Reason.com: “Police Cameras and Crime”

Police Cameras and Crime | Can a surveillance state make us safer? by Steve Chapman on Reason.com February 21, 2011:

If you want to be on TV, don’t go to Los Angeles or New York. Come to Chicago, where your wish is certain to be fulfilled. In fact, you couldn’t avoid it if you wanted to, thanks to the nation’s most extensive network of police surveillance cameras. Anytime you walk out your door, you may find an audience.

This is one of Mayor Richard M. Daley’s proudest achievements, but the estimated 10,000 devices now in operation are not enough for him. He once expressed his intention to keep adding cameras until there is one “on every street corner in Chicago.”

His obvious error is to assume that if some cameras are good, more are better. Daley’s policy also rests on a plausible but unproven assumption: that cameras reduce crime by deterring criminals and helping nab those who aren’t deterred.

I remember a bus sign in NYC years ago: “Want to be on TV? The average American is on TV somewhere 17 times a day.” They just haven’t invented the telescreen yet, but the telescreen kept talking to Winston.

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