20 comments

  • cdrnsf 9 minutes ago

    Abolish ICE and DHS. Everyone who works as an ICE ERO agent should be prosecuted and/or barred from any and all future public service.

  • e12e 3 minutes ago
  • canada_dry an hour ago

    Orwell never even envisioned this form of state surveillance!

  • Sh0000reZ 19 minutes ago

    Let's send immigration after Brin, Musk, Thiel, Kevin O'Leary, etc

    That whole lot of free loading migrants.

    Like JD "CF" Vance said; use their tools against them.

    No assurances for everyone, no assurances for them. Free market capitalism, bb

  • PhunkyPhil an hour ago

    It's no secret they've been tracking people's faces as much as they can.

    The morning of Pretti I was on Lyndale and there were two men wearing "press" jackets with DLSRs taking pictures of people's faces in the crowd. They were eventually recognized and yelled out, but it was quite an unnerving feeling.

  • josefritzishere 2 hours ago

    Your tax dollars, hard at work.

  • LightBug1 an hour ago

    Perfect addition to any self-respecting Junior Stasi outfit ...

  • tokai 2 hours ago

    But aren't they still resisting wearing body cameras?

    • tencentshill an hour ago

      These will probably not count as body cams for some reason, so will be subject to different regulations, or none at all.

    • pessimizer an hour ago

      That's not what was happening. Anti-ICE activists are now against body cameras.

      > https://www.politico.com/news/2026/02/07/democrats-fear-body...

      But when Democrats are back in power, they'll be for it. They'll issue these these exact same smart glasses, from this same vendor, to all law enforcement as the way to "Eliminate Trump's ICE."

      • mcphage 41 minutes ago

        It helps when the source you include supports the claims you make of it. The source you included does not:

        > Obviously we want them to be wearing body cameras

  • bediger4000 an hour ago

    This smells like a way to funnel money to someone. There's no way a small number of "Smart Glasses" will be cheap, and the warlord(s) in charge can spec it in ways to increase costs, funnelling even more money to that someone. Classic US grifting from the government, in my judgement. We should find out who made this decision, and it will be interesting to see who gets the contract(s) for it. As we've seen with DoD acquisition, even a failed program can keep the money spigot open for years, too.

    • jrochkind1 11 minutes ago

      I think it's both, they hope it helps them surveil better, they don't really mind if it doesn't or doesn't to the extent of it's cost, cause the right people still got paid.

      This is pretty much all federal government now.

    • puppycodes 24 minutes ago

      This was my thought as well, a good excuse for a slush fund.

      • jrochkind1 10 minutes ago

        The good excuse for the slush fund was $75 billion in supplementary funding Congress approved for ICE with no particular reason or budget. At this point all of ICE is a good excuse for a slush fund.

  • vamos_davai an hour ago

    I'm not a fan of surveillance state, but I'm also not a fan of high crime and false arrests. If we're just tying up the police and having bloated budgets, we should get rid of publicly funded police and allow police to be a corporate benefit like healthcare.

    • Natfan 5 minutes ago

      i fail to see how for profit policing with less oversight would be a good thing for the general citizenry?

    • pickleglitch an hour ago

      Isn't that a key plot point of Robocop?

      But seriously, it's a great idea. I mean, just look how well healthcare as a corporate benefit has worked out!

      • jrochkind1 10 minutes ago

        Wait, Robocop wasn't meant to be a techno-utopia?