We are on Camera Everywhere We Go and it's Only Going to Get Worse
Think about how many times you are on camera in an average day. You drive to the office on a Monday and you are recorded at just about every stoplight you drive through. Then you stop for gas and you're on the camera at the gas pump and when you go into the store to pay. Next you stop at Menards on your way home and there are cameras on top of every light pole in the parking lot, at the store entrance and at the cash register when you're checking out. And of course every time you buy something with your visa card there is an electronic record of exactly what you bought and when you bought it.
Suffice it to say that if the FBI needed to find you in a hurry they could re-trace your movements in about 50 different ways every single day you leave your house.
Is the Antichrist system being built all around us?? You can bet your Bible on it.
Imagine driving to Sunday service, visiting a friend, or stopping by a hospital--and knowing that at every turn, an unseen eye records your license plate, your route, and the frequency of your visits. What used to be a fleeting moment of life on the road has become an entry in a permanent file. That's not science fiction. It's happening now, across thousands of American communities, under the quiet rise of license-plate reader technology.
From Rare to Routine in Just a Few Years
Only a decade ago, automatic license plate readers (ALPRs) were niche tools for catching stolen cars. Today, they're everywhere--mounted on police cruisers, lining school zones, or bolted to traffic lights. In Westchester County, New York, a network of 480 cameras scanned over 16 million vehicles in a single week earlier this year.
In Virginia, more than 1,000 Flock Safety cameras log plate data daily, some of which has been accessed in immigration enforcement searches despite official restrictions. Even smaller towns are jumping in: Milford, Connecticut, recently deployed 14 solar-powered ALPRs around highways and schools, expanding a local net of surveillance that includes drones and red-light cameras.
The scale is staggering, and it's accelerating. The result is a patchwork system that, stitched together, forms something close to a national surveillance network.
AI Turns Surveillance Into Suspicion
What makes this different from yesterday's traffic cams is artificial intelligence. Companies like Flock, Motorola Solutions, and PlateSmart aren't just snapping plates anymore. Their systems use AI to flag "suspicious" driving patterns, identify vehicles by make, model, and bumper stickers, and stitch together a car's travel history.
Once the data is centralized, it doesn't just say who was where. It builds a profile: who goes to a gun shop every Saturday, who visits a cancer clinic weekly, who pulls into a particular church every Sunday. Multiply that across millions of people, and you no longer just have traffic data--you have a living map of America's private habits.
The Mosaic of Our Lives
Civil liberties groups warn of the "mosaic effect"--where harmless data points, once combined, reveal intimate truths. A late-night stop at a clinic. Weekly trips to a mosque. Frequent visits to an address that isn't your own. It's the kind of detail that used to require human tailing, court warrants, and months of legwork. Now, a simple query can retrieve it in seconds.
And police aren't the only ones with access. Some databases are shared across agencies, some with private companies, and some--as recent leaks showed--even with foreign contractors. In Illinois, ALPR data was used to track a woman seeking an abortion across state lines. In Austin, a review showed that 20% of police searches of ALPR logs lacked documentation, raising questions about casual, unchecked access.
Here; License Plate Readers: AI Is Building A Profile And Tracking Your Every Move
I will remind you again that WE are the FIRST GENERATION to have the technology available to complete all the prophecies pertaining to the Last Days that the Bible clearly laid out.

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