Posted on 01/29/2015 7:53:37 AM PST by Kaslin
Are you starting to forget just how creepy government agencies can be when they decide to spy on average (law abiding) citizens? Well, this should help refocus your distrust of big government. According to AP News:
The Drug Enforcement Administration abandoned an internal proposal to use surveillance cameras for photographing vehicle license plates near gun shows in the United States to investigate gun-trafficking, the agency's chief said Wednesday.
Um, good… Also: What the heck?
So the DEA was planning on tracking everyone that went to a gun show? Wow… Nothing like being innocent until proven guilty, right? It might be time to start borrowing your liberal neighbors car for your trip to the gun range, gun store, and gun show. (And, just for good measure, drop by a tea party protest while youre out.)
Michelle Leonhart, the DEA Administrator, said in a statement, that the proposal never got past the planning stages, and was never implemented. Ostensibly, this little foray into monitoring pre-crime would have given authorities the ability to combat illegal arms trafficking in the US. I mean sure, the Department of Justice is likely responsible for more gun trafficking than any gun show in the last ten years, but the DEA wanted to spy on you because Bloomberg told them about that notorious gun show loophole.
Of course, the gun show loophole is more of a cute leftist talking point than an actual thing. Commercial sellers are required by law to run background checks on every sale… Including at gun shows. Many states even require that any sale (including private sales) be subjected to a background check if it originates at a gun show. And, given that less than one percent of federal criminals actually purchased their guns at a gun show (with a majority of those sales having passed a background check), who would the Feds have been tracking at these events?
Well… You. And the other law abiding citizens like you. Heck, why dont they just have gun owners stand in lines to register their weapons so its easier to keep track of --- oh… Never mind.
In all fairness, it is somewhat unlikely the DEA was gearing up to create a de facto gun registration list based off of attendees to gun shows. After all, they already have the alphabet of surveillance agencies (NSA, DHS, BATFE, FBI and others) to help them out if they decide to scrounge together an un-official registry. But it does show the growing distrust that government agencies have of their own citizenry. Generally speaking, fighting crime should focus on harassing criminals; not average citizens.
The dirty little secret is that government knows it cant regulate away criminal behavior. Heck, half the time they cant even monitor it. I guess its just a whole lot easier to target people who legally exercise their Second Amendment rights by going to a gun show.
In the end, this proposal was just one more way government can collect data about its citizens. Big Government, just like big business, has discovered the value of Big Data. The NSA analyzing Facebook posts, the FBI retrieving information from Google, and Dodd Frank collecting a treasure trove of consumer spending habits, are all a part of the same game. Data collection from Facebook posts to license plates in gun show parking lots helps to influence the marketing of policy proposals. It directs the political priorities of government insiders. Just like a Google ad in Gmail, government can use its data to manipulate, regulate, and restrict the behavior of its citizens.
Ultimately, the DEA decided against stalking gun show attendees through their license plates. But, let not your heart be worried: The NSA already knows you clicked on this article.
Very good tagline, btw...
I am not hard to track with the NRA sticker and the Virginia NRA plates.
Several years ago my wife dropped me off at the Tulsa Gun Show, one of the smaller ones.
The first thing I saw wrong was there was a KLINGON at the door people were entering in.
Then I realized the Tulsa Expo Center upper floor was having a STAR TREK convention and the gun show was on the lower floor.
Then there are all those people who go to the flea market in the same area, use the same parking spots.
How right you are.
The Marihuana(sic) Tax Act of 1937 used a unique legal theory. Since Congress did not have the power to ban substances directly because of the 10th Amendment, they needed an indirect method of prohibition. They were inspired by the National Firearms Act of 1934, which effectively outlawed machine guns through the requirement of a prohibitive tax.
The list, Ping
Let me know if you would like to be on or off the ping list
Under NSA rules, if you’re not a thought criminal, you’re a pre-criminal.
If you have never been arrested & charged in your life, you’re a pre-criminal.
Stalin is laughing in h***.
How about tracking cars slowing down at drug dealer’s corners. No, that would be trying to prevent actual criminal activity. We don’t want to further “victimize” the “victims” of poverty. Plus, we might stumble over the famous and well-connected.
Let’s just persecute law-abiding conservatives who won’t bow down and do as we tell them.
> http://www.metrolyrics.com/operation-mindcrime-queensryche-ml-video-ljh.html
Takes a little bit to load but worth it...: )
ALL of them?
Or just the ones with gun racks?
Ah, the DEA and BATFE! the two lowliest agencies full of derps that were rejected from the FBI.
Who knows
Yeah, and they could tattoo a convenient little ID number on your forearm...
At least it got never past the planning stages, provided that is true.
“At least it got never past the planning stages, provided that is true.”
No, all you know is that they have DENIED implementing it! How often is what this administration says false? certainly over 50%! Meaning this is probably TRUE.
Even for something that doesn’t make it past the “planning” stage there will be a mountain of memos, emails and documentation of other communications by those involved.
The GOP Congress should subpoena those records, then make them public. Call those involved in the planning up before Congressional committee to explain themselves.
See how THEY like having their names revealed in the bright light of public disclosure. Set an example for others who may choose to go down similar routes.
LOL!
That’s just priceless.
The fairground was hosting several expos last Saturday.
Odds are that lots of blue haired, quilt loving old ladies are on the list, too, now.
;D
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