What, Me Worry?

How much further is the authoritarianism of New Labour going to be allowed to go before it’s put a stop to, and who is going to do it?

We hear this morning that now they propose to allow police to stop and question anybody, anywhere, anytime, about anything at all, with no probable cause and no need for any crime having been committed – and those who refuse are to be charged with obstruction of the police.

And now Whitehall even wants to put litter=droppers on the DNA database.
Are they crazy? Yes. Crazy like a bunch of technofascists. It’s not just the sweeping powers being given to police that we need to worry about, either:

Civil liberties groups are warning that the details of every Briton could soon be on the national DNA database, raising fresh concerns of a ‘surveillance society’. Controversial plans being studied by the government would see the DNA of people convicted of even the most minor, non-imprisonable offences, such as dropping litter, entered on the national database.

That rather puts the lie to those New Labour supporters insisting that all is for the best in the best of all possiible worlds – people like well-padded journo and ‘cultural critic’ Mark Lawson, whose asinine assertion in the Guardian on Friday that datamining is nothing to worry about, really, is one of the reasons we’re in this mess.

A commenter put it better than I ever could:

Markson
May 25, 2007 8:08 AM

Wow, the writer is exceptionally naive, especially in a world that has witnessed what the Bush administration has done with data mining. No one is paranoid to fear that governments may use Google’s vast search database to turn it on its citizens, just as Bush used AT&T to spy on Americans (w/o warrants mind you) and the Chinese government has used Yahoo to arrest a dissident.

This Pollyanna belief that because there are laws against such behavior in democracies that mortals won’t break those laws or the public will rise up is foolishly dangerous. There is no greater example of that folly than the United States where Bush has succeeded on destroying constitutionally protected rights in an unprecedented fashion and the public is apathetic (either being ignorant of the scale or believing that it’s scope is limited and accurate).

Exactly.

Mark Lawson and media figures like him are overprivileged, overfed over-insulated tossers who need to get out of North London or Bow or wherever the latest middle-aged trendoid meedja hangout is now and then. Lawson’s horribly representative of a technologically and politically illiterate cadre of journalists who were in bed with Tony (and now with Gordon) and who just flat out don’t see what’s happening. By minimising the threat Lawson and his ilk are actually enabling it.

When government authoritarianism is combined with ID cards and a DNA database and supplemented by commercial datamining, any remaining civil liberties, any claim to being private individuals that we have, is gone. Forever.

The information may be all about us, but it isn’t ours any more: even our thoughts are regularly monitored and sold.

What’s not sold is seized: in the UK the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act allows the government to seize and sweep broad swathes of information about us from companies and data providers, basically on spec (and it’s about to get worse). In the US the Patriot Act and National Security Letters serve the same purpose.

The wall between commercial and governmental data mining is now so flimsy all it will take is a enough hot air from a determined politician to blow it down completely.

Now they want our DNA too.

Soon we will all cease to be private individuals and become the property of the state, with no aspect of our lives left unmonitored, unsurveilled or uncontrolled, not even our genes. By 2010 every UK ‘citizen’ is to have a biometric ID card, the information on which is to be collated with what’s already held by government.

Liberty claims that, per head of population, the UK has five times as many people on the DNA database as any other country. The government estimates that even if the database is not expanded to include the details of minor offenders, some 4.5 million people will still be on it by 2010.

The expansion of the database is prompting fears that people from ethnic minorities are being stigmatised. According to research by the Liberal Democrats, under the existing system within three years the details of more than half of all black men will be on the DNA database

Almost 40% of the male black population, many of them children, have their DNA on criminal file, despite their having never been charged or convicted of any crime.

Oh, and just in case you though this apparent discrimination was accidental, the biometric ID cards are being brought in for foreigners first.
Guess who’ll be constantly asked to produce their ‘foreigners’ ID papers? You can bet that they sure as hell won’t be white and they won’t be foreign either.

Not content with seizing our DNA, the New Labour government’s latest wheeze is that children – even in the womb – are to be identified by social services departments as being ‘at risk of future criminal behaviour’.No only that, they’re proposing that not just hard data but gossip and speculation about us should be shared amongst government departments:

UK Proposes Department of Precrime

It seems the Blair government’s attacks on civil liberties will continue even during the PM’s farewell tour. The Times today has printed a leaked plan from the Home Office violent crime unit which if true is almost beyond belief.

The proposal is to force frontline public sector workers to report people they merely think might one day commit a violent offence. This speculation will then be collated by a national agency and shared amongst a range of bodies such as local authorites and the police.

The proposal includes terms like “sufficiently concerned” which sound good. However if staff have a statutory duty to make such reports then they will obviously cover themselves by reporting more rather than less. Remember that we’re not just talking about specially trained personnel. We’re talking about anyone in the public services who comes into contact with us.

If this monstrous scheme goes ahead it will in effect create a national database of gossip, hearsay and uninformed speculation – some of which will undoubtedly be malicious. Once on the database you’ll probably never get off. An unfounded accusation could follow you for the rest of your life.

And of course data, like that from Sure Start and other arms-length, semi-privatised or outsourced agencies, goes right into the ‘caring services’ pool.

It’s called the multi-agency approach, but it’s authoritarianism by stealth. Cemtral government is leeching off public service workers’ best efforts to help people. The people on the ground may have the best will in the world, but when a government is hell-bent on social control and has the means to do it, good people get crushed.

But it’s going to take principled people in the public services like that to fight this: only if the public and civil service unions refuse to play ball with New Labour, refuse to go along with and to implement these mad dictatorial schemes, do we have any chance of escaping a future that’s very scary indeed.

If civil servants decide to use their power they could bring the country to a standstill – and they could easily put a spoke in any scheme the government thinks up to oppress the populace, because after all they’re the ones who have to implement it.

But Will thay? How likely is that to happen? I don’t know. I wish I did.

Decidering Dictatorship


Can’t say he didn’t warn us can we?

A commenter at one of the US liberal blogs at the start of the Attorneygate hearings, I forget who, wondered idly what Bushco were up to while the rest of us were watching the dog & pony show in Congress, on the general principle that they’re tricksy, ruthless bastards and should never be understimated, despite their apparent incompetence. Could Attorneygate be another Bushco bait and switch, masking other, wickeder misdeeds?

That struck me, and I’ve been wondering myself ever since.

If you’ve ever interviewed anyone in a counselor/client situation you’ll know that there’s a presenting problem and then there’s the real, underlying problem. Same with Bushco: the scandal you’re presented with is never the one you should be looking at. I know now what I should’ve been looking at.

Even as the political corruption of the Justice Department and the machinations of his corrupt administration was being exposed Bush was making an end run round Congress and any future oversight, issuing the National Security and Homeland Security Presidential Directive; it’s declared purpose the

“Assignment of Power to Executive Branch: the directive assigns sole power to the executive branch of government.”

Screw oversight, screw impeachment: Bushco have been preparing a White House coup, to be implemented by Homeland Security at presidential decree.

Read More

Getting Away With Murder

I expect they’d hoped to hide this amongst the hoohah about Gordon Brown.

BBC

11 Menezes police face no action
Mr Menezes was mistaken for a suicide bomber
Eleven officers involved in the shooting of Brazilian Jean Charles de Menezes will not face disciplinary action, the police watchdog has said.

They were among 15 Metropolitan Police officers interviewed by the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC).

Decisions have not been made on the four most senior officers investigated.

The family of Mr Menezes – shot eight times at Stockwell Tube station after being mistaken for a suicide bomber – said the decision was “disgraceful”.

The 27-year-old was killed on 22 July 2005, one day after the failed London bombings.

The IPCC said a surveillance officer, one of the 11 not facing disciplinary action, would be given “management advice” in relation to action he took after the shooting.

It is a travesty of justice and another slap in the face for our family

Patricia da Silva Armani, Mr Menezes’ cousin

It said a decision on whether the four commanders and tactical advisers investigated should be disciplined would be made after the end of court proceedings.
More…

Mormon Sins, Feels ‘Bad’.

Does the Church of Jesus Christ and Latter Day Saints condone torture and murder by government?

This is Deputy White House Counsel Timothy Flanagan. Remember those porcine, well-fed, well-groomed features. We’ll be seeing them again at The Hague if there is any justice in the world.

This devout Mormon helped write the memo that allowed US troops to torture civilians at Abu Ghraib and secret US prisons elsewhere. This is one of the men who declared habeas corpus dead, said the Geneva Conventions were quaint and outdated and who declared that there were no human rights any longer. and that anywhere in the world, whoever or wherever you are, the US can kidnap, jail and torture you on a whim.

This is what that ‘devout’ ratfuck bastard enabled. (Warning, graphic violence)

Now he says he feels bad about it. Aww, bloody diddums. From Harpers:

I had a heartfelt conversation with Flanagan and told him what I had heard from Iraqis: that these techniques had been used on men, women and children in Iraq. He feels bad about it; I know he does. But the fact is that he and Yoo and some of these other people from the best law schools and universities in this country were the ones who came up with the legal definitions that allowed for the abuse to happen.

Quite. I urge you to read the whole article – it lays bare the horrendous torture that’s been happening and exactly who is to blame, including Flanagan. This is a man who should spend eternity with his eyes taped open watching endless looped movies of his own wife and children being raped and tortured. With a soundtrack on headphones.

What, you think that’s harsh? Why? It’s just what he made it legal for his underlings to do to others’ families, including children and babies. Flanagan is a monster, like his other ‘devout’colleagues-in-law John Yoo and Alberto Gonzalez; none of them got actual blood on their hands but they enabled a tide of blood, cruelty and filth in the hidden prisons of the US military and intelligence that will iflood the world with even more violence for decades to come.

So he says he feels bad now. What the hell does that mean? He has a vague sense of diquiet? Sincere repentance? Dismay at being caught? WTF? Saying he ‘feels bad’ is totally self-serving and meaningless. Are we supposed to show forgiveness and understanding to this psychopath now? Fuck that. He is a criminal against humanity.

What I really want to know now is whether the Church of Jesus Christ and Latter Day Saints, AKA The Mormons, will denounce him. Flanagan was the Mormon Church’s blue-eyed boy in the White House; here he is speaking to a conference of LDS layers on religion and integrity in politics – from Meridian Magazine, ‘The Place Where Latter Day Saints Gather’ :

[..]

Timothy E. Flanagan

Timothy Flanagan has firsthand experience in Washington political circles, having worked as counsel in the Bush White House. He said,

“If you lined up people who have political influence against the wall, you would have a great many wonderful Jewish people. Do you know how many Latter-day Saints there would be? Only a few. There are roughly the same number of Jews in the U.S. as Latter-day Saints, but do we have the same political impact? I don’t think so.

[…]

I’m willing to admit that our system is far from perfect and we have a great many problems as money touches politics. It is an observed fact that many Latter-day Saints view giving to candidates as something they just don’t want to do. But we can build on a cornerstone of integrity. You bring to this process your principles and the world is hungry for those principles.”

Brother Flanagan emphasized that the mark of any political work should be quality.

“Too much of the effort that people put into political work is just shoddy. It is substandard. You will stand out if you put true quality into what you do.”

When they supported Brother Timothy Flanagan in pushing their agenda in in the GOP and the White House, was torture part of that quality, principled, Mormon agenda? If not, did the LDS know Flanagan was pro-torture? They certainly knew it when he published his memo.

But I don’t see any condemnation from his church then or now. In the same article one of the other elders Boyd Black, says:

“The Church attempts very hard to keep politically neutral. Silence by the Church should never be considered as endorsement.”

Well it damned well looks like endorsement to me. Sorry, but from what I can see, I’d say the LDS hierarchy, in sheltering and approving this monster of a hypocrite, is objectively pro-torture and murder.