Kentucky Senator Rand Paul’s 13-hour filibuster, largely concerned with the use of government drones to kill noncombatant Americans on American soil, may seem like a far-out hypothetical. The White House says the President doesn’t have the authority to use drones that way. But that doesn’t put the discussion of drones to bed at all. This may be the first eruption of lava in the coming volcanic debate over drones, which we think are being used only as a convenient means of getting rid of faraway bad guys. Wrong!
The fact is, drones are already being used right here for
law enforcement surveillance purposes. More than a dozen states are said to be
trying to pass legislation restricting police use of drones. I would not like
to be a legislator or an attorney trying to sort out the legal issues involved.
What’s the difference between a drone flying over your head and a helicopter?
What’s the difference between a drone flying overhead and the street cameras
used in many communities today?
Some argue that drones can have really beneficial uses for
public safety – looking at a brush fire to see where it’s advancing, which can
be a dangerous pursuit for a human being in an aircraft. Or, as I’ve read on the Internet, drones
can be used for very benign reasons, for example, to inspect sensitive
environmental areas from the air and the changes occurring in them.
What’s really scary, though, is that private citizens are going
to get widespread access to these things, if they don’t have it already. You
think you can sunbathe nude in your backyard because you have a high fence around
your property? Think again. And suppose someone just wants to follow you around
for whatever reason? Are these going to be standard tools for paparazzi? BTW, I'm sure it would be fun for a private pilot, trying to dodge all this new aeronautical junk.
One of my earlier posts here was titled “The Privacy Horse
Has Left the Barn.” Well, he’s getting farther and farther away from the barn as
time passes, and I’m not sure I like where he’s headed.
Don’t be surprised if you hear the sound of bleep hitting
the fan over all this, and very soon.
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