Authoritarianism, quotas, and historical abuses as context
Episode Summary
In tonight’s episode, I’m joined by Nathan Allenby for a far‑reaching, urgent conversation on facial recognition and the wider surveillance architecture growing around us. We unpack the recent High Court ruling on the Met’s live facial recognition, why tech‑led policing is failing while crime rises, and how integrated CCTV, ANPR, retail systems like Facewatch, phones, RFID, and international data brokers knit into path‑tracking and social profiling. Nathan outlines practical, lawful ways to evade automated identification (from breaking the human silhouette to reflective Mylar blankets) and calls for decentralised, local protests this Saturday—snap a masked group photo and share it to the “Stop Facial Recognition” Telegram to be part of a nationwide action. We also explore the social roots of crime—loss of community policing, breakdown of cohesion and family stability, and globalised policy drives—while urging peaceful, persistent civil resistance and community self‑reliance. Along the way: local anecdotes, CCTV blind spots, historical lessons, and a clear message—don’t accept a future where walking to the shops means passing checkpoints; organise, resist, and keep your dignity (and sense of humour) intact.Resources mentioned: No CCTV (no‑cctv.org.uk). Telegram: “Stop Facial Recognition.” Practical tip: inexpensive Mylar “survival” blankets (search online) and simple silhouette‑breaking tactics can disrupt automated tracking—use responsibly and lawfully during peaceful protest.
