The Big Lie of Safety
Everywhere you go, cameras watch. On the streets, in stores, at airports, even in your pocket. Governments tell us this is for our protection — that surveillance keeps us safe from criminals, terrorists, or disasters.
But safety is not the goal. Control is. Surveillance is sold as freedom, but in truth, every camera is a chain.
Turning Spying Into Protection
The trick is simple: rebrand surveillance as security.
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Cameras on every corner? “For crime prevention.”
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Phone tracking? “For your health.”
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Internet monitoring? “For national security.”
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Data collection? “For better services.”
Every expansion of spying is disguised as an expansion of freedom. But in reality, it’s the opposite.
The Digital Cage
Unlike old forms of tyranny, surveillance doesn’t need chains or bars. It creates an invisible prison:
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Facial Recognition: Every movement tracked, every crowd scanned.
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Digital Footprints: Purchases, locations, messages — all stored forever.
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Predictive Policing: Arrests made not for crimes, but for “potential risks.”
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Social Credit Systems: Freedom tied to obedience, points, and ratings.
The result? A cage you can’t see — but can never escape.
The Globe Illusion Connection
The globe myth itself mirrors surveillance logic. Just as cameras claim to see everything, satellites are said to watch the whole spinning ball Earth. But have you ever seen a real satellite photo? Only CGI composites and cartoons.
The illusion is the same:
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Cameras = “protection” (actually control).
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Satellites = “proof” of the globe (actually fabrication).
Both rely on blind trust in unseen eyes above.
Why People Accept the Chains
People accept surveillance because it’s marketed as freedom. “If you have nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear.” But this flips logic upside down: privacy is not guilt — it is freedom.
By convincing people to defend their own chains, the system makes slavery look like safety.
Breaking Free
The first step is refusing to confuse surveillance with freedom. Freedom means privacy, dignity, and the right to exist untracked. Cameras don’t create safety — communities do. Algorithms don’t protect truth — they bury it.
Real freedom begins when people reject the idea that being watched is the same as being safe.
Conclusion
Surveillance is not freedom. It is obedience dressed as protection. Every camera is a chain, every database a prison.
Just like the globe myth, surveillance survives on illusion. Both claim to watch over us, but both exist to keep us in cages we cannot see.
The Earth is flat. The freedom is fake. And every lens pointed at you is a lock on your chains.