Patriots, prepare to have your privacy shredded once again by the Biden regime's surveillance state. Car manufacturers are now being forced to comply with creepy new AI tracking requirements that will turn your vehicle into a rolling Big Brother command center, watching your face, analyzing your skin, and monitoring your breath 24/7.
The culprit? Biden's bloated 2021 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, which buried these Orwellian mandates deep in the fine print while Democrats celebrated their "bipartisan victory." Now Americans are discovering the true cost of that legislative monstrosity.
Starting by the end of this year, automakers must install sophisticated camera systems pointed directly at drivers' faces to track eye movements and other "bodily functions." But it gets worse – the technology includes touch sensors designed to analyze alcohol levels found beneath your skin's surface, essentially turning your steering wheel into a breathalyzer that never stops testing you.
Your Car Becomes a Snitch
Think about what this really means, folks. Every time you get behind the wheel, artificial intelligence will be studying your facial expressions, monitoring where you look, and conducting chemical analysis of your body through the steering wheel. How long before this data gets shared with insurance companies, law enforcement, or worse – federal agencies?
The Biden administration sold this invasion of privacy as a way to "reduce drunk driving deaths and costs," but we've heard that song before. Remember when COVID contact tracing was just about "public health"? Remember when the NSA was just collecting "metadata"?
President Trump has already signaled his administration's commitment to rolling back Biden's authoritarian overreach, but the damage is being done right now as manufacturers rush to comply with these mandates.
"This is exactly the kind of Deep State surveillance apparatus that Americans rejected in 2024," said one privacy advocate.
The question every American should be asking is simple: If they're willing to put cameras in our cars to watch our faces, what's next? And more importantly, what are they going to do with all that data once they have it?
