23 February 2013

Crime gangs hold your fingerprints


It can be fair to say, that the average lay (or below average intelligence) person is aware that the handing over of one’s fingerprints occurs after a crime, and is collected by the police, in order to prosecute the individual. This practice is vigorously portrayed by the corporate media in films and documentaries.

The night club scene has many shady operators together with their employees that are either involved directly in the drug trade or hide behind a ‘frontman’ who has no criminal convictions.

The authorities are fully aware of the criminals who operate behind the scenes. Corrupt police also take ‘drug money’ to look the other way.

Currently there is no mandatory law that states that a fingerprint must be kept by an organisation for a patron to enter their premises, yet this is happening in Melbourne.

A Melbourne night club, Silk Road, is one such venue that scans a finger print, together with the driver’s license, whilst taking a current photograph of the patron.
 
  • Collection of driver license details is one of the first steps to criminal activity, fraud or theft against that person.


  • Collection of credit card details from purchases within the premises matched to the driver’s license name, is another step closer to the 100 point of identification needed, to commit fraud.


The excuse given is that many a brawl has (allegedly) occurred in the past and the perpetrators have not been caught.

The stupid uneducated masses are not only having their privacy breached, but are also exposing themselves to criminal activity against themselves whilst away from their premises, supporting the actions of the venue with their uneducated opinion.

The laws concerning privacy breaches are enforced on the masses and not on the corporations, governments or business that expose the individuals to risk.

The corporate media is once again curiously quite on this topic.

Australia is truly a nanny state which sees its citizens as guilty to be proven innocent.

No comments:

Post a Comment