I am from America which isn’t a unified surveillance state, but has a lot of private and government institutions independently spying on their citizens. Corporations and websites collect a lot of data online while the government agencies like police watch everyone with license plates, street cameras, etc. It has potential to become really bad even though at the moment surveillance is not evenly applied or centrally controlled. The legal system has a certain high bar on evidence that is legally obtained, but there factors such as plea pressure and classified evidence that the regime can use to punish or persecute people in some cases. What do you guys think? I am personally against it especially by the private sector. I don’t think citizens inherently need to be managed or spied on. Especially when the government is so uneven in who it spies on or who gets legally punished the harshest I cannot place enough trust or support into security measures. Especially when in some states they have forced labor in jails incentivizing them to arrest as many people as possible.
Nice try, three letter government agency
My ally, the US is a surveillance state.
All these private entities you mentioned either sell data freely or are subpoenaed by the government to share the data.
Also, current events show that Americans do not have 1st or 4th amendment rights anymore.
- Fascist Paramilitary invaders are using drones and stealing FEMA funding to surveil people in US cities.
- Fascist paramilitary invaders start unconstitutionally raiding houses door-to-door in the USA. We no longer have rights in America. Welcome to the home of the oppressed. (Minneapolis, MN - 1/11/26)
- Fascist paramilitary invaders demand a US citizen present their papers, then capture biometric data without permission before leaving during door-to-door raids in the Twin Cities, MN (1/11/26)
I do have my own opinions but I make sure to be fair and unemotional in my political posts, even to the point of understatement as you’ve shown.
The cload act allows the agencies to ask data about anyone to any company operating on US soil. If a private company has data, so does the US agencies. Btw, this break GDPR because this is a data leak, but the company cannot tell the user it was leaked…




