Posts Tagged ‘Police state’
Trust the police with their new powers?
Posted by: Gav in Gavin Ayling's blog on April 9th, 2009
No:
G20 police assault video
G20 police assault (other angle)
What a state the UK has come to where a Conservative feels the way I do.
(Although maybe that’s because I am an unusual Conservative).
If you suspect it, keep your nose out
Posted by: Gav in Gavin Ayling's blog on February 21st, 2009
Our increasingly fascist government has plumbed new depths with this image:

(Click the image to see the text a little larger)
It is now illegal to take a picture of a police officer if he decides it’s illegal. A little while ago they suggested that people should report their neighbours if they appeared to be living beyond their means and now they are asking people to report their peers for taking innocent photos.
How long before a racist utterance is met with “Let an experienced officer decide what action to take”? How long before your freedom on the street is entirely at the whim of another human being?
A friend of mine asked me the other day, apparently not sarcastically, whether it was legal to take a picture of another person. How far down the road are we where this could even be thought of as a possibility? Taking a photo does no-one any harm and what use are laws that don’t protect anyone? Actually, that’s the wrong question; we should not ask what use a law has that does not protect, rather we should be asking whether a law that does not protect anyone is a just law or an unjust intrusion on self.
I am conscious that this post will not excite the masses — there is nothing in these developments that could not be argued as being in the interest of the majority — but that is true of almost all the steps the state must take between now and Nineteen Eighty Four. Really.
Obviously good people must help the State protect other people from bad people, but when good people act for the State in reporting innocent people on a hunch, well then we’re on a slippery slope.
Tim Loughton: a minority in a good sense
Posted by: Gav in Gavin Ayling's blog on January 21st, 2009
It appears that our MP (here in the constituency of Shoreham & East Worthing), Tim Loughton, is in a minority of one notable MPs on the Conservative side against an amendment to the Freedom of Information Act which would allow MPs and Peers, and only MPs and Peers, to be exempt from the Act.
This from the Guardian:
Last night Tory opposition was also growing with Tim Loughton, the Tory frontbench spokesman on children and MP for Worthing East and Shoreham, cancelling a visit to Birmingham so he could oppose the proposal and Lord Baker, the Tory former cabinet minister, deciding to vote against the measure in the Lords.
At least some politicians appear to care about right and wrong — it’s a shame so many of them are in opposition.
Let’s hope David Cameron can be convinced not to abstain, but instead to show that he believes in democracy and whip up a vote against Gordon Brown’s abuse of power.
Familiar parking tale
Posted by: Gav in Gavin Ayling's blog on January 13th, 2009
There was an uproar Monday when trucks towed nine vehicles and issued tickets to others parked in a bus lane on a street motorists said they’ve been parking on since a transit strike shut down bus service a month ago.
Typical!
Two key issues
Posted by: Gav in Gavin Ayling's blog on June 13th, 2008
After a relatively long period where the only issue was how much Labour were going to lose by, we now have two major issues running alongside each other.
Whatever you think of David Davis’ decision to resign he has definitely kept the issue alive. The question “Is it okay to imprison innocent civilians?” would have become just another abuse of freedom had Davis not made his unusual decision.
And he’s highlighted another problem — the BBC and ITV who are supposed to be completely unbiased have continually described the situation as ‘bizarre’. As part of BBC dumbing down they have long sought to explain the implications of situations in news articles rather than just presenting the facts. But on this issue it is quite clear that they are going beyond simple explanation and clarification. If the situation is unusual (and it is) then that is fine, but to say that Davis may have “committed political suicide” or that “David Cameron… is furious” is to make leaps beyond the facts.
Let us be clear too: This is about locking away innocent people. There will be no trial, no evidence will be presented to the victim (of the state) and no news will be delivered to him. This man is losing all rights without being able to help show why he is innocent; and he shouldn’t need to do that.
European Constitution
The other key issue is the European Constitution aka the Lisbon Treaty. The Irish Prime Minister said the other day that the Lisbon Treaty is 95% the same as the Constitution. And the public in Ireland look like they have done for us what we were denied by our liar Prime Minister. Thank God.
Shami on Davis
Posted by: Gav in Gavin Ayling's blog on June 12th, 2008
David Davis has resigned his constituency seat expecting, one must assume, overwhelming support for the position rational politicians have taken over the suggestion that imprisoning innocent people for forty two days is acceptable in a free democracy. Davis deserves our support and respect for this brave decision.
Last night’s debate, and the brave Labour rebels in particular, showed that democrats from across the spectrum care passionately about rights and freedoms. MPs of all parties hold courage and conviction about these values and few more so than David Davis.
Shami Chakrabarti, Director of Liberty
Free? I used to be…
Posted by: Gav in Gavin Ayling's blog on June 12th, 2008
Thank you DUP. I am no longer free — I am to be compensated, sure — but I am still at the mercy of the state and, assuming the Lords are spineless or overruled, I can be imprisoned by the state with no evidence against me for 42 days.
I feel a little sick.
Eubank — terrorist
Posted by: Gav in Gavin Ayling's blog on November 16th, 2007
Some of my friends tell me that the incremental steps towards a facist state that V for Vendetta so excellently illustrated, is my imagination run away with me.
So why does the law now stop Chris Eubank from behaving as he wishes (harming no-one) and resulting in a warrant issue for his arrest?
When will it be time to resist these steady erosions of our… Well, I was going to say liberty, but that is now definitely gone.





