PD get a surplus UH-1? So what? They'll find they don't have the funds or expertise to maintain it, and it'll become a relatively minor example of government waste and inefficiency, not the first step to the blue-helmeted jackboots going door to door asking for your papers.
Ah, the old "the government is too inept to ever become abusive" argument. Unfortunately, the more boneheaded, wasteful, incompetent an authority, the worse they are about buying jackboots (and using them). Has nothing to do with the UN, either (since they can't really supply their own jackboots at the end of the day, we have little to fear
)
I will always argue that if they can have such equipment, so can I. Police have M16's? Fine, but where's mine, without an NFA required?
Let's put aside the "NFA" part, which is a whole other dog's breakfast, and read the phrase; "as readily accessible." Non-LEO's aren't issued guns like police, we buy/own/access them, so the legal differences are great, but the practical differences not so much. Non-LEO's can't get machine guns; the legal ways to do so are so onerous and tenuous as to be a non-issue compared to a department's standard procurement/book keeping procedures that they use to obtain select fire weapons. If the local PD wants to have ready access to machine guns by buying them, I want that added power they have purchased able to be checked by the body public, which means they must be able to readily purchase the same for themselves. Otherwise, the balance of force has measurably shifted towards the authorities without oversight; a dangerous circumstance to leave unattended.
The NFA fee isn't the crucial problem, it is the ban on new fully auto guns.
If we had to pay the 200 bucks and get them - many would jump at the chance.
That's a different issue from the fee.
Very true, but 200$ was
incredibly prohibitive in 1934; several months' wages, and the same price as an expensive SMG or more. When inflation rendered the law less burdensome, our benefactors found a way...
When you rent a full auto firearm at a range, do you have to go through the NFA paperwork, and wait in line for months to get the tax stamp to use it?
Believe it or not, f/a rentals will only go up in price, since it is illegal to manufacture new SOT machineguns for the purpose of rental (many unknowingly/flagrantly do so anyway, but at the peril of the ATF)
As to if the wait time [LEO form 5 for machinegun transfer] is different, no clue.
Well, a cursory Google search turned up nothing but Form 1 & 4 wait time results, so I'm guessing the police are not significantly hindered by the regulations so burdensome to mere plebes. As usual.
I'm also pretty sure it isn't their M-16. I'm pretty sure they don't get to keep it. In most cases I'm even pretty sure they don't get to take it home.
We're not talking about what the individual policemanofficer does at home, off the clock, when he's once more "one of us," now are we?
I don't think the individual cop dictates no-knock raids or equipment purchases, either.
The UK a police state , I am not sure were you got that from. Since when was the UK a police state. ? the majority of police are not even armed. As for peaceful enough Americas murder rate is higher than most EU countries including the UK.
Perhaps "police state" is too strong a term (perhaps; a society's individual tolerance of politicized or abusive police efforts varies). My point is that the disarmed UK territories
require enhanced and omniscient/omnipresent police action precisely
because the citizenry ostensibly cannot defend itself. Similar rationale justifies the level of security in Israel. Perhaps I am wrong in my understanding that legal self-defense through violence is both unlawful and socially unacceptable in many (all?) of the UK lands. Let's not drag statistical misdirection into this philosophical discussion
Police fight the war on drugs, but politicians declared that war. Police have a responsibility to enforce the laws that our elected officials create.
And when the divided allegiance of police between their communities and their political superiors shifts too far in favor of the latter; you have a Police State (def: police used to further political interests at the expense of the public --quite arguably the case in Jim Crow South, and now the Inner City where Chiefs are solely beholden to mayors)
TCB
"On the unrelated topic- the A-10s being retired and surplused out is a Damn Shame, and one I think we will come to regret when we finally realize that the F-35 cannot do the same thing."
Oh, I'm sure we'll learn the mistake shortly after some brilliant idiot convinces us to try using them instead of attack helicopters. The Damn Shame is none of our perfected-long-ago planes can be remade, since I'll bet the FAA regs have ballooned so much in the interim to declare them "death traps" (despite the new ones
not being +40 years old
like a growing bulk of our forces' airframes)