Somebody’s Watchin’ Me (and you)

  Comments (...)
Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

Last week, U.S. Sen. Rand Paul stood on the floor of the U.S. Senate and spoke out in opposition to the use of drones to kill Americans without due process of law.

Regardless of your stand on much of what the Obama Administration has done over the past four-plus years, you have to admit that’s a pretty scary thought. Rarely, it seems, agencies of the federal government are willing to work together in a coordinated effort, unless of course, they are planning to trample on the rights of ordinary citizens.

It doesn’t matter if the President of the United States at the time has an “R” or a “D” behind his name, especially when it can be done in the name of “security.”

Several months ago, I issued a warning about the expanded use of drones shortly after Congress re-authorized the Patriot Act. But since then, government agencies at all levels, as well as the Department of Defense, are hard at work to ensure your rights under the Third, Fourth, Fifth, and Ninth Amendments are completely shredded.

First, we have the nearly three dozen local law enforcement agencies around the U.S. who have surveillance drones ready to go up in the air — unmanned “bears in the air,” if you will. To do so, however, each agency must receive a Certificate of Authorization from the FAA.

About one year ago, the FAA was already hard at work to “streamline the process” so law enforcement can get more “spies in the sky.” In fact, the agency already estimates there will be as many as 30,000 unmanned aircraft in the skies over the United States alone by 2020.

In the meantime, the latest legislation governing the FAA has mandated the development of a licensing system for commercial drone flights by 2015. That piece of the puzzle has been pushed by the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International, an industry advocacy group for the multi-billion-dollar UAV industry.

Second piece of the puzzle came in April of last year, when an Air Force “instruction” — which has since mysteriously been deleted from the Air Force’s media website — outlined the use of military drones to conduct domestic intelligence gathering. In the course of gathering such information, if a drone were to “incidentally” record “suspect activity,” the military was obligated to share that information with the Department of Homeland Security to establish domestic surveillance.

Previous Page|1|||

Comments

Total Comments
1

View/Add Comments

Most Recent Comment

claybeardmore wrote on March 12, 2013 2:34 p.m. ...
I've said many times before and I'll say it again - it won't be long before we'll have cameras in our homes. Remember, just because you're paranoid doesn't mean they're not watching you!


Newton Daily Deals Email:

National video

Reader Poll

What Summer activities are you most looking forward to:

Vacation Travel
Sports & Activities
Capitol 2/Valle Drive In
ThunderNites
Iowa Speedway