• Analysis

Fake ‘NYPD’ drone signs hit New York

Several weeks ago, a 28-year-old Army vet, who had worked with drones during two tours in Iraq and is now a radical art student in New York, came up with a creative act of protest to raise awareness around the growing use of drones domestically by police forces across the country.

According to an article in last week’s New Yorker, over the course of several nights, the veteran (who remains anonymous) and a few friends posted eleven unusual street signs around New York City, which is apparently investigating using drones as a law enforcement tool.

Designed to look exactly like official street signs, the fake NYPD signs had several different messages: “ATTENTION: Drone Activity in Progress,” or “ATTENTION: Local Statutes Enforced by Drones,” or “ATTENTION: Authorized Drone Strike Zone, 8am-8pm, Including Sunday.”

Near each sign, they also stenciled a quote from a Founding Father, such as a warning from Ben Franklin that seems particularly apropos: “They that can give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.”

As Avaaz pledged to do as part of a recent petition, activists now need to buy or build their own drones and fly them over the city to back up these signs and make the reality of drones just a bit more tangible to an American public that often seems completely disconnected from the issue.



Recent Stories

  • Analysis

Student encampments have the power to change minds — if they control the narrative


May 9, 2024

While media and universities try to delegitimize student encampments, there’s still a way they can shift public opinion to support an end to the genocide in Gaza.

  • Q&A

NYC’s Riders Alliance has a vision for a better, safer subway with less policing

May 7, 2024

A grassroots group of MTA passengers and community leaders is organizing riders to support new community investments and push back against regressive public safety narratives.

  • Analysis

Columbia students are sick at heart — just as we were in ‘68

May 1, 2024

An organizer of the 1968 Columbia University protests on why the message against war, then and now, is the same.