Patriots, remember when we warned you about the Biden regime's so-called "Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act" back in 2021? Well, the chickens are coming home to roost — and they're watching your every move.
Car manufacturers are now scrambling to comply with disturbing new AI tracking requirements that will turn every new vehicle into a rolling surveillance state. By the end of this year, cameras will be pointed directly at drivers' faces to monitor eye movements, while creepy touch sensors analyze alcohol levels beneath your skin's surface.
This isn't science fiction — it's the Biden administration's final gift that keeps on giving, even after Trump's decisive victory sent them packing. The 2021 law mandated these Big Brother technologies under the guise of reducing drunk driving deaths, but ask yourself: when has the federal government ever stopped at "just this one thing"?
Your Car Becomes a Government Snitch
The new monitoring systems will track far more than just alcohol consumption. Eye-tracking cameras will record where you look, how often you blink, and analyze your facial expressions. The skin-touch technology goes even deeper, literally scanning beneath the surface of your skin for biometric data.
"The touch system is being designed to analyze alcohol found beneath the driver's skin's surface," according to reports. But what else will these sensors detect? Stress levels? Heart rate? Medical conditions? And who gets access to all this deeply personal data?
"This is exactly the kind of federal overreach that President Trump and the MAGA movement fought against. Now we're stuck with Biden's surveillance state legacy embedded in every new car."
While Democrats claim this technology will save lives and reduce costs, conservatives see the real agenda: conditioning Americans to accept constant government monitoring as normal. Today it's your car watching you — tomorrow it could be your home, your workplace, your entire life under the microscope.
President Trump has promised to roll back Biden's authoritarian executive orders, but this surveillance mandate was buried deep in legislation that will take time to unravel. Meanwhile, every American shopping for a new car this year will have to choose: accept the spy technology or keep driving older vehicles.
The question isn't whether this technology can detect drunk driving — it's whether free Americans should be treated like suspects every time they turn the ignition. What do you think, patriots?
