Civil Liberties
The government is building the most powerful surveillance system in human history. No vote. No hearing. No one asked you.
Most of this platform is about what government owes you. This plank is about what it has to be stopped from doing to you. Power doesn't shrink on its own. It gets checked — by courts, by public records, by people who refuse to look away.
I spent my campaign doing that work. The campaign is over. The work isn't.
They're watching. We mapped it.
Automated license plate readers track where you drive and when, logging the movements of ordinary people across Maryland with no warrant and almost no oversight. Most residents have no idea how many cameras are aimed at them or who keeps the data. So we found out. The MD-06 Privacy Project documents the surveillance infrastructure already installed across this district, camera by camera, at deflock.ethanformd.com. You can't consent to what you can't see.
A data center is a surveillance machine that happens to drink water.
I support the Artificial Intelligence Data Center Moratorium Act — Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's bill to halt new data center construction until federal safeguards exist. This isn't only about electric bills and drained aquifers, though it's about those too. The bill exists because ICE is already partnering with AI firms to surveil Americans, and because the same infrastructure powering that surveillance is being thrown up across the Mid-Atlantic with no accountability. You don't get to build the engine of mass surveillance in our backyard and call it economic development.
Williamsport.
On January 16, ICE paid $102.4 million for a warehouse outside Williamsport — a town of 2,000 — and announced plans to hold 1,500 people at a time. Then it handed a $641 million contract to a defense firm to run it. The state sued. In April, a federal judge halted most construction, ruling the government never did the environmental review the law requires. But the judge let one thing continue: the security fence, the cameras, the fiber optic cable. A court stopped the detention center and the surveillance kept going up anyway. I've fought this facility from the start — town halls, public records requests, tracking the case through federal court. I'm not done, and neither is this fight.
Sunlight or nothing.
Government works in the dark because we let it. Every secret warehouse deal, every undisclosed camera contract, every agency that "can't comment" is betting you'll stop asking. I don't stop asking. I've used Maryland's Public Information Act to pry loose what Washington County wanted buried, and I'll keep filing, keep litigating, and keep publishing what I find.
The right to know what your government is doing to you isn't a courtesy. It's the whole game.