The National Motorists Association (NMA) is escalating its campaign against automated traffic enforcement, framing the technology as a threat to civil liberties. In its newsletter, the NMA highlights a federal bill that could block funding for camera installation, but notes its passage is uncertain. The organization identifies more immediate dangers in California, where bills expanding camera use await the governor’s signature, and in Connecticut, where cities are deploying cameras on roads with allegedly improper speed limits and signal timings. The NMA argues these systems prioritize revenue over safety, violate due process, and erode public trust. It advocates for engineering-based solutions instead of algorithmic ticketing. The group also warns of expanding surveillance networks, such as proposals to integrate private dashcams with police ALPR databases, creating a widespread monitoring web under the guise of traffic safety.