Tuesday, October 31, 2006

Calm as hindu cows

On the train doors on the subway and commuter trains here in Stockholm you can see a few small signs telling you among other things to mind the gap and that security cameras are watching, "for your safety" it says. Stockholm is by no means the only city that uses surveillance cameras in public space, all you have to do is look at London where a tourist can walk from Eastend to Westend and have several cameras watching every step of the way.

The thing that I think is most worrisome in the debate is the argument for having them in the first place: "for your safety". If cameras are there to catch the bag-snatcher, mugger, thief or anyone partaking in miscellanious street idiocy, then people won't do it for fear of being caught. But how does that add upp to being safe? It might protect against people trashing train cars, but what's important here is crime against people. Putting aside questions like the democratic legitimacy of assuming someone is guilty or Big Brother issues, I'd like to show just how transparent this argument of "safety" is.

It doesn't take a Ph D in criminology to say that people do stupid things whether they think they can be caught or not, and sometimes people are just plain ill. In Stockholm, like every other city, there are some very mentally disturbed or plain desperate people using public transport or walking around in public space. Sometimes there are gangs of young boys that have quite an intimidating presence late at night in the subway. Just like everywhere else, at night and on weekends, people get drunk. Fights break out. People get desperate for attention. It happens everywhere and it makes no difference if a camera is there or not. Sometimes people commit severe crimes with the full intention of being caught. Sometimes people are doped up, strung out or barely hanging on to their sanity. The point is that when these crimes are in progress on the subway and commuter trains and busses, all that security cameras do is watch them with an indifferent eye, recording everything and protecting precisely jack shit. It must be hard for victims of crime on the trains to see that sign, "for your protection", after being mugged or stabbed at by someone who slipped through the social security net (these are documented cases, shown on TV and captured of course by....violá...security cameras).

Maybe the only way to really prevent crime on public transport is to have security guards for every train car on the subway and commuter trains and every bus, but that's obviously out of the question. The real uses for security cameras, whether digitally storing every living soul in a superdatabase or not, will probably never be revealed. I just hope that poeple don't buy in to this illusion of safety.

P.S. It's not my intention to spread fear of violent crime. In my opinion it's a fact of life that can never be legitimized or prevented by signs, threat of imprisonment, punishment by being forced to listen to Rod Stewart or worse.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

What really concerns me is when people gather live to watch a crime, with that same "indifferent eye," standing by as if reality is just another TV show where no actually gets hurt.

Who's watching us through those camaras? I wouldn't wonder if they're not among the most jaded.

Niklas said...

What the sign actually should say is: "For your comfort". The idea that there is a camera recording everything, is a comforting idea to one who believes that people won't try and do stupid shit when they know someone is watching. It's like those pampflets during the cold war telling kids in school to hide under their desk if an A-bomb would detonate near by. That desk wouldn't do shit, but the false feeling of hope let people continue their daily lives. Bussiness as usual.

Tyler Durden said...

Tigerlilly: You're right...cameras and an overflow of information can easily lead to a state of being jaded and blasé...let's just hope that people can use technology for better purposes than being a perpetual peeping tom.

Nicklas: Good idea! Now we just have to make som stickers to put on the train doors, guerilla style...mwahahaha! Then we replace the safety-on-board airplane cards with more realistic ones where people scream and shout amid fire and smoke during a 500 mph crash landing into the ocean and maybe people wouldn't believe, as you put it, this business of keeping people calm.

Anonymous said...

Well... I don't like to be monitored more then the next guy, but if they help it might be good enough for me. As long as they keep the cameras in public areas, as subway and malls. If you've seen the swedish tv-show "Efterlyst" you see that some of the camesras actually helps the investigators to solv some crimes.

To use the cameras to solve "everyday crime" is another matter though... I don't wan't my tax money to pay a camera with the sole purpose to catch a drunk juvenile peeing on a deserted street. If I had a child in the age were the kids run around and might get raped/robbed/stabbed or something, I as a parent, might feel a little safer if I knew that the city's safety are checked by some kind of security company (or even better the police).

If the purpose and the usage is for good, they'll have my support, as long as I might do whatever I want within my own realm...

Anonymous said...

I agree with Tigerlily's point.

What also baffles me is the power of words... How much of reality is going to be shielded by it?

Anonymous said...

Tja!

Ledsen att jag inte tittat in på din blogg på länge, men så gjorde jag det nu.

Vi måste defintivt ta en öl någon dag. Kanske för att fira din kommande musikala succé.

Tyler Durden said...

Anonymous: I agree with you partly in the fact that it might help solve crimes that have already happened. What really chaps my hide is the main argument that cameras work as a preventive measure against crime, which can be shown to be a steaming pile of horse manure with just a little thinking. If security cameras don't soon develop the ability to shoot paralyzing darts at the stabber/robber/rapist then the only thing they can do is be an idle spectator. In that case the only thing companies and authorities have to do is change their signs from "for your protection" to "for improved statistics in solved crimes", for example.

Sesquipedalien: The power of words apparently mean very much, but I think it depends entirely on who says them and how much people believe them. A large company or state authority are obviously going to be more believable if they want something that's democratically questionable and skew it to be a question of the individual's safety. On the other hand, it's only going to be as believable as the individuals will allow it to be. I just really hope that individuals can think critically for themselves and not believe something just because a state authority or company has said it, but believe it because they themselves have come to that conclusion.

Salami: Det är bara å höra av dig. Du kan vänta dig en skiva snart...kanske lagom till jul? Jag börjar bli lite törstig...