Federal Surveillance Tech Becomes Mandatory In New Cars By 2027
Every new car in the U.S. will be required by law to have tech that puts constant surveillance on the driver by 2027.
This content is information the American ruling elite do NOT want you to have access to. If you appreciate work like this, and want more of it, please consider becoming a paid subscriber.
Note: this article would’ve been up hours ago, but halfway through writing it I realized somebody had smashed my car window and cleaned me out. They stole my favorite sunglasses and a couple credit cards.
And before you say, “Maddie…why the hell were credit cards sitting in your car?” trust me, I know. You’re right. I didn’t even realize those cards were still in there. I hadn’t touched them in at least a year.
Apparently the masterminds behind the operation went on a luxury shopping spree at 7/11 and spent a few hundred bucks, so after I finish this article I’m probably going to track down which location it was and send everything to the cops.
Or maybe I’ll cool off by then. Times are rough. Maybe they were buying baby formula. Maybe they just really needed taquitos. Who knows.
Either way, weirdly enough, it ties perfectly into what I wanted to talk about today, so let’s get into it.
Before we begin today’s episode of We’re Speedrunning Toward a Totalitarian Surveillance State and Everybody’s Pretending It’s Normal, I want to make something very clear about where I stand on all of this:
You have every right to know what your government is doing, and they have NO RIGHT to know what you are doing.
That is why we are called private citizens, and they are called public servants.
But somewhere along the way, that relationship got flipped completely upside down. The government hides behind classified files, redactions, secrecy laws, and closed-door meetings, while demanding total visibility into your finances, communications, location, purchases, movement, habits, and behavior.
A society where rulers live in privacy while the population lives under surveillance is the very definition of tyranny.
And now that surveillance infrastructure is making its way directly into your car.
For years, surveillance mostly existed outside the vehicle: traffic cameras, license plate readers, GPS tracking, toll scanners, facial recognition systems, cellphone metadata, etc. But now the surveillance is moving inside the cabin with you.
Beginning in 2027, new vehicles sold in the U.S. will reportedly include driver monitoring systems capable of tracking eye movement, attention, distraction, and behavior behind the wheel. Supporters say it’s about reducing distracted driving deaths. Critics, or honestly, just people capable of pattern recognition, see something much bigger: the normalization of constant biometric surveillance disguised as “safety.”
Because once the camera exists, the question is no longer whether the data gets used.
The question is: who eventually gets access to it?
Insurance companies? Car manufacturers? Law enforcement? Advertisers? Regulators? AI systems building behavioral profiles on millions of drivers in real time?
If history has shown us anything, it’s that these systems never stay “limited.” They always start with some emotionally manipulative sales pitch about “safety” or “convenience,” and then a few years later the technology somehow becomes permanent and gets used for things nobody ever voted on, approved, or even had a real say in.
The infrastructure built for “safety” today somehow always turns into the infrastructure for control tomorrow.
Your phone watches you.
Your traffic lights watch you.
Your TV watches you.
Your city watches you.
And now your car watches you too.
Which brings me back to my car getting broken into today.
My vehicle already has this technology. If I glance away from the road for more than two seconds it starts yelling “WATCH THE ROAD” at me like I’m a teenager learning how to drive. Which means there is obviously a camera monitoring me constantly while I’m inside the vehicle.
So here’s my question:
If somebody smashed my window today, then there should theoretically be footage of it. Can I access that footage?
Or is this one of those situations where the system only exists to monitor me, while the actual owner of the vehicle somehow has less access to the data than the corporations collecting it?
I think we all know the answer to that.
Nothing says “freedom” quite like having a camera pointed at your face every time you drive somewhere, all in the name of “safety,” of course.
This content is information the American ruling elite do NOT want you to have access to. If you appreciate work like this, and want more of it, please consider becoming a paid subscriber.
The Questions We Should Be Asking
Where exactly does this data go? Who owns it? Who can access it? How long is it stored? Can it be sold? Can it be subpoenaed? Who’s watching the footage? Can it be used against you?
What happens when the system flags somebody incorrectly?
And let’s be honest, it’s not if that happens. It’s when.
If your car decides you’re “impaired,” what happens next?
Does it lock you out?
Shut the vehicle down?
Call the authorities?
Notify your insurance company?
What happens if it locks somebody out in the middle of a dangerous neighborhood or on the side of a highway at night?
Will there even be a manual override?
Who becomes legally responsible when the system inevitably screws up?
What exact behaviors are being classified as “impairment” in the first place?Who decides those standards?
How long before insurance companies start using this data to raise rates?
How long before it shows up in courtrooms?
How long before employers want access to it?
How long before “unsafe driving behavior” becomes another algorithmic score attached to your identity?
How long before it becomes normal for the government to have a “kill switch” tied directly to your car?
What else am I overlooking? Let me know in the comments below…
If you’re tired of being told everything is fine while it clearly isn’t, you’re exactly why this publication exists.
My work is 100% reader-supported. That means no advertisers, no political handlers, and no incentive to soften the truth.
I started this because too many people feel like they’re losing their minds trying to make sense of what’s happening, myself included. I wanted to build a space of like-minded people to make this journey feel less lonely for all of us.
To allow me to continue posting content just like this, please consider becoming a paid subscriber. I’m running a special for $40/year or $5/month.
If that price feels impossible to you, I understand. Share this article with everyone you know, it costs nothing but it matters more than you could possibly know.
This content is information the American ruling elite do NOT want you to have access to. If you appreciate work like this, and want more of it, please consider becoming a paid subscriber.


I guess I’ll never have a new car.
Congress can’t stop insider trading. The Pentagon can’t pass an audit. The border databases get hacked constantly.
But don’t worry: by 2027 your car will reportedly be monitoring your eyes and behavior “for safety.”
Every surveillance state in history eventually discovered the magic word was protection.