Flock cameras aren’t just watching the street, they’re watching you. Stores like Home Depot are contracting with Flock to install cameras in their parking lots. HOAs are bringing them in. Nursing homes. Gated communities. Private property that you pass through every day without thinking twice. That means your license plate can be photographed multiple times a day, logged, stored, and cross-referenced — not because you committed a crime, but because you existed in public.Flock cameras aren’t just watching the street, they’re watching you.
— Andrew Kaufman MD (@AndrewKaufmanMD) February 7, 2026
Stores like Home Depot are contracting with Flock to install cameras in their parking lots. HOAs are bringing them in. Nursing homes. Gated communities. Private property that you pass through every day without… pic.twitter.com/UkBlJ9eJRI
And suddenly all those new data centers popping up everywhere start to make a lot more sense.
Think about it. Cities are signing contracts. Private corporations are signing contracts. Entire neighborhoods are signing contracts. That’s an explosion of data being collected, processed, and stored — constantly.
People will say, “Relax, it’s just license plates.”
For now.
How long until it’s biometrics?
How long until it’s facial recognition?
How long until it’s movement tracking, behavioral profiling, predictive policing?
Every system starts small. Every surveillance program begins with “safety” and “convenience.” And every time, the public is told not to worry — right up until the infrastructure is already in place.
This isn’t about catching criminals.
It’s about normalizing surveillance.
This is a clip from my True Health Report podcast with Hakeem Anwar.
Click below to watch right now.