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Surveillance
State: A Preview of Your Future?
It’s not 1984
yet, but it’s getting awfully close. Is this leading to the ‘mark of the
beast’?
As you step out
of your apartment in the morning, the camera at the entrance records your
departure. Cameras track you as you drive your car to work. As you walk down
the street from the car park to your office, cameras track your movements.
Monitoring software follows you from one camera to the next. You walk past a
police officer. He wears sunglasses, not because it’s bright outside, but
because the glasses contain cameras connected to facial recognition software.
Once at the office, a camera outside
the building alerts both the government and your employer that you’ve arrived.
As you log on to your computer, the
government records your web browsing. The information forms a “citizen score.”
Your score suffers when you visit sites that criticize the government, when you
leave comments that are insufficiently supportive of government leaders and
policies, or if you buy the wrong thing online.
This dystopian total surveillance
state sounds far-fetched, like an idea for a fictional Hollywood movie. But
it’s not.
Each of these surveillance tactics
are being tested in pilot schemes in China right now. And the Chinese aren’t
the only ones under surveillance.
Sharp Eyes
It may be hard to take the idea of
such centralized control seriously; after all, we’ve heard warnings about it
for years. George Orwell described “Big Brother,” the all-seeing government,
way back in 1949. His book is titled 1984, but in 2018, Big Brother is still
not here.
Those who lived behind the Iron
Curtain, however, had a different experience. In East Germany, 2.5 percent of
the population spied on the rest. Germans had to watch what they said in
public, and even in private, in case the Stasi was listening. Say the wrong
thing or hang out with the wrong people, and you could find yourself the victim
of a government-sponsored harassment campaign. Or worse, in jail.
Now, however, we have reached a new
era where technology has made mass surveillance easier than ever before.
A 1984-style surveillance state requires
the linkage of millions of cameras and the transmission and storage of masses
of data. Fiber-optic networks send data at light speed, and petabytes of
information are stored with ease. Facial recognition software and machine
learning means that one person can track thousands.
And China is leading the way.
“Surveillance technologies are giving
the government a sense that it can finally achieve the level of control over
people’s lives that it aspires to,” said Adrian Zenz, a German academic who
writes about China.
“Sharp Eyes” is the Chinese
government’s most ambitious initiative. It aims to link up the millions of
security cameras already present in China into a single nationwide surveillance
platform. This includes the government cameras already on streets and shops, as
well as private cameras. Official documents state that they aim for an
“omnipresent, fully networked, always working and fully controllable”
surveillance system by 2020.
China is running a pilot scheme for
this “omnipresent” system in Chongqing. There, housing complexes unlock with a
facial scan. The resident doesn’t have to fumble with his keys, but this means
the government is tracking who goes in and out. Policemen at computer screens
follow citizens as they walk through the streets, using cameras and facial
recognition software. They track criminals—and anyone who associates with them.
“Police Cloud” is a related project
that aims to collect citizens’ online information and government data, and link
it to their ID cards and their faces. An individual’s shopping receipts,
browsing history, medical and criminal records, and social media comments are
all collated and linked to his or her face.
According to Chinese government
documents, these surveillance tactics will be used to monitor criminals, which
include those who undermine Chinese stability or have “extreme thoughts.”
Another pilot scheme ties a lot of
this data into a “citizen score.” A high score could result in better
government services and more travel opportunities. And who determines the
threshold below which the government may begin taking punitive measures?
The face-recognizing sunglasses are
real, too. Railway police are testing them in Zhengzhou.
The Washington Post wrote in
January that “the Chinese government is working hand-in-glove with the
country’s tech industry, from established giants to plucky start-ups staffed by
graduates from top American universities and former employees of companies like
Google and Microsoft, who seem cheerfully oblivious to concerns they might be
empowering a modern surveillance state.
“China seeks to achieve several
interlocking goals: to dominate the global artificial-intelligence industry, to
apply big data to tighten its grip on every aspect of society, and to maintain
surveillance of its population more effectively than ever before” (January 7).
In December, China demonstrated this
technology to the bbc. In the city of Guiyang, police have the face of every resident
on record. The police found and mock-arrested the bbc’s reporter: It took them only seven minutes.
This surveillance reaches its most
extreme form in the Muslim-majority province of Xinjiang. Here the Chinese
government struggles with some dissent. Xinjiang authorities have not
implemented some of these measures, but they have cameras everywhere. In the
provincial capital of Ürümqi, security checkpoints and id scanners guard the
roads and train station. Cameras track citizens’ movements everywhere. Police
carry devices to access residents’ smartphones and search them for dissenting
content or banned chat apps. To fill up with gas, you must swipe your id card
and look into a camera. To buy a knife, your identification information must
first be stamped into the blade in the form of a qr code.
Fall afoul of the authorities and you
could be barred from traveling or sent to one of the “study and training
centers”—behind barbed wire, concrete walls and watchtowers.
A Danger to the West
When a government possesses this kind
of power, it is certain to abuse it. Orwell described his dystopian future as
“a boot stamping on a human face—forever.” The increasing use of surveillance
technology in China is curtailing freedoms, and indications are the trend will
continue. How can there be real freedom of thought or association when the
government tracks what you say and who you associate with, and punishes you if
it does not approve?
But surely such a thing could never
happen in the West?
China is and always has been
different from the West in fundamental ways. Its 20th-century embrace of
communism has given the government of the world’s most populous nation enormous
powers over the populace. Freedom of speech, popular sovereignty and individual
rights are not a part of Red China’s mode of operation. Because of this, the
government directly or indirectly runs most of the nation’s big businesses.
According
to Chinese government documents, these surveillance tactics will monitor
criminals, which include those who undermine Chinese stability or have “extreme
thoughts.”
China claims to have facial
recognition software far more sophisticated than that used by the Federal
Bureau of Investigation. According to the Washington Post, experts believe this
is probably true. “More than anything else, experts say, deep learning technologies
need huge amounts of data to come up with accurate algorithms,” it wrote.
“China has more data than anywhere else in the world and fewer constraints
about mining it from its citizens.”
But in terms of surveillance
hardware, the West is ahead of China. America has more cctv cameras per head than China does. The United Kingdom stores 30
million to 40 million images of vehicle license plates every day, tracking the
movements of most of the country’s population.
The biggest difference in the U.S.
and UK is that surveillance is not used in the same heavy-handed way China
does, even though your government may already be spying on you through your
webcam, running facial recognition, and tracking your car far more than you
realize (see Robert Morley’s article “Is
the Government Reading Your E-mail?”
Throughout history, governments have
wanted to control their citizens—and have used every possible tool to do so.
As far back as ancient Rome, Cicero
complained about the government reading his mail. Caligula and Nero both used
surveillance as part of their reigns of terror over the Roman aristocracy. It’s
easy to imagine either of these tyrants becoming a Joseph Stalin if he had Stalin’s
highly organized state and the technology at his disposal.
“[G]overnment tyranny is routine in
human history,” writes Trumpet editor in chief Gerald Flurry in his booklet America Under Attack. “Let’s not be naive and think something like that could never
happen here. Our forefathers weren’t stupid. They wanted to guarantee
Americans’ freedom. They really knew that God is a God of freedom; He wants us
to be free. That’s a gift from God, and they understood that!”
Man has never invented a weapon he
has not used. And man has never invented a surveillance technique that
governments have not used.
America’s Founders designed a
Constitution that limited government power. They knew that the human heart is
naturally evil, and that those who hold the most power over other people’s
lives would quickly turn this power into tyranny if they are not held in check
by law. But most of that constraint has eroded. The philosophical, political
and technological potential for a surveillance state exists in nations
throughout the West.
‘The Mark of the Beast’
History and an understanding of human
nature tell us that these techniques could be used anywhere. But biblical
prophecy gives a more specific warning.
It tells of a time coming when no man
can “buy or sell” without the approval of a central government (Revelation
13:17).
The Bible calls this stamp of
approval “the mark of the beast.” It is a mark of religious observance—compliance
with the state-approved religion.
It is easy to see how a China-style
surveillance state could enforce such a policy. Refuse this mark, and you
appear on the list of people not permitted to hold a job and unable to buy
goods or food at the shops.
Man
has never invented a surveillance technique that governments have not used.
Herbert W. Armstrong wrote, “In this
scriptural usage, the expression ‘buy or sell’ more literally indicates being able
to buy—not that stores or those from whom one might make purchases of the
necessities of life would refuse to accept the money, but that the one refusing
the ‘mark’ would not be able to buy, would not be able to earn a living, to
earn a wage or salary, or to engage himself in business” (Who or What Is the
Prophetic Beast?). So this prophecy could be
fulfilled without a surveillance state. But mass surveillance would make it
much easier. And when you see how European powers have acted throughout
history, a surveillance state is likely.
History is full of religions using
surveillance to enforce their beliefs. The bbc even noted in its history of
government spying, “In the Middle Ages, the Roman Catholic Church was more
powerful than most governments—and it had a powerful surveillance network to
match” (Nov. 1, 2013).
Nothing brings out a government’s
passion to control what people say and think like religion does.
In A History of Christianity, Paul Johnson
describes the Catholic Church’s dogged pursuit of “thought crimes”—another term
popularized by Orwell. In this pursuit, the church violated “town charters,
written and customary laws, and virtually every aspect of established
jurisprudence,” he writes.
What would such an organization do
with modern surveillance technology?
Mr. Armstrong proved in his booklet Who
or What Is the Prophetic Beast?that this
“mark” refers to Sunday observance. The religious power in Europe will
require everyone to keep Sunday.
Imagine, then, this scenario. Cameras
outside of churches record all who attend. Miss a service and you can expect to
explain yourself to the authorities. The government monitors mobile phone
signals: Too many in an office could mean that some are breaking the law and
working on Sunday. Dashcams automatically record anyone spotted working
outside.
Get caught, and your bank account is
nullified. You lose your job. You cannot buy or sell. Try to get around this
and the police will track you down. With cameras everywhere, there is nowhere
to hide.
Phone signals are monitored every
other day of the week. At large gatherings, the police can remotely turn on the
microphone and listen to all that is said. If it’s an illegal religious
service, the police are there within minutes.
Does all this sound like a dystopian
nightmare? Again, today’s technology makes all of this possible already.
Bruce, the Poor Man, free thinker, social critic & cynic
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2 comments:
Big Brother has been around for decades with Stalin, Hitler, the NSA, etc. It should be apparent to everyone by now that one cannot trust their governments. They feed us a line of BS about restricting our freedoms in order to protect our freedom which is a crock of crap and Americans fall for it every time despite warnings from Ben Franklin and history...most of us are as dumb as a box of rocks. That so-called Patriot Act is a good example of how Americans got screwed by that idiot and his puppet masters. I hope he burns in hell.
No matter what we do someone has to stick their nose into our business. Just look at the nightly news. It's a roundup of government control stories from local to national. The government strangles life.
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