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Some Rights May Have To Be 'Eroded' For Safety

Turn-X Alphonse writes "The BBC is reporting on a speech given by the head of MI5 in the UK. Dame Eliza Manningham-Buller claims in the future some civil rights may have to 'erode', in order to keep everyone in the country safe from terrorism." From the article: "MI5 has recently let it be known that it is in favour of making telephone intercept evidence admissible in court. Previously the intelligence and security services had expressed concern such that evidence might reveal operational details. Meanwhile, Home Secretary Charles Clarke has been calling for EU states to keep mobile phone and e-mail records for longer, to help fight terrorism and crime."

30 of 665 comments (clear)

  1. Personal Responsibility by XorNand · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This all boils down to one thing: lack of personal responsibility.

    What ever happened to it? So many of our problems are rooted in everyone's attempt to pass the buck: the populace's willingness to give up civil liberties in order to get a nanny state in return, the abundance of frivolous lawsuits, corporate scandals, twelve step programs, people who constantly bitch about politicians but never vote, people who bitch about their jobs being offshored but don't do anything to increase the value of their own career, Karl Rove, etc, etc.... I just don't understand what has happened in my lifetime.

    My father grew up within a society that valued "being a man": being responsible for your own station in life and your family's welfare, admitting your mistakes, and genuinely trying to be honorable/noble. If we had more personal responsbility in this world governments wouldn't be able to get away with attitudes like this.

    Where's Sartre when you need him? :-(

    --
    Entrepreneur : (noun), French for "unemployed"
    1. Re:Personal Responsibility by daniil · · Score: 5, Funny
      Where's Sartre when you need him? :-(

      In Hell, sharing a small room with two other people.

      --
      Man is a slave because freedom is difficult, whereas slavery is easy.
    2. Re:Personal Responsibility by NickFortune · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Voting is accepting the nanny state.

      Given that we already have a nanny state, it seems to me that not voting is representing the nanny state - it says "go right ahead - I don't care enough to oppose you".

      And you know what? If the nanny state was the worst we had to worry about I might even agree with you.

      But we in the UK live in a country with more surveilance cameras per square foot than any other in the world. We have a a government that has introduced curfews, travel restrictions, has done away with the right to silence, wishes to remove the right to trial by jury, has instituted detention without trial and without evidence, that lies to its people to justify foreign wars of aggression, has no compuction in victimising journalists that speak out against it, that plans to force through expensive identity card schemes in the face of both public opposition, and a total lack of evidence that thes scheme will benefit anyone at all.

      And one that apparently condones shooting commuters in the head at point blank range without evidence and with no warning.

      So I think there's just a wee bit more at stake here than the Nanny bleeding State.

      Don't you?

      --
      Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
    3. Re:Personal Responsibility by mpe · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But we in the UK live in a country with more surveilance cameras per square foot than any other in the world.

      Which have a strange habit of breaking down exactly when they are actually needed.

      We have a a government that has introduced curfews, travel restrictions, has done away with the right to silence, wishes to remove the right to trial by jury, has instituted detention without trial and without evidence,

      Claiming that all this is about "prevention of terrorism". Is there any evidence that the meme of "reduce civil liberties (of the common man) to increase safety and security" actually has any basis in reality in the first place.

      that lies to its people to justify foreign wars of aggression, has no compuction in victimising journalists that speak out against it, that plans to force through expensive identity card schemes in the face of both public opposition, and a total lack of evidence that thes scheme will benefit anyone at all.

      To find out who it benefits you'd need to "follow the money".

      And one that apparently condones shooting commuters in the head at point blank range without evidence and with no warning.

      Then sending the shooters on holiday, rather than to prison.

    4. Re:Personal Responsibility by mikerich · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I find her comments very worrying and showing a profound lack of understanding of the concept of risk.

      Eliza Manningham Buller is saying that it might be necessary for EVERYONE to lose well-established rights in order that SOME people MIGHT be protected from a possible threat. There is a possibility of tens of thousands of people having their rights abused if human rights legislation is weakened. Is this a fair price to pay for The War Against Terror (tm)?

      f we're going to keep salami slicing our rights to protect ourselves from terror, when will someone in power start asking who is the bigger threat - Osama bin Laden and his cronies, or the government of the day?

      There is also a question to be asked about her politics. Traditionally, Britain's spooks have been generally independent of government. They've also kept their mouths shut when their work is a matter of political debate. All of a sudden a speech she made some months ago is published, talking the same language as Blair, Clarke and Blunkett. Published just before Parliament is reconvened to discuss ripping up our human rights. Published just after Charles Clarke stood up in Brussels to tell the EU that the European Convention on Human Rights was helping weaken Western civilisation because it prohibited such useful judicial tools as torture.

      Just watch the politicians now say that they have to do these things because the spies need these new powers to keep us all safe.

      "Oh, that is all well and good, but, voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked and denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It works the same way in any country."
      Hermann Goering in comments to Gustave Gilbert, 18 April 1946.

      Mike.

    5. Re:Personal Responsibility by clambake · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Given that we already have a nanny state, it seems to me that not voting is representing the nanny state - it says "go right ahead - I don't care enough to oppose you".

      And when you have a choice between Dictator 1 and Dictator 2 then voting just says, "hey, I agreee with your repression of me!"

    6. Re:Personal Responsibility by NickFortune · · Score: 4, Insightful
      And when you have a choice between Dictator 1 and Dictator 2 then voting just says, "hey, I agreee with your repression of me!"

      You're not wrong. However there are more than two parties. Buy into the trap of binary thinking - that it's an either/or choice, and you're still playing their game - only now they can dismiss your discontent as "apathy".

      The only political issue that should really matter right now is electoral reform. We need to change the system so that two parties cannot dominate any election each through fear of the other being elected.

      http://www.electionmethods.org/ is a good place to start.

      --
      Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
  2. Read 'erode' as 'trample on' by dada21 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In the US (I'm unfamiliar with the UK), our rights are not granted by King nor State edict. They're inherent ("God-given") to every human born, US citizen or not. Our Constitution provides our government certain specific powers to appropriate certain specific rights of ours onto them.

    Reducing inherent rights is an impossibility in the States. It is tyranny to trample on our right to be secure in our person and property when no warrant has been issued for a specific investigation into a specific crime.

    Letting government infringe on our inherent freedom from witch hunts is scary. I know it is happening, but I'm not understanding how it protects us. Real criminals know the law and can get around all these government intrusions. That leaves only 'innocent' citizens as the target. With so many vague laws criminalizing behavior, you may be committing a crime without realizing it. Let your elected officials keep a log, just in case you forget to notify them of the crime you unknowingly commit.

    It is unjust and unacceptable, and I am unwilling to be part of it. Should I mimic criminals now to keep myself safe from [i]government[/i]? Disposable phones, anonymous mailers, and all that?

    Be sure terrorists already are safe from these injustices.

    1. Re:Read 'erode' as 'trample on' by perky · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Reducing inherent rights is an impossibility in the States. It is tyranny to trample on our right to be secure in our person and property when no warrant has been issued for a specific investigation into a specific crime.

      Guantanamo Bay.

      That is all.

      --
      "The new wave is not value-added; it's garbage-subtracted" - Esther Dyson, Dec 1994
    2. Re:Read 'erode' as 'trample on' by dada21 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And those rights are granted you by the state -- and, as such, can be taken away, but only with good reason.

      Wrong.

      The rights are granted by God or by birth. The Constitution gives our government very restricted enumerated powers. Government grants us no rights.

      Go read your pocket Constitution. 1st Amendment says nothing about "Congress grants you the freedom to speak." It says Congress shall make no law taking away your ability to do so. And so on.

  3. Fight this by TheSpoom · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It may be very hard to stop someone who wants to blow up a train and is convinced it is the will of their God to do so. Security should be increased and anything in the power of public utilities like train stations and airports should be done to prevent terrorism.

    However, I urge anyone reading to fight the erosion of their civil liberties in a so-called trade for their "security". I'm especially worried about the UK putting forward an equivalent of the PATRIOT Act because if they do, it sets a precident for all of their allies and will likely put pressure on them to do the same (which includes Canada, where I live).

    I know I'm preaching to the converted here on Slashdot, but I wish there was a way I could make people see what we do: that the PATRIOT Act in the US allows the Government can monitor an individual's web surfing records, use roving wiretaps to monitor phone calls made by individuals "proximate" to the primary person being tapped, access Internet Service Provider records, monitor the private records of people involved in legitimate protests, spy on suspected computer trespassers (not just terrorist suspects) without a court order, and most concerningly, allows law enforcement to issue search warrants that do not force them to tell the subject that he was searched. (Source: EFF)

    The word needs to be brought out to the streets.

    --
    It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
    - E. Debs
  4. The laws are worse than the terrorists. by Ckwop · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Technology changes the balance between victim and attacker. Fact. Occasionally, it is prudent to create new laws to redress the balance. At first, breaking into a computer wasn't a crime. The laws in many countries decide (rightfully, imo) to make this an offense.

    The problem comes when the law makers don't really think through the consquences of the laws they write. The start with the assumption that criminals are dumb. Most of the time this is actually a fairly good assumption. However, it is a mistake to right off all criminals as being stupid. The people behind 9/11 were certainly not dumb and it's these type of people we are drafting laws to stop.

    . The first question a legislator should be asking themselves when faced with a security decision is "How could an attacker make this law useless". On the subject of wiretapping the first thing that springs to mind is encrypting the connection. How can you wiretap an encrypted connection? Of course, they could try and use RIPA to get the keys off you but RIPA is badly drafted (as I discuss here) and can be circumvented easily provided you use a signed Diffie-Helman key exchange to determine the session key.

    Give the fact that the law can be dodged completely it only serves to make us all less secure. It removes a check and balance from our society and opens up to abuses by the Police and other government organsiations. (As an aside, Law should be drafted in that they should fail in the safest possible way when being used by a corrupt Police force).

    I'll finish this comment with a point I feel is important. In July, fifty or so people were killed by terrorists. That was the first major terrorist attack since the IRA declared a cease-fire and it was alost the biggest terrorist act in (recent) British history. As much as it is a tragedy that those lives were lost, is it worth changing the relationship between citizen and state for the sake of fifty dead? The same can also be said about 9/11 or the madrid bombings. Yes four thousand people were killed in 9/11 but four times as many die per year in US due to gun fatalities. In terms of a threat to the average citizen of any particular state, the threat posed by terrorism is right down in the noise level. It is my belief that a greater threat to our liberty is posed by the onerous legislation being passed worldwide than by terrorism.

    Simon.

    1. Re:The laws are worse than the terrorists. by i_should_be_working · · Score: 5, Insightful

      In terms of a threat to the average citizen of any particular state, the threat posed by terrorism is right down in the noise level.

      I agree, and it's funny how people almost never think of this. How so many other dangers are more present and deadly than terrorism, but aren't seen as important. Where's our war on smog, bad driving, and gun proliferation?

      Before the 2004 US elections I saw quotes by people saying things to the effect of 'who cares about the economy when we're at war with terrorism'. Yet far more children are going to die from poverty induced things like exposure and malnutrition than from any acts of terror.

    2. Re:The laws are worse than the terrorists. by AaronLawrence · · Score: 4, Interesting

      A couple of destroyed buildings serves as a very visible symbol.

      If terrorists had killed 4000 random people with a selective virus, sure it would still be nasty but there wouldn't be any video to watch or a great big hole in the ground afterwards.

      Gun deaths are the same thing: not visible, so ignored.

      --
      For every expert, there is an equal and opposite expert. - Arthur C. Clarke
    3. Re:The laws are worse than the terrorists. by king-manic · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I agree, and it's funny how people almost never think of this. How so many other dangers are more present and deadly than terrorism, but aren't seen as important. Where's our war on smog, bad driving, and gun proliferation?

      Before the 2004 US elections I saw quotes by people saying things to the effect of 'who cares about the economy when we're at war with terrorism'. Yet far more children are going to die from poverty induced things like exposure and malnutrition than from any acts of terror.


      I agree. Terrorism is a insignificant problem, 3000+ at the world trade center, a few hundred in london. Compared to car accidents this is a minicule death toll. Also compared to violent crime, pollution, heart disease, cancer, ect... The roots of these terrorism is as much about ideological differences as they are about foreign policy. The only thing you can do about it is to tighten security and make it hard.

      A war on terrorism is stupid, because it's a war on a tactic. you can't have a war against flanking, you can't have a war on spying, so why is there a war on terrorism?

      It's a threat they threw at the american public to justify their current impearlist ideas and to throw off of the fact that the current administration is incompetent from beuracrat to president.

      As a financial conservative/social progressive I find Bushes policies compeletly offensive. He is not a financial conservative and he's pretty backwards on social policies. He's runnigng up debt and introducing regressive policies on science and religion.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
  5. Mr $100 by emidln · · Score: 4, Informative

    You know, there was a crazy american towards the end of the 18th century that seems to have been quoted about this...

    Then again, his countrymen don't seem to take him seriously, so why should anyone else?

  6. On the plus side by katana · · Score: 4, Funny

    They might declare English food to be a terrorist act, and erode the rights of British pubs to serve crap.

    1. Re:On the plus side by tuxette · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If you think the food is crap, then you're not drinking enough ;-)

      --
      People say I'm crazy, I got diamonds on the soles of my shoes...
  7. Where is freedom? by RayDude · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Any people that would give up liberty for a little temporary safety deserves neither liberty nor safety." - Benjamin Franklin

    "1984" could be a reality. "Brazil" could be a reality.

    Don't people realize that part of the cost of freedom is by definition risk of being hurt.

    Fear is what drives us to give up liberty, and it is only fear that we have to fight. Fear is worse than death, beause it traps us in our minds, afraid to move, afraid to live.

    If we want to represent freedom to the world, I believe we ought to stop being afraid and stop lashing out in fear.

    If we give up our freedom, doesn't that mean the terrorists are winning?

    Why can't anyone see the truth here?

    The truth is: we must do our best with the knowledge we have, defend ourselves as best we can, and let go of our fear.

    Raydude

    1. Re:Where is freedom? by david.gilbert · · Score: 4, Insightful
      We can't be 'the Land of the Free' if we're not 'the Home of the Brave.'

      Well said. Did you feel a particular need to post anonymously?

  8. Terrorists try to destroy our way of life by Knome_fan · · Score: 4, Insightful

    But we are more intelligent than those evil terrorists.

    Instead of letting them destroy our way of life, we destroy it ourselves.

    Thanks for your insightful comments Dame Edna...

  9. Same ill logic as in the US. by kprox · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "We are fighting a war on terrorism to protect our rights and freedoms, right and freedoms we must give up, to help fight the war on terrorism, to protect our rights and freedoms." - Source Unknown

  10. There passed a long time since the last decent PM by oakad · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves.

    ---- William Pitt, 1783
  11. Wisdom by deblau · · Score: 4, Insightful
    "The fears of one class of men are not the measure of the rights of another."
    Joanna Baillie, Basil (act III, sc. 1, l. 151)

    "Fear is not the natural state of civilized people."
    Aung San Suu Kyi

    "Be as beneficent as the sun or the sea, but if your rights as a rational being are trenched on, die on the first inch of your territory."
    Ralph Waldo Emerson

    --
    This post expresses my opinion, not that of my employer. And yes, IAAL.
  12. The problem is not gov't, but the role of gov't by einhverfr · · Score: 5, Insightful

    First, I think that there are few that would argue that we don't need a government. Even Thomas Jefferson ("That government governs best that governs least.") obviously believed in some form of government, and our national structure owes much to his writing.

    IMO, we need a strong government, but we also need strong civil liberties. These are not at odds with eachother. Only a weak government would feel the need to infringe upon these liberties.

    A strong government exists to build a strong social infrastructure. This can include such things as commercial infrastructure (highways), information infrastructure (my county owns a fiberoptical network through which I get telephone and internet service provided by my choice of private companies, and besides, what else do you call the public school system), economic infrastructure (protecting the freemarket from the likes of Microsoft), etc. We also need a strong judiciary, and many other portions of the government.

    Whether we need wealth distribution programs is a subject for another debate. Personally I think we do need some form of wealth redistribution even if it is only an attempt to help make sure that everyone has the opportunity to get a quality college education and narrowly scoped to achieve that end. But that is beside the point.

    When government starts to infringe on our civil liberties as a way of keeping us safe, we are sliding back to the circumstances which spawned our great republic, where fundamental rights (habeas corpous, trial by jury) were suspended in the Colonies in order to help maintain security. Already, the case of Jose Padilla threatens to at least partially overturn the right to a jury trial and the right to habeas petitions.

    Welcome to the world of 1770.....

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  13. The War On Poverty by Vicissidude · · Score: 4, Insightful

    One blatant example of poverty causing death just came up last week: Hurricane Katrina. The majority of the men, women, and children who didn't leave New Orleans because they couldn't leave. The poverty rate there is 2-3 times the national average and many people in that group don't have cars.

    Now, we're trying to bus them out of the hurricane area. But, where were the buses before the hurricane? We certainly knew well ahead of the time that level of a storm would devastate New Orleans. If leaving the area was the best option, then why wasn't this option given to the poorest citizens before disaster struck? The answer has everything to do with money and the fact that they don't have it. Certainly, the city, state, or federal government could have spent a little money to use local school buses and move those people out. I have a sneaking suspicion where that money actually went...

  14. Variations on a meme by Quirk · · Score: 4, Insightful
    It seems old to me to introduce Karl von Clausewitz, but I think the introduction to his seminal works is necessary.

    Karl von Clausewitz is perhaps best known from his statement: "War is merely the continuation of policy by other means." This oft quoted statement was part of a dialectic argument set forth in Hegelian terms to examine the properties of war. IIRC von Clausewitz also was the first to characterize an oppresive, desparate state as insidiously furthering their power by pointing to an enemy without. Declaring war on the enemy without allowed a state to cast blame on the enemy for the shortcomings of the state within. In our present case the war on terrorism allows the state to truncate our civil liberties.

    The interplay between the rights of the individual and the security of the collective is an ancient argument. In the west Jeremy Bentham presented the struggle in terms of Utilitarianism, "the greatest good for the greatest number". (I've had a fondness for Bentham since, as a schoolboy, reading he was stuffed and sat at the entrance to his club.) At the other end of the stick were the Romantics, best known, perhaps, in the writings of Jean-Jacuees Rousseau, a Calvin in Rebellion (and in my opinion a second rater), and F. Nietzsche.

    The argument is ancient and each of us has to reexamine it to find our own place.Good luck with that.:)

    --
    "Academicians are more likely to share each other's toothbrush than each other's nomenclature."
    Cohen
  15. US Heading in same direction. by Kefaa · · Score: 4, Insightful

    http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi -0509100027sep10,1,5918883.story?coll=chi-newsnati onworld-hed Shows that the US is not that far behind, as an appeals court says it is legal to hold US citizens forever without trial, as part of the Presidential powers. I think the courts and our political leaders need to pick up a dictionary.

    Fascism: A social and political ideology with the primary guiding principle that the state or nation is the highest priority, rather than personal or individual freedoms.

    I believe we had a world war over this.

  16. Forget the Gitmo. Look at Padilla by einhverfr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Here is a case where the Administration argues that an American citizen, detained on American soil far from combat operations can be held indefinitely without any sort of trial, and the 4th circuit just agreed.

    This means no trial by jury, no habeas petition, no access to a lawyer, merely because the government says so. Furthermore the 4th circuit stated that they were going to apply the Hamdi standard here and state that anyone accused of being an enemy combattant might have the burden or proof in proving that he is not, perhaps against a military tribunal. This is very scary indeed.

    To see where this leads, I would direct everyone to read Scalia's dissent in Hamdi (in which Stevens joined). He states that the Hamdi standard would lead to an attrition of our due process rights as American citizens. And after reading the 4th circuit's opinion, I have decided that Scalia and Stevens are clearly right here...

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  17. WTF? by jafac · · Score: 4, Insightful


    Erode this. And the horse you rode in on, bitch.

    As a taxpaying citizen, if my hired protectors can't protect me without infringing my rights, then they're fucking FIRED. The People can find someone else who will. These assholes forget who they're working for. The government is for the people, by the people. Their right to govern comes from MY consent to be governed. Do the job you're given, or get the fuck out of the way for someone else who can.

    This just pisses me off. Some rights must be eroded? Bullshit!

    --

    These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.