Thursday, September 05, 2013

We're living '1984' today...

It appears that the police now have a device that can read license plates and check if a car is unregistered, uninsured or stolen. We already know that the National Security Agency can dip into your Facebook page and Google searches. And it seems that almost every store we go into these days wants your home phone number and ZIP code as part of any transaction.

So when Edward Snowden -- now cooling his heels in Russia -- revealed the extent to which the NSA is spying on Americans, collecting data on phone calls we make, it's not as if we should have been surprised. We live in a world that George Orwell predicted in "1984." And that realization has caused sales of the 1949, dystopian novel to spike dramatically upward recently -- a 9,000% increase at one point on Amazon.com.

Comparisons between Orwell's novel about a tightly controlled totalitarian future ruled by the ubiquitous Big Brother and today are, in fact, quite apt. Here are a few of the most obvious ones.

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There are those who say that if you don't have anything to hide, you have nothing to be afraid of. But the fact is, when a government agency can monitor everyone's phone calls, we have all become suspects. This is one of the most frightening aspects of our modern society. And even more frightening is the fact that we have gone so far down the road, there is probably no turning back. Unless you spend your life in a wilderness cabin, totally off the grid, there is simply no way the government won't have information about you stored away somewhere.

What this means, unfortunately, is that we are all Winston Smith. And Big Brother is the modern surveillance state. Full story...

Related posts:
  1. '1984' sales skyrocket in wake of US surveillance scandal...
  2. 1984 Day: why people are protesting the NSA...
  3. '1984 is now!': Germans protest Berlin's role in NSA spying ...
  4. Forget Prism and the NSA. The real threat to your privacy is YOU...
  5. A bad month for privacy rights...
  6. John Pilger: Welcome to Orwell’s 1984 in 2010...
  7. Today, 60 years ago, George Orwell's 1984...

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