I don't consider being taped while you drive by a "interference with privacy, family, home or correspondence, nor to attacks upon his honour and reputation", you see, becoause SOME people have a way of defining privacy as broadly as it suits them.
Oooh, capitals. Very subtle. I find bold better myself, but whatever floats your boat.
Firstly, let me clarify your statement. This is not being 'taped while you drive'. This is every trip you make being recorded (time, location, etc), and stored for at least 2 years with the view to either a) taxation and b) prosecution. This is applied arbitrarily to every individual (driver) in the country.
The essential, most basic definition of privacy (within this context) is the limit into how far the state can intrude into your affairs. My contention would be that the state does
not need to know the details of every car journey you make, especially when they have
no legal grounds for such an interest.
Car monitoring CCTV doesn't interfere with the home or correspondence and street is GOVERNMENT PROPERTY and the government has the right to place survailance on it's property (like in federal buildings)
What next? You'll want to remove cammeras from there too?
I never said that; you're evidently trying to use the ole strawman, but it's a daft connotation you're drawing. It's like saying that being opposed to torture means I'm automatically opposed to police arresting and interrogating suspects.
I am willing to accept CCTV within public spaces (i.e. where there is no reasonable expectation or privacy), or within private buildings (where the owner consents and the public, by entering consent to monitoring), and where that CCTV information is not automatically archived for a long period of time (but instead only kept for a short period, and only stored where it is known and provable in court to be of use in the investigation of a crime). I am
not willing to accept tracking via biometrics & universal CCTV coverage (i.e. across the country, by a singular entity), nor am I willing to accept the storage of such data on all or arbitrary individuals without a clear legal justification to do so.
Furthermore, the issue of individual rights is entirely seperate from the issue of property ownership. Your human rights cannot be suspended simply by dint of being on private property; I cannot torture you legally just because you're in my house, and neither can the government. This is why we have legal controls on the powers of government, to prevent oppression being made legal just because the government says so (duh). Also, the government does not own the land - the
state does, and by state that means it is owned effectively by the public. The government - and other state organisations - simply the have the responsibility of managing it. This is why we call them 'public' roads (etc).
I also note your entire arguement for it being acceptable to track people is based on a personal definition of privacy that seems, on previous threads, to be "the government can do anything, because you're safe if you don't dissent".
And they can't do nothing with CCTV what they can't to allready with different means.. In fact, it easier to avoid being taped on a camera than a mole in your organisation. Cameras can be detected easily enough and jammed or destroyed. Spies are far harder to root out.
Again, you make the mistake of assuming this system would somehow be only applied to specific individuals or organizations, when it is designed to be universal and arbitrary in who it watches. Also, you miss the whole point of it - quick and easy tracking; something that is most efficient when wanting to monitor a large amount of 'low risk' people, where low risk constitutes potential dissentist.
How many private civillians can easily jam cameras? I don't know how to (especially bearing in mind that doing so in a visible way would lead to prosecution - or worse in a truly opressive society). Planting moles requires having trained individuals, for one thing - and places realistic constraints in terms of resources (which alone means it has to be used sensibly for actual state security, such as within terrorist organisations or criminal groups rather than, say, political ones). As I said previously - I think this is the 4th or 5th time I've had to repeat this - the fundamental issue is the ease and scope of this level of road camera/CCTV equivalent; that it gives a very low 'cost' ability to track and monitor individuals (who are under no suspicion of any crime) compared to conventional, current methods. And that it does so in an arbitrary manner where there is no legal clearance required for individuals - i.e. it assumes the legal ability to watch every individual.