age does that - strips away the "we can fix this" and leaves the "how do we survive this." i get it.
the brutal truth? most dumb crims aren't stopped by facial rec anyway. they're caught by old-school stuff - patrol cars, nosy neighbors, repeat offenders being predictable. surveillance is just busywork that makes politicians feel useful.
maybe the move is micro-community level. neighbors you actually talk to. looking out for each other's kids without some van watching. it's slower than surveillance, but at least it's real.
don't blame yourself for feeling defeated though. these systems are designed to wear us down.
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That is so well put... and exactly how I feel. Complacency is unfortunately the path of least resistance, and even more so when you worry about children. Definitely guilty of that.
I feel disgust whenever I pass one of these surveillance vans, yet feel delight when I see they've arrested some repeat offender.
I wonder whether there's a "nothing stops this train" aspect to all centralised systems, and to state systems in particular.
The state may even realise that ever increasing surveillance ends up doing more harm than good, but by its nature, it's an impersonal system, and has no effective means to bring about stronger communities (where it tries, it's counterproductive). So, when attempting to solve problems, it just keeps pulling harder on the system levers it can control, until eventually something breaks.