1984 was a picnic compared to modern day leviathan
surveillance cage
Paul
Joseph Watson | January 18 2006
Recent revelations of the NSA spying on
American citizens re-awakened debates about big brother and when state surveillance
of its citizens goes too far.
The fact is that the modern implementation
of the prison planet has far surpassed even Orwell's 1984 and the only difference
between our society and those fictionalized by Huxley, Orwell and others,
is that the advertising techniques used to package the propaganda are a
little more sophisticated on the surface.
Yet just a quick glance behind the curtain
reveals that the age old tactics of manipulation of fear and manufactured
consensus are still being used to force humanity into accepting the terms
of its own imprisonment and in turn policing others within the prison without
bars.
All over the United States, Canada and
Britain, surveillance camera systems are being installed on street corners,
in public bathrooms, in residential neighborhoods, and even in parks and
forests. We are asked to trust the government underlings who control them
that they are working for our best interests as said underlings are caught
using the cameras to spy on naked women in their homes.
In the UK, government
programs encourage citizens to spy on their neighbors and report
suspicious activity as part of a CCTV channel subscriber package.

Homeland Security funding is being utilized
to fund this mass expansion of the surveillance state in the US as city
and state officials clamor at the teat of Big Brother to milk the cash cow
of the police state and win
the contracts for installing more and more sophisticated spy
cameras.
The government demands to know everything
about our private lives and catalogue, file and index every aspect of our
existence, yet government itself becomes more and more secret with each
passing day as it engages in escalating criminal activities.
The warning of Rousseau, that "man
is born free yet everywhere he is in chains" has come to pass. A majority
of Westerners define freedom as the freedom to have a television and shop
at Wal Mart. True freedoms, innate freedoms are no longer understood or
practiced by a majority.
The most fundamental freedom, freedom
of speech, is now subject to free
speech zones. Areas that coincidentally preclude anywhere where
media would be present, any place that the speech would be heard. The message
is clear, you have freedom of speech but only if nobody can hear that speech.
Full
body scanners that produce a photo fit of our naked bodies
are being introduced into airports and trains.
RFID
tracking tags are being added to every item we purchase, sending
out a surveillance hum back to Big Brother HQ from the warehouse to the
landfill.

Toll
roads that read sensors
on our license plates
are taxing and tracing us across the country. GPS Black boxes in our cars
report back to the government on exactly where we have traveled and where
we are heading.
Small towns in Florida were already running scans
on cars three years ago and that program has vastly
expanded across the country.
Security blimps that are used against
insurgents in Iraq are soaring high in major cities to report suspicious
activity.
Spy satellites are used by the USDA to
monitor farmer's activities and ensure they are complying
with federal demands. Police helicopters are used in Arizona to make over
flights of private property and check that owners are keeping
their swimming pools clean. If he pools are not green the owners face immediate
fines and even jail sentences.
Londoners are encouraged by the government
to report
on their neighbors via a huge poster and radio campaign organized
by the Metropolitan Police. They are urged to watch for suspicious activity
that could denote terrorist activity. Getting a refund on a credit card
purchase, owning a vehicle and living in a house are three potential terrorist
red flags according to the government.
Posters at bus terminals inform Londoners
that they are 'secure
beneath the watchful eyes' of Big Brother.

Government and media establishment organs
demonize
disposable phones and link them with terrorism because the
phones can't be tracked 24/7 by government spy systems.
Our digital cable boxes and TIVO
systems are recording what we watch to create psychological
algorithms which are stored on government databases. These systems track
what we watch, for exactly how long we watch it, and what our psychological
score is based on those factors.
The US State Department directs
a new program that enables the Mexican government to intercept
phone conversations and online messages from every telecommunications network
within Mexico.
DNA databases are instituted in Britain
to record the DNA of anyone arrested. even if they are not charged their
DNA record remains in the database. Laws are then passed with make every
offence arrestable. Examples of those caught up in the database include
a schoolgirl
who threw a snowball at a police car.
Entrepreneurs, industry leaders and former
government officials advocate
taking the implantable ID chip as it becomes a necessity to
access VIP areas in trendy bars and Mexican judicial
workers are ordered
to take it or lose their jobs.
Remote
lie detectors have been developed for use initially in airports
in which laser beams are bounced off a by passer's skin to try and denote
signs of stress which could indicate the will to commit acts of terrorism.
Brain scanners in Boston Logan airport also target suspicious individuals.
This is the prison without bars. This
is the
panopticon, a prison so constructed that the inspector can
see each of the prisoners at all times, without being seen. This is a portrait
of the accelerating movement by western governments to erect giant, powerful,
all-pervading mass surveillance, tracking and control grids that will keep
all populations firmly under the baleful and watchful gaze of Big Brother.

Orwell's 1984 was a picnic in comparison
to the wielding cogs of the prison planet infrastructure that are being
put in place all around us.
The choice is ours. As we hurtle towards
the end of the first decade of the new millennium, are we content to accept
the terms of our own imprisonment and live as slaves in a high tech rat
maze, or, like the ones who went before us, will we cast off the shackles
of servitude and serfdom, and reclaim our God given right to life, liberty
and the pursuit of happiness?