Hi-Tech
Society
We live in a
society nearing perfection within the realm of hi-tech science. A perfect crime can be committed on a random
victim and the criminal can possibly get away with it but only if he doesn’t
get caught on a surveillance camera, and if his or her DNA, and finger prints
are not on file. However, if the crime
involves a homicide that person can still get caught 20 or thirty years down
the road if evidence is collected at the scene of the crime, and later matched
to newly recorded DNA and or finger prints.
With existing
science a person can be caught simply from dropping chewing gum (chewed) on the
sidewalk, or from a discarded empty plastic water bottle or pop can. Even spiting on the sidewalk can be used to
compare evidence DNA with a suspect.
I am still amazed
at how a satellite image can show the cars on my driveway, at a given time, and
even show someone Bar-B-Queuing in the back yard patio of anyone’s house. At present the NSA can listen to our cell
phone conversations and read our emails, how is it possible that we can’t track
a Boeing Airliner, with over 200 passengers and crew on board.
- (Reuters) - The chance of
finding floating debris from a missing Malaysia Airlines jetliner has
become highly unlikely, and a new phase of the search will focus on a far
larger area of the Indian Ocean floor, Australian Prime Minister Tony
Abbott said on Monday.
- The search effort for Malaysia
Airlines Flight MH370, which vanished while flying from Kuala Lumpur to
Beijing on March 8 with 239 people on board, has so far failed to turn up
any trace of wreckage from the plane.
- Given the amount of time that
has elapsed, Abbott said that efforts would now shift away from the visual
searches conducted by planes and ships and towards underwater equipment
capable of scouring the ocean floor with sophisticated sensors.
- He admitted, however, that it
was possible nothing would ever be found of the jetliner.
- "We will do everything we
humanly can, everything we reasonably can, to solve this mystery," he
told reporters in Canberra.