Stolen Eyes: Rage Against the Panopticon

Sometimes it takes a criminal act to set us free from the Panopticonic Eye of our government watchers. 

They allegedly drove around town in a pickup truck with a cherry-picker to dismantle 22 of the high-end Nikons from their street poles. The devices are used to identify red-light-running drivers, who then are issued tickets by mail.

The suspects peddled an estimated $88,000 worth of goods to a camera resale shop for $300 each to feed their heroin habits, law-enforcement sources said yesterday.

It doesn’t matter that the Nikon cameras used
in the NYC Red Light Camera systems were stolen for their value — and not
to intentionally blind the government from watching us to fine us — because, in the
end, the result is the same:  The One-Eyed Beast has been blinded and a little lawlessness is our the dividend we spend to gather back the bits of our anonymous freedom.

About David W. Boles

Publishes 14 blogs through BolesBlogs.com. Teaches via BolesUniversity.com. Publishes through BolesBooks.com. Lives at Boles.com.
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2 Responses to Stolen Eyes: Rage Against the Panopticon

  1. Gordon Davidescu says:

    Wow. I’m amazed that there wasn’t more security for the cameras themselves – some sort of alarm on the locks, even. That was quite clever of the thieves.

  2. It was quite a scam, Gordon! The genius criminal mind at work is truly amazing. I agree those expensive Nikon cameras need to be secured in a much more robust manner. Why make the temptation so easy to get a fix?

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