If we think traffic cameras are bad,
witness the Measure 54 victory, what about drones? Here in Ashtabula
we can call the question now.
Drones, now taking to the air around
the country, are expected to explode in number over the next several
years. They are costly, threaten our privacy, and bring with them
the threat of further law enforcement which does not increase our
security, but instead augments the flow of funds to government using
our tax dollars.
The burgeoning drone industry, now
worth billions, is taking to the air as law enforcement at all
levels, local to federal, rush to buy the units supplied through war
contractors. The FAA has streamlined the process for usage by
agencies. Applications are being expedited though an online process,
according to Bloomberg.com. There is money to be made and it is we
who will pay in multiple ways.
Americans have seen the evidence of how
the units can, and are used in Afghanistan and elsewhere by the
military. Today Americans have also learned drones
can be hacked, security is not guaranteed.
As the hum of drones fades in
Afghanistan it begins to rise, here in America.
The companies who produced drones as
weapons and surveillance systems for the military, are now eying the
far more lucrative law enforcement
functions within the United States. The Association
for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International reports more than 2,100
members, anxious for sales. Industry figures indicate a present
market of $5.9 billion, this expected to double in the next decade.
With billions to be made we can expect
a flood of well-oiled arguments on why we have no Constitutionally
protected right to privacy if a hovering drone can edge into our
private space, photographing us without our consent, especially if
operated by law enforcement.
Becoming the first Drone-Free Zone is
therefore a question of our security, financial, physical, and
spiritual. Money is tight. Our privacy is precious to us. We know
how we feel about this kind of intrusion.
The proposed ordinance is one
page and easy to understand.
http://www.knowdrones.com/ORDINANCE-1.pdf
Police should spend their time keeping
the peace, not looking at photos of us going about our business in
these times of economic trauma.
We can be first. With one act we can
secure our peace of mind and lead the way for others.
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