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Where To Buy Police Scanners Cheap


Think about it. If a radio scanner costs $500 and lasts 6x as long as one costing $100, you have essentially saved yourself $100 in the long term. So, while you may think that the Whistler TRX-2 is a little bit on the high side in terms of price, do remember that this is one of those discount police scanners that will give you many, many years of happy use.




where to buy police scanners cheap



Mike --You Worte: "The only ones who might take issue with this type of surveillance are soft on crime progressives who believe criminals are the true societal victims."FYI, I am neither a progressive nor do I believe criminals are victims. Please do not characterize individuals so quickly and indiscriminately.I do believe we need to preserve our privacy -- and it's getting more difficult to do that. As "starting home" pointed out, "How would you feel if one of these cameras was at an intersection next to your home and it captured every time you left your driveway?It's okay if police have their scanners, but this city must make sure they are used vary carefully all the t time -- this year, and next, and nets.Diana


Cost factors aside, the ALPRs are a pro-active measure on the part of the police to identify and discriminate against people of color who may or may not belong in certain areas where affluence tends to prevail (e.g. Stanford Shopping Center & the nicer Palo Alto neighborhoods).It is yet another example of blatant racial profiling targeting black people driving expensive cars that again, may or may not belong to them.ALPRs represent a numbers game geared towards stopping and apprehending a certain percentage of presumed suspects based on outward appearances.Fiscal and liberal-minded Palo Altans should further address and question this matter as it is merely an electronic surveillance extension of southern police practices."If these ALPDs are truly an infringement on personal freedom, the ACLU will get involved along with advocacy groups for people of color from lower socio-conomic backgrounds."^ Most likely...can Palo Alto afford yet another lawsuit, this time based on police-initiated racial profiling and unwarranted stops for questioning?


>...these ALPRs threaten freedom of association and freedom of religion.^ Only if someone is doing something illegal...remember January 6th? If not for the Capitol surveillance cameras, many of the insurgents would have gone unidentified and un-prosecuted.As for religious services, most people (including the police) don't care who's attending church or temple.The ALPR could also prove one's innocence by recording their whereabouts at a given time of day.It is a two-sided coin...freedom VS security.


This won't solve the problem they think it will. A screwdriver and 60 seconds are all it takes to put a different plate on.People are already committing brazen thefts with license plates in full view, and when I've handed this surveillance footage to the police, wrapped up in a tidy bow, nothing happens. I've done this 8-10 times now.Do you really want your vehicle to be scanned everywhere as you drive around town?This is a net negative. Won't solve the problem, but it will surveil residents.


I love how the sentiment in these comments is that crime in PA is committed by "outsiders". With that logic, we should implement inspection booths at all entrances to PA to check residency. Trackers could be put on vehicles coming into the secure zone to ensure we know where they are at all times. In fact, the technology exists to register and track their phones inside the secure zone so if they leave their vehicle, we can immediately notify police to follow them. To quote the great Carol Johnson: The criminal element needs to be put on notice that they are not welcome in Palo Alto regardless of color, socio-economic background, and/or immigration status.


MyFeelz...yesterday is long gone. At one time Palo Alto was kind of like Mayberry but times have changed.I attended Addison Elementary before many of the other Palo Alto public schools were built (with the exception of Palo Alto High School). We had May Day festivities at school and children gleefully danced around a May Pole to celebrate the arrival of spring. Dr. Henry M. Gunn was school superintendent at the time and he would occasionally stop by to check in on the classes.Those were the good old days in Palo Alto and we can never go back in time.There were very few African American residents and those that did live in Palo Alto resided mostly in the Ventura neighborhood and attended the old Mayfield School on El Camino Real where the soccer fields are now located.A few other African American families resided on a small segregated street in Crescent Park where they served as domestics for well-to-do white middle class families.The police station was located on Bryant Street in downtown and even had its own jail. In those days, many of the police officers, firemen, and teachers also resided in Palo Alto. The old wooden Carnegie Library on Hamilton was eventually replaced by the current City Hall building and nearly everyone in PA shopped at one time or another at Werry Electric, Roos Brothers, Crescent or Adolph's Bakery, Dick Felt's Store for Boys, Rucker's Uniform Shop (for domestic attire), Thoits Shoe Store, and Palo Alto Hardware among many other noteworthy establishments. This was before Stanford Shopping Center and Town & Country were built.You could also buy a new car in Palo Alto as there were downtown Pontiac/GMC, Ford, and Cadillac/Oldsmobile dealerships.At one time Palo Alto was just another nice predominantly white middle-class town where everyone accepted others providing one was courteous and knew their place. There were no outsiders to scrutinize and everyone was welcomed by the various retail establishments.


Decide for yourselves if ALPRs are necessary...Automated license plate readers (ALPRs) are high-speed, computer-controlled camera systems that are typically mounted on street poles, streetlights, highway overpasses, mobile trailers, or attached to police squad cars. ALPRs automatically capture all license plate numbers that come into view, along with the location, date, and time. The data, which includes photographs of the vehicle and sometimes its driver and passengers, is then uploaded to a central server.Vendors say that the information collected can be used by police to find out where a plate has been in the past, to determine whether a vehicle was at the scene of a crime, to identify travel patterns, and even to discover vehicles that may be associated with each other. Law enforcement agencies can choose to share their information with thousands of other agencies.Taken in the aggregate, ALPR data can paint an intimate portrait of a driver's life and even chill First Amendment protected activity. ALPR technology can be used to target drivers who visit sensitive places such as health centers, immigration clinics, gun shops, union halls, protests, or centers of religious worship.Drivers have no control over whether their vehicle displays a license plate because the government requires all car, truck, and motorcycle drivers to display license plates in public view. So it's particularly disturbing that automatic license plate readers are used to track and record the movements of millions of ordinary people, even though the overwhelming majority are not connected to a crime.


> Decide for yourselves if ALPRs are necessary...These surveillance cameras are unconstitutional and the blatant violations should be addressed in the SCOTUS by the ACLU and privacy rights advocates.Don't be hoodwinked by law & order proponents who contend that ALPRs will protect society from criminals.They are mounted everywhere and serve no purpose other than to infringe upon our daily lives by keeping a watchful eye on everyone's coming and goings.Now the cops want them mounted on their squad cars. For what purpose? To further harass people of color with dubious claims of probable cause?If the pole-mounted ALPRs are connected to a central server and offer quick access, there is absolutely no need for readers mounted on individual patrol cars.This is a racist endeavor perpetrated by racist police departments.


To rejuvenate and stimulate the American economy, a substantial growth in retail sales is very important regardless of where the goods are manufactured.Retailers insure their merchandise against theft so it is immaterial whether these goods are legitimately purchased or stolen.To increase surveillances via ALPRs is pointless as the police are not going to cover any of the related retail loss expenditures, let alone successfully apprehend all of the alleged perpetrators once they have fled.Lastly and speaking as a person of Jewish ancestry, @Bobbie Ryerson...your suggested car stickers and guest passes are no different than someone being forced to wear a yellow Star of David on their clothing to designate them as undesirable and unworthy individuals.


> ALPR is not preventing any crime. Its tracking a vehicle after the fact to associate it to other locations where crime has occurred. It's presence is not an effective crime deterrent.? ALPRs can be an effective crime deterrent by alerting the police to stop and question anyone who might have been associated with or involved in a prior crime.ALPRs are not racist, just a 'seeing-eye' that reads license plates.


Police Scanner Radio & Fire is one of the most popular free scanners you can download, and for good reason. It piggybacks off the acclaimed Broadcastify app, which includes police, fire, EMS and other audio feeds. 041b061a72


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