The latest abuse of technology to bring tyranny on to the streets of Britain comes in the form of mobile fingerprinting devices which will be used to identify corpses... and to check people's identities.
Now, we all know how this one is going to pan out. We've seen it all before.
Just like all those
Isabella Sankey, for civil liberties group Liberty, is quoted in the Telegraph's report on this as saying: "Convenient technology is all very well but not if it encourages the police to exceed their powers. The public should know that unless you have been arrested or charged there is no power in force to demand fingerprints without consent. The danger is that consent becomes a bit of a fiction on the street without legal advice or the other protections of the police station."
The same report details how suspected supermarket shoplifters will be strip-searched in between the cucumber portions and the courgettes. Or something. We can't even take these fascists seriously any more.
We should take a leaf out of the book of the U.S. state of Texas... how about we only vote for candidates who have read the British constitution including the Bill of Rights 1689 and who are familiar with the Treason laws, and who vow to impeach any British politician suggesting, voting for, and signing any of this utter tyranny into statute law..?
Enough is enough. We keep saying it, and yet more is unleashed.
Obey, slave! That's what New Labour seem to think. They seem to forget that they are the public servants.
If British people vote for another five years of this lot, come join me in the queue as we seek political asylum in a safe country. Like Zimbabwe.
0 comments:
Post a Comment
This blog seeks to uphold the right to free speech. However, comment moderation is used to prevent the posting of comments which could be considered libelous/offensive etc. We do not, however, guarantee to publish all comments and we reserve the right to refuse to approve any comment submitted at our discretion. Views expressed are those of the comment author and do not neccesarily reflect those of this blog.