“Crush! Kill! Destroy!”—The Robot, Lost in Space
The purpose of a good government is to protect the lives and liberties of its people.
Unfortunately,
we have gone so far in the opposite direction from the ideals of a good
government that it’s hard to see how this trainwreck can be redeemed.
It gets worse by the day.
For instance, despite an outcry by civil liberties groups and concerned citizens alike, in an 8-3 vote on Nov. 29, 2022, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors approved a proposal to allow police to arm robots with deadly weapons for use in emergency situations.
This is how the slippery slope begins.
According
to the San Francisco Police Department’s draft policy, “Robots will
only be used as a deadly force option when risk of loss of life to
members of the public or officers is imminent and outweighs any other
force option available to SFPD.”
Yet
as investigative journalist Sam Biddle points out, this is “what nearly
every security agency says when it asks the public to trust it with an
alarming new power: We’ll only use it in emergencies—but we get to decide what’s an emergency.”
A last-minute amendment to
the SFPD policy limits the decision-making authority for deploying
robots as a deadly force option to high-ranking officers, and only after
using alternative force or de-escalation tactics, or concluding they
would not be able to subdue the suspect through those alternative means.
In other words, police now have the power to kill with immunity using remote-controlled robots. |
No comments:
Post a Comment