Originally posted by aka Calum Da Jazbo
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Privacy and the State
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Beef Oven
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Originally posted by scottycelt View PostWhat is incontrovertibly true?
Originally posted by scottycelt View PostWhether our rulers are understandably a little irritated or not by such a discussion the fact is that this discussion on personal privacy is all over the media at present and the politicians are being asked some very searching questions. If it is considered 'quaint' by some to point out that democratic governments tend to change in political outlook and personnel on a regular basis, then so be it! Of course, we can all claim that no political party truly represents our view of morality. I often do myself these days, but there's party political democracy for you, imperfect as it is.
Originally posted by scottycelt View PostAs for being 'credulous' that is surely more than matched by others who appear to indulge in an automatic cynicism about what any UK government does or does not do?
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Originally posted by scottycelt View Post...others who appear to indulge in an automatic cynicism about what any UK government does or does not do?
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Originally posted by Beef Oven View PostWith equal respect, I never said you didn't address the issue in your 5 points (point 5 takes it's strength from an attack on the people/group in the government rather than the issue, that's all).
but Scotty made the point very simply earlier on, that the risk is extremely small that the authorities would have the time, resources or even inclination to bother innocent/non-profile suspects.
You kinda accept this point when you refer to MI5/police being unable to monitor and prevent the slaughter of Lee Rigby.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Beef Oven
Originally posted by french frank View PostAnd you see no connection between particular powers and the individuals given the authority to use those powers?
But it isn't 'the authorities' who actually access the information: it's individuals. They are able to access what they are told to access, what they are not told to access and what they are told not to access. And they (authorities and individuals) can do what they want with it.
I didn't accept the point at all. It was not suggested by either police or security services that if they had had more resources and more people (ergo more time) and greater powers they could have prevented it, but that such random acts would never be totally preventable.
2. Never mind those on your list, it's journalists that pose the real threat (we arrest kerb-crawlers, not the prostitutes).
3. I did not mean you 'voluntarily' accepted this, your argument 'assumes' it.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostWhat Richard Barrett wrote of as being so!
Can such a statement be "impossible to dispute" or "beyond question", which is what I understand to be the meaning of incontrovertible?
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Originally posted by Beef Oven View PostNever mind those on your list, it's journalists that pose the real threat (we arrest kerb-crawlers, not the prostitutes).It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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scottycelt
Originally posted by ahinton View PostWhat Richard Barrett wrote of as being so!
Originally posted by ahinton View PostBut an important point here, which Richard Barrett and others have already made and which you seem studiously to be avoiding, is that, when all parties likely to be capable of forming a government (or at least participating in a coalition) at the next General Election have broadly similar views on this matter, the sense of democracy - to the extent of there no longer being and alternative for which dissenters may vote - is compromised; what we face on this is rather less "imperfection" per se in parliamentary democracy as an increasing dilution of opportunities for parliamentary democracy.
Any imperfections and shortcomings of our democratic system is not the issue here. The privacy of the individual is the one we are supposed to be discussing and whether the security services have any right to secretly monitor communications of certain individuals they suspect may be about to cause serious trouble in the future for the likes of you and I. Many will consider that can be justified in the cause of the greater good ... I certainly think so!
Originally posted by ahinton View PostI suspect that such cynicism is an automatic response only in a small minority of those who express views on governmental activities and, indeed, the principal mood is less one of cynicism in any case than one of increasing and perfectly understandable despondency.
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Originally posted by anotherbob View PostHe said "it's nevertheless incontrovertibly true that our rulers would much prefer that this discussion were prevented from taking place at all."
Can such a statement be "impossible to dispute" or "beyond question", which is what I understand to be the meaning of incontrovertible?
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostI would submit that the sheer number of examples where politicians have sought to push such issues under the carpet and those in which they have succeeded in doing so by so waffling, dissembling and doing anything at all except address them is evidence enough.
In a place like this where so many people are so sure they are right I think it is important that they should use words carefully.
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by scottycelt View Postthe fact that others disagree with him demonstrates that it cannot possibly be described as 'incontrovertibly true'!
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Originally posted by scottycelt View PostAny imperfections and shortcomings of our democratic system is not the issue here. The privacy of the individual is the one we are supposed to be discussing and whether the security services have any right to secretly monitor communications of certain individuals they suspect may be about to cause serious trouble in the future for the likes of you and I. Many will consider that can be justified in the cause of the greater good ... I certainly think so!
Originally posted by scottycelt View PostAre you saying that because some people are politically 'despondent' the security services should not be keeping a close eye on likely troublemakers in the most effective way possible?
Originally posted by scottycelt View PostWhat would be your alternative strategy to try and prevent the next bomb going off in one of our major cities? Is there any realistic alternative that can be tried?
forces and setting an example as a nation bent on encouraging reductions in violence; foolproof it would not be, but it would help. Trust in one's government has been mentioned, aside from the general depletion in this in recent times, the more snooping that can go on unhindered and supported by the law, the greater will be distrust in general.
If the activities of the security services are anything like as woefully inefficient and incompetent as those of defence procurement have been over the past decade or more (and I'm not saying that this is the case), the level of public trust in them would disappear altogether, particularly given their statutory immunity from accountability.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven View PostYou need to expand a little, right now it reads like a conspiracy theory sound-bite. Not saying you don't have a point.
how many people died on our roads this week so far? where is the panic? cheap argument but alas valid ....According to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.
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