Persuasive Essay On Surveillance Cameras

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A friend once told me, “It is so ironic that I have a powerful job, but I can’t really take control of my actions”. As a supervisor in a gigantic company, he could not take control because his boss was watching him the entire time from the tiny camera installed in his office. Everyone dreams of his position, but the pressure of surveillance and mistrust lead him to quit. Closed-circuit televisions (CCTVs) are becoming increasingly common in major cities around the world. Closed-circuit televisions are TV systems in which records are not publicly distributed, but are watched mainly for surveillance and security purposes. According to James Vlahos from the Popular Mechanics’ Magazine, “There are an estimated 30 million surveillance cameras now …show more content…

Terror is becoming a major threat to the security in the United States following the September 11 attack. The government has increased its security, and one way to do this is to increase surveillance. Now, part of the citizens believes that the government has gone too far in the use of these cameras. The surveillance cameras are now being used for many other purposes, some of which are not related to security in any way. Top government officials can now monitor actions of people they suspect to be a threat to the country, but others think that this action is spying on the innocent citizens who are busy developing the country in their own private ways. There is a limit to which this security measures become a public pain. As much as people may want to feel secure at all times in every place they go, they also value their privacy. That is one of the essentials that define a human being. Even wild animals in the forest enjoy this right to be private. No one wants to be monitored at all times because it creates a psychological feeling that he or she is in a prison. One feels that their world has been narrowed to the corners of their own house. In fact, some members of the society claim that this privacy inside one’s house is lost as soon as the curtains on the window are removed due to the presence of …show more content…

There is a growing feeling that the presence of surveillance cameras within the country is the best way of combating crime, terrorism, and other acts that are prohibited by law. Surveillance cameras are also finding a new role in workplaces. During agricultural and industrial revolutions, there was a popular practice where supervisors were appointed to monitor employees and ensure that they did not engage in non-work related activities. This culture of close supervision came to an end in the twentieth century. In the twenty-first century, a new concept has emerged; leading to the creation of the performance contract where an employee’s worth is measured by their productivity. This new concept has gained popularity because employees are aware that they will be paid based on how well they work. They were aware that the top management trusts them, hence why they work with very minimal supervision. However, some companies are now using surveillance cameras to monitor their employees’ activities, which directly challenges this new popular concept. According to Welsh and Farrington, assistant professors in the Department of Criminal Justice at the University of Massachusetts, Lowell, “many people no longer trust in the use of surveillance cameras in various institutions” (110). The lack of honesty and clarity between customers and sellers made surveillance

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