My driver’s license is about to expire so I grudgingly head over to the most feared bureaucracy in New Jersey – the Department of Motor Vehicles. The DMV. When I get there, I discover the line just to get into the building is a block long. The book I brought almost manages to kill the two hours I spend waiting. Almost.
“Number 142!” the clerk calls out. “Number 142!”
“Here,” I say, almost running towards the counter.
“ID and proof of residency, please,” the clerk says, not looking up from her terminal.
I hand over my passport, social security card, old driver’s license and a copy of my electric bill. Satisfied I am who I say I am, the clerk punches some numbers into her computer and says, “Okay, stand in the box to get your picture taken.”
Freshly shaved with a new haircut and wearing a nice shirt, I take up position in the box and smile.
“Take off your glasses, sir,” the clerk says. “And you can’t smile.”
“Why not?” I ask.
The clerk taps a sign next to the camera that reads “Facial Recognition System.”
“Are you kidding me?” I say.
“If you smile it throws of the computer.”
“Jesus. Talk about Big Brother.”
“You want a license or not?”
I know the moment my picture is taken, it will join millions of faces in a system accessible to law enforcement personnel. The rationale behind such programs is to root out identity thieves and insurance fraudsters, hunt down Al Qaeda operatives and catch bank robbers who forget to wear a ski mask. I also know it will enable the government to track every move I make.
A guy who used to work for the Port Authority told me that when I drive into the Lincoln Tunnel, cameras are not only reading my license plate and comparing them to a list of wanted automobiles, but are also capturing an image of my face. “The cameras are so good,” he said, “They can count the change in your cup holder.” So, even if I leave my EZ-Pass at home, rip out OnStar and take the battery out of my cell phone, the government’s electronic gauntlet will still detect me going into the city. Not that I want to do anything nefarious, mind you, but does the FBI need to know I crossed the Hudson to grab a $26 burger at Minetta’s Tavern?
It’s a brave new world. Credit card companies can count the change in my pocket, Google Maps has a picture of my house, for-profit companies dissect my forays online, the post office scans my mail and, thanks to Mr. Snowden, whatever you think of him, I know all my phone calls and Internet searches are stored in some kind of vast database. Now Uncle Sam knows I have an affinity for MILFs in cheerleading outfits. Just great. But if I want to drive legally I have to acquiesce yet again to the power of The State.
“Take the picture,” I tell the clerk, and the results are monstrous. I’m usually told I look younger than my forty-five years, but the grumpy guy on my new license looks sixty – and has been absorbed into an NSA/CIA/FBI biometric super snooper program to boot.
Depressed, I go to my local cigar shop where I strike up a conversation with the local police chief. ”Steve,” he says, after I tell him about my run in with the burgeoning security state, “In five years, you will have no expectation of privacy anywhere but your home.” After hearing that, I wonder if noon is too early to start drinking.
As I puff on my Maduro, the television news starts squawking about Anthony Weiner and his affinity for posting his penis online. For some reason, men love sharing pictures of their dicks with the world. I’ve never done so and I’m not sure what dark corner of male sexuality powers the compulsion, but if you look at sites like Twitter, Instagram, Tumblr and Snap Chat, you’ll realize the Web is veritable sausagefest.
Then an idea free-associates with my paranoid mind. If facial recognition is going to be part of our daily lives, why don’t we have penis identification software? Cockidentifcation?
Men already think their penises are special, but I’m sure the phallus of the human male had enough biometric identifiers that make it as unique as a fingerprint, iris or strand of DNA. So if we analyze the data I’m sure there’s enough variances in length, girth, lack thereof, tapers, angles, shapes and bends to assemble a searchable database of dicks. Obviously, we’re talking about cataloging erect penises here. Flaccidly and shrinkage would only confuse the system – like glasses and smiling flummoxes facial recognition now. So how do we get all this tumescence online?
We already have an impressive collection of dick pics lurking on the world’s data servers. Putting names to those penises might be a start. Perhaps aggrieved females could put names to the unwanted cock shots they get and forward them to some future government agency. On second thought, I can see this being abused by pissed off drunken women nationwide. “Don’t call me back will you? I’m sending your prick to Guantanamo!”
I’m afraid we’d have to mandate some kind of cold and clinical nationwide dick inventory. Of course we’d have to use machines – no busty nurses with analog tools like tape measures, sorry. Too many dicks, too little time. Maybe when a young man signs up for Selective Service, he’ll have to go to full mast for his country and stick his unit in the Federal Wangometer and register his johnson. Perhaps future trips to the DMV might involve porno mags and dropping your shorts. Or we could finally put those detested full body scanners in airports to good use. I’ll leave the logistics to others.
So what’s the benefit to this system? What’s the value of having every guy’s dong digitized and searchable? Glad you asked.
1. If you’ve ever used a dating website, you know that people send misrepresentative pictures all the time. If you send a picture of a penis that’s not your own to impress some woman on a sex hook up site – the computer will label your fraudulent weenie and boot you out of the system. That’ll prevent a lot of female dissatisfaction.
2. National security. Terrorists are invariably perverts. Remember all the porn they found in Osama’s bunker? Two minutes after these guys wrap up their You Tube rants about miniskirts and Western decadence, they’re spanking it to Girls Gone Wild. It’s not much of a stretch to imagine them posting pics of their dicks. Well, once the NSA’s penis sniffing algorithms spot a terrorist schlong getting Tweeted from an IP in The Hindu Kush, time to send in the Predator Drones. That’s what I call a hard target. Whacking tangos was never so much fun. Oh I could go on forever……
3. Could be used as an alternative ID – a guy never leaves his penis in his other pants. Maybe it could even be used as a passport. Like being able to pee standing up, just another advantage to being a dude. Who knew Visa stamps could be so kinky?
4. Pervy pols will get busted way quicker. “Eddie Escapade my ass! We know that’s you Anthony!”
5. Scientists could crunch the numbers and finally tell us if all those ethnic/racial stereotypes are really true.
6. Monetize the Internet for regular Joes. Why should porn sites, Google and You Tube make all the cash? If someone clicks on your penis pic, you get a micropayment. Micro might be a poor word choice, though. Perhaps a sliding scale. Hmmm.
7. Aid in prosecutions. Think how much faster the Bill Clinton thing would have gone.
8. The FBI would have a 10 Most Wanted Dicks Poster. And you wonder why your girlfriend always volunteers to buy stamps?
9. Market research. Condom makers will know why those Magnum sizes aren’t selling briskly. Maybe Madison Ave will find a guy who can cover the space between those two bathtubs.
10. It would make life easier for porn producers. “Jimmy Wad’s got the flu. Check the database for local talent!”
Like all sensitive information, a national dick database will have to be protected. God forbid the government uses it for illegal purposes. Cops will need a warrant before doing any search and uh, seizures, but let’s face it; the FISA court will find a way to pervert the Constitution. And I’m sure some whistleblower wannabe will get a job with the Federal Penis Data Initiative to “see what’s really going on,” steal the information, release it to the press and then seek asylum in Russia. Putin. What a dick.
An hour later, my cigar has gone cold and I finish typing this post on my iPad. I’m exhausted from thinking about so many synonyms for wieners. “What are you writing?” the police chief asks.
“Chief,” I say. “You don’t want to know.”.
Great to see you posting again Steve!
i loved your first book and have just started reading the blog, but i have to comment on “the bitchy waiter”. He was on the today show yesterday and he told all of america that he is happy with a 15% tip!! for real dude?? maybe at a dinner or pizza place, but if theres a table cloth & linen napkins and the service is average, nothing less than 20% is acceptable!! just had to get that out there, thanks
Steve,
No matter what they try, there will always be the problem of identity theft…
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/08/02/geraldo-ramos-passes-out-drunk-wakes-up-no-penis_n_3697194.html?ref=topbar
Because I’m old, I remember the ‘Plaster Casters’ of the early 1970’s. Groupies who made plaster casts of those they admired…some of whom had difficulty in holding a pose (as it were).
I found this AWESOME website through listverse, and thoroughly enjoy your writing. I recently invested in your book “Keep the Change” and published some derived guidelines for tipping in New Orleans. Thank you for entertaining us and retraining a mean Englishman in the correct ways to tip. Tip Heavy, my friends.
Steve, don’t encourage them. Just don’t.;
The license-plate cameras are even more intrusive than you imagine. In major metro areas, certainly the Bay Area, there’s a DHS-funded data center where all the cities which such cameras can and do transmit their pics of your vehicle and plate, with time stamp. Enough cities have these cameras that they can actually track a particular vehicle’s course across the metro area on a given day. If they’re interested enough in you, they don’t need to put a direction-finder in your car anymore.
The chief is right, and wrong; we’re entering the era of no secrets — for the mass of us. The wealthy and privileged will keep theirs. It’s called the asymmetry of information: they can know all about you, but you know nothing about them. Privacy for all is indeed a fantasy now, but in a better world everybody would know about everybody. No privacy for anybody. The privileged would lose their position of advantage, and we’d all be better off.
In the meantime, the best thing to do is keep no secrets, depend on no secrets. Make openness your strategy and work with it. Only when you attempt to have secrets will you truly be in their power.
Welcome to the police state. I told you back in college that this would happen. The wealthy and privileged can be hacked into, if you’re good enough. Hell, the Pentagon was hacked a couple of years ago.
The same thing happened to me.
There must be a better way.
I have been using AAA on my last
few DMV needs. Much better experience.
Funny post, but I thought/hoped it was going in a different direction. When the clerk mentioned that a smile could flummox the facial recognition software, you might have written about the power joy gives you to resist authoritarianism. Seems like the type of wisdom that is up your alley.
Mr. Dublanica, this is the fall-down funniest post, with the requisite amount of seriousness, that I have seen on your blog in a while!