Virtual Home Invasions: We’re Not Safe from Government Peeping Toms, by John and Nisha Whitehead

Your refrigerator can rat on you to the government. From John and Nisha Whitehead at rutherford.org:

“The privacy and dignity of our citizens is being whittled away by sometimes imperceptible steps. Taken individually, each step may be of little consequence. But when viewed as a whole, there begins to emerge a society quite unlike any we have seen—a society in which government may intrude into the secret regions of man’s life at will.”—Justice William O. Douglas

The spirit of the Constitution, drafted by men who chafed against the heavy-handed tyranny of an imperial ruler, would suggest that one’s home is a fortress, safe from almost every kind of intrusion.

Unfortunately, a collective assault by the government’s cabal of legislators, litigators, judges and militarized police has all but succeeded in reducing that fortress—and the Fourth Amendment alongside it—to a crumbling pile of rubble.

We are no longer safe in our homes, not from the menace of a government and its army of Peeping Toms who are waging war on the last stronghold of privacy left to us as a free people.

The weapons of this particular war on the privacy and sanctity of our homes are being wielded by the government and its army of bureaucratized, corporatized, militarized mercenaries.

Government agents—with or without a warrant, with or without probable cause that criminal activity is afoot, and with or without the consent of the homeowner—are now justified in mounting virtual home invasions using surveillance technology—with or without the blessing of the courts—to invade one’s home with wiretaps, thermal imaging, surveillance cameras, aerial drones, and other monitoring devices.

Just recently, in fact, the Michigan Supreme Court gave the government the green light to use warrantless aerial drone surveillance to snoop on citizens at home and spy on their private property.

While the courts have given police significant leeway at times when it comes to physical intrusions into the privacy of one’s home (the toehold entry, the battering ram, the SWAT raid, the knock-and-talk conversation, etc.), the menace of such virtual intrusions on our Fourth Amendment rights has barely begun to be litigated, legislated and debated.

Continue reading

One response to “Virtual Home Invasions: We’re Not Safe from Government Peeping Toms, by John and Nisha Whitehead

  1. Sun von Rommel

    Life During Wartime by Talking Heads comes to mind and the line, don’t stand up there in the window, someone might see you.

    A good shotgun blast with bird or magnum will take out a drone and they haven’t been deemed an officer yet like dogs.

    Many generations later from the founding and it is soft and weak clamoring for mommygov to pwease keep me safe by any means necessary.

    There is a panopticon for that and enjoy muh convenience as at last everything is done for you.

    (h/t-Jello Biafra from Shut Up Be Happy)

    I love the laptop wireless showing refrigerators and thermostats and some of them have to be honey pots.

    Like

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.