08) STREET CAMS: A STEP
TOWARDS POLICE STATE
(The
following
article is from the November 16-30, 2008, issue of People's Voice,
Canada's
leading communist newspaper. Articles can be reprinted free if the
source is credited. Subscription rates in Canada: $25/year, or $12 low
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By Stephen Von
Sychowski
On Oct. 26, the B.C. Provincial
government announced a startling new plan to install video surveillance
cameras on streets in "high crime" areas of Vancouver and Surrey.
Costing $1 million in taxpayer dollars, the plan will constitute a
violation of privacy rights unprecedented in the history of the two
cities. While Attorney General Wally Oppal admits that "people will be
concerned with some of the issues around privacy rights," he claims
that "it cannot be contradicted that the surveillance aspect of these
cameras enhances police efforts."
But it can
be contradicted, and
has been. The B.C. Civil Liberties Association, for example, condemned
a similar project in Kelowna's Cary Park. They note that a street cam
program has been an utter failure in the United Kingdom, where the top
police officer has referred to it as "a fiasco that doesn't deter
crime, doesn't help solve crime, and yet, costs a billion pounds."
The
Association was quick to
criticize this new plan for the BC Lower Mainland, suggesting that
instead of reducing crime it will simply displace crime as it moves to
the next street to avoid cameras. If the cameras follow, crime will
move again. The final result is no more privacy and still no safety
from crime.
While the
experience of other
cities shows that this new spy program won't work, there is an even
bigger reason to oppose it. It destroys a fundamental right of all
citizens to privacy. It gives unprecedented spying powers to police
forces who have historically been a force of violence and oppression
and who, as an arm of the capitalist state, serve ruling class
interests against the working class and the people. It allows the boys
(and girls) in blue one more chance to abuse their authority by
watching over any given person at any time doing anything in any public
place.
During the
Nov. 15 civic
elections, this should have been an important issue, but it has barely
been mentioned. Vancouver's outgoing NPA mayor Sam Sullivan has stated
that only communities who want the cameras will get them. The only
problem is that the form of "consultation" mentioned by Sullivan is to
"go to community policing centres for suggestions and consultation,"
which hardly constitutes real public consultation. Vision Vancouver
candidate Gregor Robertson similarly stated that he believes only
communities who want cameras should get them; a statement which is
disappointing but not surprising considering Vision's agreement with
the NPA on increasing the size of the police force.
Besides, the
provincial
government has already stated the cameras will be installed in high
crime neighbourhoods. In other words, they have all but made the
decision already, regardless of the reassurances of local politicians.
Public
consultation under
capitalism is notoriously a joke, as any activist who has fought on any
issue from public transit to Olympics to peace or healthcare will know.
Under the caring-sounding veneer, the people of Vancouver and Surrey
are being told that their rights to privacy will be taken away, but not
to worry because they will first be "consulted" through their community
policing office.
This new
program fits in with
the overall slide towards fascist style police state policies, and the
gradual curtailment of rights and freedoms in all the imperialist
countries since September 11, 2001. It can also be seen as part of the
development of "police state 2010" in preparation for the upcoming
Winter Olympics. This new system will no doubt be used in part as a
tool for the oppression of the homeless population who must be "cleaned
up" before the Olympics. Not to mention for the suppression of dissent
while securing "our 2010 legacy" in the form of corporate
super-profits. In the long term it could be used against workers' and
students' struggles, the peace movement and others fighting for a
better world.
Some will
support the cameras
and buy into the heroic and virtuous sounding "crime fighting"
rhetoric. But life is not a comic book and things are not black and
white. Crime is an inherent byproduct of the capitalist system and the
despicable conditions of existence it forces upon so many: poverty,
desperation, addiction, ignorance and so on. Most "visible" crime is
worker-on-worker, or committed by members of the lumpen-proletariat
against more (relatively) well-off workers. We are left shamefully
victimizing and blaming each other while the real criminals are off
scot free.
But rather
than running scared
and giving in to each demand by the ruling class to allow them to
rescind our rights and freedoms in exchange for a bit more phony
security, we should take a stand together to fight for policies that
would really reduce crime. That means housing, jobs, education, and
real help for those suffering from the disease of addiction. It means a
living wage and a guaranteed annual income. It means building a culture
of solidarity and collectivity, not charity and individualism. They
aren't going to hand us this on a silver platter. We have to organize
to take it - and if we can catch them off-camera, maybe the platter too!
In the
meantime, an alternative
to street cameras might be suggested. Since our governments and the
corporations behind them like cameras so much, let's install them in
all of their offices. That way we can all get together and keep an eye
on the real crooks for a change.