Homeland Security 'Highway Watch' Stasi Program
Trains Americans to Spy on Each Other
[Editor's Note: Here in California, it's called the "Amber
Alert System" in which citizens are expected to call the police if
they spot a car on the highway that the police are looking for (of course,
it's always a case of child abduction, or child rape, or child molestation,
etc. It's important that the word 'child' is included in the description
of the villain being pursued), but in any state or country, it's still called
'How to train the Sheeple to report on themselves for us" by Big Brother
and the Illuminated Ones. I hope you or your neighbors don't fall victim
to that hideous manipulation...Ken Adachi
Introductory comments from Alex Jones: And you thought TIPS
was dead! As was the case with Total Information Awareness, they just changed
the name and doubled the funding. And of course there are no real terrorists
anywhere so these brown-shirts will be reporting gun owners and anything
their CIA handlers call 'suspicious'. In ten years maximum people who refused
to take the chip will be labelled as suspicious and potential terrorists.]
From Time Magazine | July 5 2004 Issue
http://educate-yourself.org/cn/highwaywatchautopspying05jul04.shtml
July 5, 2004
On
a blazing hot morning last week, 75 men and women of the highway —
bus drivers, truckers and van operators — convened at a nondescript
office building in Little Rock, Ark., to be trained as terrorist hunters.
The Department of Homeland Security this year gave $19.3 million to the
American Trucking Associations, which is based in Alexandria, Va.,
to recruit a volunteer "army" called Highway Watch.
So far, 10,000 truckers have signed on to become amateur sleuths.
Over the next year, the goal is to add tollbooth workers, rest-stop employees
and construction crews, creating a corps of 400,000 people drawn from every
state.
Waiting for the training to begin, Jo Anna Cartwright, who
manages the rural public bus system in northern Arkansas, said she had not
yet encountered any terrorists in her job, as far as she knew. "We
got a terroristic phone call the other day," she said, "but it
turned out it was just the boyfriend of an employee." Her bus drivers
pay special attention to a gentleman from Afghanistan who recently married
a regular rider, she said. Cartwright had come to the training to learn
what else she could do.
The tutorial was led by Jeffrey Beatty, a security consultant,
formerly of the FBI and CIA. He started by showing clips of alQaeda training
videos. "They are out there training for operations in the U.S. homeland.
Make no mistake about it," he said, warning that Little Rock cannot
afford to be complacent. "You're getting a presidential library here
— for a President who launched cruise missiles against al-Qaeda,"
Beatty said, referring to Bill Clinton. There are not enough police and
federal agents to protect all of America, but transportation workers could
be a "force multiplier," he said. "We want to turn the hunters
into the hunted," he intoned for the first of four times that day.
So how exactly does one spot a terrorist on the highway? Members
of Highway Watch are given a secret toll-free number to report any suspicious
behavior — people taking pictures of bridges, for example, or passengers
handling heavy backpacks with unusual care. "We want to hear from you
when something just doesn't look right," Beatty said. "Say you're
out at a truck stop and you see someone hanging out near your truck, wearing
a jacket. Maybe it's too hot out for a jacket. Go back inside, alert someone
and check him out through the window."
But — and this is important — Highway Watch members
are just messengers, not superheroes, Beatty said. The hotline call center
in Kentucky logs the information it receives in a database and contacts
law enforcement when necessary. It usually isn't. Of the 200 or so calls
that come in each month, only about 10 have anything to do with suspected
terrorism. Most callers report abandoned vehicles, stranded motorists or
roadway hazards. Highway Watch members are instructed to look for certain
kinds of behavior — not certain kinds of people. "Profiling is
bad. Bad, bad, bad," Beatty said.
Still, listening to his ominous warnings and the bravado that
comes easily to the former Delta Force commander, one has no difficulty
imagining an empowered civilian getting carried away. And Americans generally
have not reacted well to institutionalized nosiness. In 2002 the Justice
Department proposed something called Operation TIPS, which would have encouraged
not just truckers but also cable installers and mail carriers, among others,
to report suspicious behavior. But before the program could begin, it was
buried in opposition from the left and the right. Americans did not want
to become a "nation of snitches," as the libertarian Cato Institute
put it.
Highway Watch, which will receive an additional $22 million
next year, preserves the part of TIPS concerned with monitoring behavior
in public space. The Department of Homeland Security has also launched Port
Watch, River Watch and Transit Watch. Then there are the familiar Neighborhood
Watch groups, many of which have expanded their missions to include homeland
security. In New York City, government outsourcing of surveillance has even
trickled down to doormen and building superintendents, thousands of whom
are being trained to watch out for strange trucks parked near buildings
and tenants who move in without furniture.
After the session in Little Rock, two newly initiated Highway
Watch members sat down for the catered barbecue lunch. The truckers, who
haul hazardous material across 48 states, explained how easy it is to spot
"Islamics" on the road: just look for their turbans. Quite a few
of them are truck drivers, says William Westfall of Van Buren, Ark. "I'll
be honest. They know they're not welcome at truck stops. There's still a
lot of animosity toward Islamics." Eddie Dean of Fort Smith, Ark.,
also has little doubt about his ability to identify Muslims: "You can
tell where they're from. You can hear their accents. They're not real clean
people."
That kind of prejudice is hard to undo, but it's a shame Beatty's
slide show did not mention that in the U.S., it's almost always Sikhs who
wear turbans, not Muslims. Last year a Sikh truck driver who was wearing
a turban was shot twice while standing near his tractor trailer in Phoenix,
Ariz. He survived the attack, which police are investigating as a hate crime.
The Highway Watch website boasts that the program is open
to "an elite core [sic] of truck drivers" who must have clean
driving and employment records. In fact, their records are not vetted by
the American Trucking Associations. At the Little Rock event, some came
in off the street without preregistering. However, the organization is highly
security conscious about other parts of its operations. It refuses to disclose
the exact location of its hotline call center or the number of operators
working there. "It could be infiltrated," says Dawn Apple, Highway
Watch's director of training and recruitment.
What's clear is that Highway Watch is a morale booster for
drivers. "I don't want to sound too hokey, but truck drivers are a
very patriotic bunch," says Mike Russell, a spokesman for the organization.
"It made sense for us to take advantage of what we do every day —
which is, basically, patrol major highways through a windshield."
Just three days after his training in Little Rock, veteran
Wal-Mart truck driver Danny Ewell found cause to call Highway Watch. On
Father's Day, as he was leaving a Red Lobster in Johnson City, Tenn., he
saw a young man walking between two cars with an orange T shirt draped over
his arm. Peeking out from under the T shirt was a semiautomatic weapon.
"Because of the training, I knew to look at his height and his hair
color, and I got the make and plates of his car," Ewell says. "Normally
I would have just looked at his clothes. But now I know to look for things
that won't change." Ewell called 911 and Highway Watch. Local police
responded but were unable to find the man. Ewell, at least, had done his
part.
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