City of the Future? (Shop till you drop until the state's hyper-surveillant gaze)

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America may be lurching towards becoming a surveillance state (with the UK bumbling ahead of it), but pesky archaic notions like civil liberties, the constitution and tenaciously salutary  cultural habits like hedonism and distrust of authority still manage (sometimes) to trip it up. Not so much in Shentzen, China, the epicenter of what author Naomi Klein calls "Market Stalinism", an amalgamation combining hyper-consumerism and high-tech 24/7 surveillance, or what she calls Police State 2.0. In this interesting essay in Rolling Stone Klein ruminates on how the Chinese government, with the eager assistance of taxpayer subsidized US security tech firms is making cities like Shentzen the new prototype of a "Panopticonic"city Michel Foucault would have loved to hate, using the methods of Mao with an irony he may have appreciated. 

Naomi Klein reports:

American commentators like CNN's Jack Cafferty dismiss the Chinese as "the same bunch of goons and thugs they've been for the last 50 years." But nobody told the people of Shenzhen, who are busily putting on a 24-hour-a-day show called "America" -- a pirated version of the original, only with flashier design, higher profits and less complaining. This has not happened by accident. China today, epitomized by Shenzhen's transition from mud to megacity in 30 years, represents a new way to organize society. Sometimes called "market Stalinism," it is a potent hybrid of the most powerful political tools of authoritarian communism -- central planning, merciless repression, constant surveillance -- harnessed to advance the goals of global capitalism.

Now, as China prepares to showcase its economic advances during the upcoming Olympics in Beijing, Shenzhen is once again serving as a laboratory, a testing ground for the next phase of this vast social experiment. Over the past two years, some 200,000 surveillance cameras have been installed throughout the city. Many are in public spaces, disguised as lampposts. The closed-circuit TV cameras will soon be connected to a single, nationwide network, an all-seeing system that will be capable of tracking and identifying anyone who comes within its range -- a project driven in part by U.S. technology and investment. Over the next three years, Chinese security executives predict they will install as many as 2 million CCTVs in Shenzhen, which would make it the most watched city in the world. (Security-crazy London boasts only half a million surveillance cameras.)

The security cameras are just one part of a much broader high-tech surveillance and censorship program known in China as "Golden Shield." The end goal is to use the latest people-tracking technology -- thoughtfully supplied by American giants like IBM, Honeywell and General Electric -- to create an airtight consumer cocoon: a place where Visa cards, Adidas sneakers, China Mobile cellphones, McDonald's Happy Meals, Tsingtao beer and UPS delivery (to name just a few of the official sponsors of the Beijing Olympics) can be enjoyed under the unblinking eye of the state, without the threat of democracy breaking out. With political unrest on the rise across China, the government hopes to use the surveillance shield to identify and counteract dissent before it explodes into a mass movement like the one that grabbed the world's attention at Tiananmen Square.

Remember how we've always been told that free markets and free people go hand in hand? That was a lie. It turns out that the most efficient delivery system for capitalism is actually a communist-style police state, fortressed with American "homeland security" technologies, pumped up with "war on terror" rhetoric. And the global corporations currently earning superprofits from this social experiment are unlikely to be content if the lucrative new market remains confined to cities such as Shenzhen. Like everything else assembled in China with American parts, Police State 2.0 is ready for export to a neighborhood near you.

Thanks for the tip from Eve Matelan


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This page contains a single entry by Phil Leggiere published on May 24, 2008 1:11 AM.

Pittsburg Prosecutor Declares New War on "Masking Products" that Help People Pass Urine Drug Tests was the previous entry in this blog.

Why Taser Em (When You Can Just Spray Them with Magic Mist that Makes Them Want to Comply) is the next entry in this blog.

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