Kurt Nimmo
Infowars.com
April 30, 2012
As part of an ongoing effort to create a Stasi-like surveillance grid
in America, the Bureau of Justice Assistance, in association with the
International Association of Chiefs of Police, has produced a video to
assist in the training of officers as they go about detecting what the
federal government considers to be suspicious activity. It is part of
the Nationwide Suspicious Activity Reporting Initiative (NSI).
The video instructs officers to consider photographers as possible
terrorists who should be singled out for additional interrogation.
According to the video, street photography and photography of public
buildings provides “justification for further analysis,” although the
video emphasizes that photography “and other similar activities are
protected activities unless connected to other suspicious activities
that would indicate potential terrorism. This may cause the officer to
conduct additional observation or gather additional information – again
taking into account the totality of circumstances.”
“Photography, observation, or surveillance of facilities, buildings,
or critical infrastructure and key resources beyond casual, tourism, or
artistic interest, to include facility access points, staff or
occupants, or security measures,” the video instructs.
The “acquisition or storage of unusual quantities of materials,”
including cell phones and pagers, is considered to be a suspicious
behavior.
While the NSI attempts to be politically correct – stating it does
not profile individuals on the basis of race or religion – and also pays
lip-service to privacy, it is the largest and most technologically
sophisticated surveillance program in the nation’s history (a fact noted
by none other than the Washington Post).
It “collects, stores and analyzes information about thousands of U.S.
citizens and residents, many of whom have not been accused of any
wrongdoing,” the Post notes
“The unprecedented network involves local police,
state and military authorities feeding a growing database on thousands
of US citizens and residents, even though many have never been charged
with breaking the law,” AFP
reported in 2010. “The apparatus breaks new ground in the United States
— where domestic security measures traditionally have faced legal
limits — and raises questions about safeguards for privacy and civil
liberties.”
In fact, this is a fallacy – the government has surveilled and collected data on millions of Americans for decades.
Beginning with Operation Shamrock,
the NSA has spied on Americans since the end of the Second World War.
Operation Shamrock violated the Communications Act and the Fourth
Amendment. In 2005, it was revealed that the NSA has continued to
illegally monitor Americans by working with transnational telecoms to copy all email and web browsing in the United States and internationally.
The NSA is not alone. The FBI (most notoriously under COINTELPRO) and the CIA (Operation CHAOS)
have long track records in not only surveilling Americans, but also
disrupting – the FBI called it neutralizing – the legal political
activities of countless Americans.
The NSI is part of a long and disreputable tradition in violation of
the Constitution. Street photographers can expect to be singled out and
considered members of al-Qaeda and other largely mythical terrorist
fabrications.
The drift is unmistakeable. East Germany’s Stasi began by creating
dossiers on its citizens and ended by imprisoning people for trying to
leave the country, or telling political jokes. Secret executions and the
deliberate irradiation of political prisoners with x-ray machines in an
attempt to give them cancer was routine.
Source: http://www.infowars.com/nsi-instructional-video-public-photography-is-terrorism/
30 Apr 2012
NSI Instructional Video: Public Photography is Terrorism
Related Posts terrorism
Posted By : Admin Date: Monday, April 30, 2012 Category: terrorism


