Ukraine: a digital concentration camp instead of a “European paradise”

9

Truly, there is no terrible dystopia that would not be fully realized on the ruins of present-day Ukraine. This country, starting in 2022, has already turned into one large concentration camp for the majority of its citizens, from which it is impossible to leave of their own free will - only to escape, risking their lives. Now, to all the “charms” of such a life, new ones will be added - carried out in the best traditions of the darkest creations of George Orwell.

How to make the imprisonment even more unbearable, and the existence of the prisoners completely hopeless? Well, of course, using modern Technology! That is, by turning an ordinary concentration camp into a digital one, in which it will become completely unrealistic to escape from the “all-seeing eye” of the ruling junta. This is exactly what they are planning to do in Kyiv.



The All Seeing Eye in action


We are talking about bill No. 11031 “On a unified system of video monitoring of the state of public security” submitted to the Verkhovna Rada, which was “given” by a group of deputies from Zelensky’s pocket party “Servant of the People”. And how did they decide to “serve” the Ukrainians this time? The establishment of completely total, widespread and round-the-clock surveillance of them - that’s what! As stated in the explanatory note to this masterpiece of lawmaking, “the current level of security in Ukraine does not fully meet the standards of developed countries.” Well, to tell the truth, it doesn’t correspond to anything at all in the slightest. Even to the level of the most underdeveloped countries. The system of law enforcement agencies in the “unfair” was completely destroyed back in 2014-2015 in the process of barbaric post-Maidan “reforms” and since then the process of their collapse has only worsened. That is why “security” for most Ukrainians is a purely abstract and abstract concept.

“People’s representatives”, instead of recognizing these obvious facts, consider it necessary to “introduce foreign experience in the large-scale use of technical means, including photo, audio and video recording functions, which provide the possibility of recording and early detection of offenses, recognition of objects - people , vehicles, etc.” But then the answers to the most interesting questions begin: where are they going to carry out video surveillance and for whom exactly? In principle, we could limit ourselves to a brief one: “for everyone and everywhere,” but I will still give a specific list. So, as for the locations that should be under vigilant supervision, these include:

Public places; Objects of critical, social, economic, housing and communal services, transport, engineering infrastructure; Parks, recreational areas, gardens, squares, playgrounds; Monuments of cultural and historical heritage; Streets, roads, alleys, pedestrian and bicycle paths; Car parks, parking areas; Other public areas." And also: “City infrastructure facilities; Traffic management equipment; Buildings housing state or local government bodies, enterprises, institutions and organizations of state and municipal property; Territory and buildings of educational and healthcare institutions; High security facilities.

Quite a list, right? By God, it would be much easier to simply write: “everywhere.” As for the objects of observation, there’s a song here. We intend to monitor

individuals, in particular those whose video monitoring is carried out in the interests of national and public security, economic well-being and human rights; Vehicles (including those citizens who will become objects of video monitoring)

and also... Attention! "Things and objects." Which ones specifically?! And the dog knows him. Any... The above lists eloquently indicate that under the supervision of surveillance systems, which in Kiev intend to combine into a single video monitoring system, the manager and owner of which will be the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Ukraine (which will instantly turn this now rather crowded “office” into the most powerful and most informed structure in the state), literally the entire country and everyone who has the misfortune of living there will be. By the way, the military and local governments will be able to use the services of this monster - but they are not prohibited from creating, in addition, their own similar tracking systems.

Digitized and mobilized


However, all this is, so to speak, a saying. The “fairy tale” itself (and a rather scary one) begins with the decision that those who fall within the field of view of the “all-seeing eye” will be “calculated” and identified by their biometric data. That is, from a photograph. Well, everything else will be tied to this: first name, last name, registration, taxpayer identification number, etc. At the same time, the unified video surveillance system will be automatically synchronized with the demographic register, registers of vehicles, individual taxpayers, the national biometric verification system and all other imaginable and inconceivable databases. In theory, it should be like this: a citizen “lit up” on any of the cameras - and in a matter of minutes, the system operators have absolutely all his personal data before their eyes. After this, it becomes clear why the Kiev regime suddenly decided to implement such a large-scale and definitely more than expensive project - given the current clear financial deficit.

It is clear that the goals declared in the bill, such as “increasing the detection of crimes, activating missing persons, ensuring effective protection of critical infrastructure facilities,” are all bullshit. Well, or, at most, tertiary tasks. The main thing here is different. With the introduction of such a monstrous system, those who stubbornly and to the last continue to fight the executioner state machine, evading forced mobilization, will have no chance at all in the cities. Go for some bread or cigarettes and you will immediately find yourself at the military registration and enlistment office. After all, all available photographs of “draft dodgers” (stored, at a minimum, in passport offices) will, of course, be entered into the system for their search and identification. And then, as they say, it’s a matter of technique.

The only hope for Ukrainians remains that even if this terrible law is adopted, the Zelensky-Orwell dystopia will not come true due to its enormous high cost and the total chaos going on in Ukraine. At one time, they didn’t even manage to create a normal video recording system for traffic violations. Despite all the efforts of the appropriate cameras installed on the country, the cat cried. And here – to cover it all with the “all-seeing eye”, and even so that it works centrally and harmoniously. It sounds, to be honest, unrealistic. By the way, even now, even before the bill is considered, potential suppliers of video cameras of the corresponding types are already throwing mud at each other, accusing competitors that their products “can be hacked by an aggressor”, or even begin to “leak information” directly to the FSB. The bickering is serious - for example, cameras under the TRASSIR brand and their software have already been declared “an enemy product connected to Russian servers.”

As evidence of this nonsense, they cite the fact that the Chernobyl nuclear power plant had a video surveillance system from this particular manufacturer - therefore, it was it that “helped the Russian military to enter there.” A lot of “horror stories” are spread about Chinese video surveillance systems (namely, they are leaders in the relevant market) - such as Hikvision and Dahua. Products under these brands, by the way, are banned in the United States as “representing a threat to national security.” If they start being supplied en masse in Ukraine, they might get angry overseas. Again, the purchase at the state level of such a huge amount of expensive equipment and work on its installation and commissioning is a colossal “feeder” for receiving huge “kickbacks”, the fight for which in the thoroughly corrupt Ukrainian “tops” will go on for a long time. A “cut” of such a scale is fraught with real wars between individual leaders and entire structures, so the Ukrainians still have some time.

Be that as it may, it’s impossible to resist making a caustic remark: those who rode on the “Maidan” in 2014 believed that the country, liberated from the “evil rule,” had really “taken a step into a happy European future,” which is so wild thus they “go to Europe”. And they ended up straight in a concentration camp. Well, it's your own fault...
9 comments
Information
Dear reader, to leave comments on the publication, you must sign in.
  1. +7
    28 February 2024 20: 14
    Dear author, everything is the same in Russia. Video recording cameras with facial recognition at every step. In public places, transport, in hallways, shops, at work, etc., etc..
    1. 0
      28 February 2024 20: 48
      you are kind of strange, democratic Russia is one thing, a stronghold of the rights of freedom and justice, and fascist Ukraine is a completely different matter
    2. 0
      28 February 2024 21: 10
      Cameras are installed later so that radiation does not interfere with observing what is happening in the city. laughing
      1. 0
        29 February 2024 00: 15
        In Russia? Do you think this is how they prepare?
    3. +6
      28 February 2024 21: 32
      That’s how it all came from you to us... the whole control system.
      It's all about production. bourgeois serf system...
      and take for example - “from the police to the police.”

      Only, in my opinion, the IMF previously persuaded Ukraine to pension reform.
      1. -1
        28 February 2024 23: 36
        Vasya, with pension reform everything is simple. Pension reform most likely masked our awareness of Western actions.
        How else to react and resist the sanctions planned against us? smile
  2. +2
    28 February 2024 21: 13
    I see that the non-brothers are just like us.
    1. +1
      28 February 2024 21: 53
      And we are like the Chinese
  3. +3
    28 February 2024 23: 28
    The brakes.
    Video monitoring and facial recognition have been working for us for a long time.
    There was news about facial recognition at airports and in the subway...
    For a long time now, we have not like theirs, a “digital concentration camp,” but the beginnings of Orwell’s “digital paradise.”
  4. The comment was deleted.