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No pictures, please: speed camera vigilantes.


THE UNITED KINGDOM is one of the most surveilled societies in the West, its 60 million citizens monitored by 4 million cameras, including 6,000 traffic cameras. The latter have touched off a wave of protests that are making politicians and traffic cops Traffic Cops is a documentary series on BBC One which follows traffic officers from various police forces including Hampshire, Cheshire and South Yorkshire. It shows what is involved in the day-to-day role of a traffic officer and the incidents they come across.  nervous.

Since the first speed cameras went up in 1992, the government has ticketed Brits to the tune of $210 million a year, with 58 percent of British drivers forking over fines. More recently, angry drivers have destroyed or damaged more than 1,000 of the machines with fire, baseball bats, explosives, and other techniques that drive traffic cops to use words like terrorism. Much of the vandalism has been carried out by a secretive group called Motorists Against Detection.

According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 The New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Times, one camera in the town of Brentwood was torched three times. The government finally spent $66,000 to house the machine in a fireproof fire·proof  
adj.
Impervious or resistant to damage by fire.

tr.v. fire·proofed, fire·proof·ing, fire·proofs
To make fireproof.

Verb 1.
 chamber. It would cost almost $400 million to protect every camera the same way--money authorities aren't eager to spend.

Guardian columnist George Monbiot George Monbiot (born January 27, 1963) is a journalist, author, academic and environmental and political activist in the United Kingdom who writes a weekly column for The Guardian newspaper. He is the patron of the UK student campaign network People & Planet.  has called the anti-camera activists "anti-social bastards" sniffing that "while there are many reasons for the growth of individualism in the UK, the extreme libertarianism now beginning to take hold here begins on the road." Meanwhile, the Conservative Party, looking ahead to elections in 2009 or 2010 is floating the idea of cutting back on cameras and improving road safety in other ways.
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Title Annotation:Citings
Author:Weigel, David
Publication:Reason
Date:Feb 1, 2007
Words:239
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