Thursday, July 10, 2014

ROLL UP! ROLL UP! THE SNOWDEN CIRCUS IS IN TOWN!

Laws will be introduced in The Marsten House next Monday requiring phone companies to keep records of locations, dates and numbers of any phone call.

So what reason is being put forward?

To keep us 'safe'.

Meanwhile:
1. we created al Qaeda in the first place;
2. we had a Covenant of Security with Islamic terrorists leading to London nicknamed 'Londonistan';
3. we assisted the Jihadis in Libya in 2011, who then moved to Syria where they have been financed with hundreds of millions of dollars from Saudi Arabia and Qatar;
4. we have been allowing preachers like Michael Adebalajo to encourage British Muslims to go to Syria to fight Jihad against Syria.

And yet it was the heads of MI5, MI6 and GCHQ who blamed Ed Snwoden for 'aiding the enemy'.

And yes, that's the same Ed Snowden whose 'revelations' we knew about in 1999 which are still being published in fake shock horror on the front pages of the establishment media well over a year after they broke, when we can see the panic in the establishment whenever there is the slightest whiff of a scandal involving paedophilia in Whitehall.

Controversial emergency laws will be introduced into the Commons next Monday to reinforce the powers of security services to require phone companies to keep records of their customers' calls.

...There will be no power to look at the content of phone calls, only location, date and the phone numbers.

The government sources say they have been forced to act due to European court of justice ruling in April saying the current laws invaded individual privacy.

The government says if there had been no new powers there would have been no obligation on phone companies to keep phone records if there was a UK court challenge to the retention of data.

Backbench MPs will ask why the new powers are being rushed through the Commons when the European court of justice ruling was passed in April and the Home Office has refused to discuss the implications of the ruling.

[source : Emergency surveillance law to be brought in with cross-party support, The Guardian, http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2014/jul/10/emergency-surveillance-laws-rushed-through-cross-party-support, 10th July 2014]

No comments: