Why you should care
This isn't about having something to hide. It's about who gets to watch everyone, all the time, with no public vote and no way to opt out. The facts do the work here.
Nine reasons. Any one of them is enough to say no.
All documented. Every card links its source.
You're tracked even though you did nothing
The camera doesn't know innocent from guilty. It logs everyone. An EFF study of California found only about 0.05% of what these systems collect had anything to do with a crime when it was captured. The rest is just people living their lives.
No warrant, and you can't opt out
Police can search the database with almost no reason to. No warrant. And the law makes you show a plate, so it tracks you whether you agree or not.
It builds a pattern of your life
One photo is nothing. Thousands of them, over months, show where you sleep, pray, drink, and who you spend time with. That's a profile of you, built without a warrant and without anyone asking.
It can be turned on anyone, left or right
This data has been shared with ICE for deportations and used by a Texas sheriff's office to search a nationwide camera network for a woman who had an abortion. A federal agency considered using plate readers to log gun-show attendees; the plan was dropped after it came to light. Whatever side you're on, it can be pointed at you.
Sources: EFF and ACLU, ACLU on the DEA gun-show plan
Errors get innocent people stopped - sometimes even at gunpoint
In independent tests, as many as 1 in 10 reads came back wrong. That is not harmless. People have been handcuffed at gunpoint and jailed over a misread plate, a woman in San Francisco, a Black family in Aurora, Colorado.
Officers can misuse it
A Kansas police lieutenant was arrested and charged with using the department's system to stalk his estranged wife. Give people a tool this powerful and some of them will misuse it. It has already happened.
A private company holds it, and databases leak
This is a private company's record of where a whole region drives. That is a target. A federal surveillance vendor already got hacked and traveler data ended up online.
Small towns become virtual gated communities
Put cameras at the edges of town and nobody comes or goes without being logged. In a small Northwoods town, that is every single person.
Nobody voted, and it doesn't stop growing
No public vote. And cameras sold "for stolen cars" get turned on school-residency checks, background checks, and unpaid fees. It never stays what they promised.