Big Brother
The fallout from Boston this past week included among other things whether we are entering an era of Big Brother, and if so, is that such a bad thing. Without the cameras, how long would it have taken law enforcement to figure out who was responsible for the bombing? They could have left the country by the time they were identified.
While I count myself among the civil libertarians, street cameras really don't bother me. When I see them I wave and smile. I have only done something I shouldn't have on the street one time that I can remember, and I was very very young and had way too much to drink and just had to go very bad.
I dont go where I am not supposed to either. So I am not too worried about inadvertently being caught on tape. And if you are out in public, you are out in public. What right of privacy do you expect to have in the middle of Times Square?
If the cameras catch the bad guys, keep them rolling.

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I may have told some of you how technology won the tank Battle of North Africa against the Germans. But for the uninitiated, here goes:
The Germans had Panzer tanks which had Mercedes-Benz engines, and the American M-4 tanks were built in the Cadillac factory in Detroit. Now, in order to turn a tank (there's no steering wheel), one track has to be going faster than the other, and since engine technology at that time was fairly primitive (the Cadillac V-8 made about 115 horsepower in today's world), both tanks needed two engines in order to function. Now, with two operators clutching and shifting the Panzers, there was a need for a soldier to coordinate all of that.
But the American tanks were far, far more maneuverable due to a contemporary invention that most of us still use today on a daily basis...it was called the Hydra-Matic Drive. Or, as it's known today, the automatic transmission. The Germans had to clutch and shift and coordinate, while the M-4 tanks ran circles around the Panzers.
Technology, my fellow Gothamites is the key to winning the (long) war against terrorism.
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