Is the West Building Its Own Iron Curtain? 337
New submitter pefisher writes "The British are apparently admitting that they track their citizens as they travel the world (through information provided by intelligence agencies) and are arresting them if they have been somewhere that frightens them. 'Sir Peter, who leads the Association of Chief Police Officer's "Prevent" strategy on counter-terrorism, told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that those returning from Syria "may well be charged and investigated, but they will be put into our programmes".' The program seems to consist of being spied on by the returnee's cooperative neighbors."
No (Score:4, Insightful)
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Dimwit. The oppressive regime is yours.
Re:No (Score:5, Informative)
Re:No (Score:4, Funny)
The Iron Curtain kept people from escaping from oppressive regimes
oh you mean like the united states government
This article is just talking about prosecuting people who have been fighting for terrorists
oh you mean CIA operatives
scrutinizing those suspected of hanging around with terrorists
oh you mean congressmen
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The Iron Curtain kept people from escaping from oppressive regimes
oh you mean like the united states government
I know I shouldn't feed the trolls, but this just pissed me off way too badly. Whom has the US kept from escaping its regime? The US has had thousands of willing expatriates [barnesandnoble.com] over the years to Communist countries.
Do you seriously want to draw an equivalency between the NATO (US and European allies) policy on expatriation versus that of the Warsaw Pact countries? Are you utterly ignorant of the Refuseniks [wikipedia.org]? Do you really dishonor the memory of the Berlin Wall dead [wikipedia.org] so badly in the name of your political hatred
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Perhaps you missed it, but there were a bunch of people who didn't want to be part of the USA back in 1861, and the USA fought a war to force them to stay. Your country is literally defined by its unwillingness to let people leave.
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Oh, it's an iron curtain... it's just that this new and improved one encircles the whole of the world.
Re:No (Score:5, Insightful)
Exactly. Like the United States. They start or get involved in many, may wars, spy on every other nation on earth and even track their own people like dogs with microchips under their skin.
If you're traveling to the US your intentions surely must be questioned.
Re:No (Score:5, Insightful)
You forgot some pertinent facts: The U.S. has a long history of funding terrorists, supporting coups, and undermining democracies.
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Re:No (Score:5, Insightful)
You're being ridiculously blind to our actions, making a blanket statement they were necessary for the very existence of the U.S.A. rather than often bone-headed moves that not only were against our supposed morals (e.g., freedom, democracy, not-mass-murdering) but also ended up biting us in the ass and incurring loss of life that otherwise wouldn't have happened. If we actually acted as a country in a way that we say we believe in, we'd probably had a much better last 50 years.
Re:No (Score:5, Informative)
For the fully documented stuff proved beyond question we have idiocy like one part of the CIA running guns to Castro and another opposing him. We also have an agency in the US selling weapons to Hezbolla less than a year after they had killed off more than one hundred US Marines. That sort of thing made the USA look very weak. It's the sort of thing that showed Bin Laden that he had a chance.
After that we've got less well documented stuff with extremist middle east groups, hard core Islamists that stand against everything the USA stands for, getting US weapons, just to make some Saudis doing backdoor deals with US companies happy. That sort of thing, and the far better documented Iran-Contra, are directly opposed to the interests of the nation state but are of benefit to individuals. I don't know what to call it, because treason now means playing chess against the wrong person or exposing abuses to the constitution. Selling weapons to declared enemies with a recent high body count of your own people is now seen as the act of a "patriot".
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So do muggers. Does that excuse them?
"Realpolitik" is usually used as an excuse for extremely short-sighted stupidity, which ignores both the enemies you're making and the geopolitical climate you're creating. US made its choices, now it just has to live with the consequences, such as its soiled reputation.
Re:No (Score:4, Insightful)
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Can you elaborate on that? Why does Luxembourg want to rent a fighter jet? What threats is that jet meant to protect against? I get why larger countries need military forces as a defensive measure, but given Luxembourg's scale, it seems like there's no military force short of nuclear weapons that they could raise that would present a deterrent against potential aggressors.
Re:No (Score:5, Insightful)
You forgot some pertinent facts: The U.S. has a long history of funding terrorists, supporting coups, and undermining democracies.
Yes, but they are OUR terrorists, OUR coups, and OUR ENEMIES' democracies.
And we are RIGHT!
Moral choices are so much easier when your country is always right. It's practically like you don't even need to think.
Re:No (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:No (Score:5, Funny)
"You forgot some pertinent facts: The U.S. has a long history of funding terrorists, supporting coups, and undermining democracies."
True, but I think all that was just practice for undermining our own democracy.
Re:No (Score:4, Funny)
Re:No (Score:4, Insightful)
I always wonder what Milosevic and Mladi would be up to today if the US had just stood back and let Europe deal with the problem. How many millions would have died before someone summoned up the balls to do anything besides wring their hands and go "oh my, wont someone do something!"
Re:No (Score:5, Interesting)
That particular conflict was just a turf war between two [wikipedia.org] rival gangs [wikipedia.org]. When USA interfered, they took sides for one of the gangs. That caused problems later when this gang invaded a neighbour country [wikipedia.org].
So, it could have been even for the better altogether if US had just stood back - the gangs might have blooded themselves out.
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That particular conflict was just a turf war between two rival gangs.
Which apparently generated a million refugees and 5-10k deaths of civilians.
That caused problems later when this gang invaded a neighbour country.
A problem which incidentally was almost an order of magnitude smaller than the original "turf war".
So, it could have been even for the better altogether if US had just stood back - the gangs might have blooded themselves out.
Or they might have not. How many generations are you willing to wait?
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Seriously, we had to come up with a new, rarer version of a unicorn because we run into too many unicorns walking down the street or something?
Re:No (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:No (Score:5, Insightful)
"There are certain places in the world that if you go you should be setting off alarm bells."
I see. Guilt by association is now okay? That's news to me.
I don't give the slightest damn where people go. It's what they do when they get there that matters.
While it might not be like an "iron curtain", per se, it certainly IS like a dictatorial police state.
Re:No (Score:5, Interesting)
In a lot of places yes. In my city a librarian with no prior convictions has been locked up with bail refused because she was seen having a drink with a biker.
It's why authoritarians are incompatible with democracy and the rule of law in general. They think such things as guilt by association is perfectly OK and that someone who is "one of us", as in not one of the plebs but an associate of the ruling party, should also get innocence by association. The best bits of Magna Carta do not make sense to these people - they think there are some that should be above the law and some that should be below it.
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Oh come on. Guilt by association has always been a part of the scenery.
And so was burning of witches. But we got better.
There are plenty of people in Syria, and they have relatives who live in other countries. Should those relatives be waterboarded in UK if they go to safe areas of Syria just to see their dying parents?
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Read the whole comment now. I said looked at and not water boarded. Certainly they'll look at them and if they have dying parents that should be pretty much the end of it. It's reality and the world we live in. It's an unfriendly world with plenty of anger and resentment on all sides. To not look at people traveling to a part of the world that hates us would be failing to practice due diligence. Torture of course is an entirely different ball of wax.
Re:No (Score:4, Insightful)
Certainly they'll look at them and if they have dying parents that should be pretty much the end of it. It's reality and the world we live in.
The reality of the world is that US or UK police cannot possibly prove or disprove that Mr. X went to Syria to see his relatives or to play a soldier. How do you propose to "look at them" if they were in a war-torn country? Should they just ask politely? What kind of an answer will they get?
There is even no way to prove that someone from UK went to Syria. The border between Turkey and Syria is wide open, and you can take a taxi from one country to another. There will be no records, no visas, no stamps in the passport. Once you are out of UK you can go anywhere and do anything you want. Short of being photographed, none of that can be proven. Many fighters keep their faces covered (which is not a bad idea in a desert anyway.)
The monitoring net, done poorly (as you can do it only poorly,) will only snag innocents who are stupid enough to admit that they went to Syria or other hotspots. The bad people will lie to you, and you can't do anything about it. As result, you not only have bad people against you, but also you push the innocents into the hands of bad people if you mistreat them. If you do not want people to go from UK to Syria, why do you admit Syrians into the country in the first place?
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You know how these things work don't you? They interview people and they ask questions. Most of the questions they ask they already know the answer to. If you lie to them that's when they start to really get interested. Thousands of people like this get interviewed and mostly nothing ever comes of it. You may think it's a waste of time and hell, you might be right. The authorities attitude is that if they do it enough eventually the odds will play out in their favor.
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"And so was burning of witches. But we got better. "
Well, it seems that some of us did.
Re:No (Score:4, Funny)
There are certain places in the world that if you go you should be setting off alarm bells.
Colorado seems to be at the top of the list these days.
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If it is an "iron curtain" is a whole different question that, "would it assist the implementation of one if they tried."
I would argue that if you're worried about that happening in the future, being honest about the current situation is more valuable than hyperbole and propaganda that intentionally overstates the situation.
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According to the laws too...
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Which side are the "terrorists" though?
Whichever side your country doesn't like. And these days, the USA, and by extension its lap dog Britain, have skin in every game around the world. There are no more situations like the Spanish Civil War, where volunteers could go and fight for whichever side they chose. And then return home free from prosecution.
You can still go overseas and support the politically correct side. But be forewarned that our government has a position on practically every conflict on this planet. So you can haul suitcases of m
For everyone who said "what do you have to hide?" (Score:5, Insightful)
In discussions about government spying and surveillance, there is often a vocal group who says "if you don't have anything to hide, then this spying should not bother you."
The counter argument is that governments have tended to take information they are given and when the right person is in power, or the right sentiment strikes the public, those programs are expanded and distorted beyond their original intent.
I'm sure in the 1970s and 1980s when these programs were first beginning to be set up, they had noble intentions of only ever targeting known criminals and spys, and eventually were justified by saying that if makes people feel more secure in a post-9/11 world.
But the reality is, even without these programs, we live in the safest time that humanity has ever seen. The odds of dying of a freak accident like choking on a grape are more real to the average person than terrorism, or crime.
This is not the right solution to this invented problem.
Re:For everyone who said "what do you have to hide (Score:5, Insightful)
Spot on. I just lost my modpoints, or I wouldn't be commenting, I'd be promoting.
Like all rational policy, there needs to be some sort of risk/reward analysis objectively performed on the "security" aparatus in the West. For 100 years of claiming superiority as the "first" world, we seem to be throwing the baby out with the bathwater at an alarming rate seemingly in reaction to the various growing pains in the "second" (and, in some cases, "third") world. What happened to our example? Even more frighteningly, what WILL happen? The massive security aparatus of the West (and, obviously, the US first and foremost) represents an enormous risk to future security of the freeman. And, it counters an absolutely miniscule risk in comparison. This is no sensible policy. I pray to God (literally) that this is reversible.
Re:For everyone who said "what do you have to hide (Score:4, Interesting)
The US is not "first and foremost," the UK has 100% information sharing with the US. We are fully and entirely the same team in this.
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Lots of countries have 100% information sharing with the US.
It's called strongarming/bribing/blackmailing/flat out threatening.
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It's never "100%" There's always phase lag, transcription errors from data reformatting, and simple deceit in what is transmitted to other country's security forces.
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That is the old days
They have direct access, it is different than getting a copy in their email.
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Lots of countries have 100% information sharing with the US.
It's not really sharing, in the traditional form of the word.
More like paying protection money, to be honest. I mean, you might get back something you can use against your political enemies (so long as they are Americas enemies too), but mostly you have to hand it over and not look them in eye; and all the while some thug is poking under your head of sate saying thing like 'this parliament looks a bit old to me, positively a fire hazard really, be a shame if it burned down.. what do you think?'
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I pray to God (literally) that this is reversible.
I see. Well, thanks for nothing. Some of us are trying to do something about it. Maybe you could help instead of chatting to your invisible friends about it...
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
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iinm, something similar happened in the UK too, if you can count the Isle of Man as the UK :
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/worl... [bbc.co.uk]
"Isle of Man church service marks Manx link to Holocaust"
"The Manx Holocaust memorial service is a "poignant" reminder of the Isle of Man's role as an internment centre during WW2, said organisers.
Between 1940 and 1945 thousands of Jewish refugees were held as "enemy aliens" in six island internment camps."
Shameful. Kind of reminds me of Gitmo...
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The UK and British Commonwealth had a similar suspicious attitude back then to Jewish refugees that is being shown to Moslem immigrants now.
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How about the one of... i don't know what country, which recorded peoples' religions so they could give them proper burial. Until they were invaded by the nazis. You know how germans love efficiency, you can only imagine what a happy day it must have been for them.
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While I like your post and stance, I have to say something: I live in a country of about 5 million people. From that it is estimated that about 400 000 are gypsies. And it is estimated that at about 100% of them are on unemployment benefits and social welfare (which is a significant cost for the state). But those are just estimates. We are not allowed to track the race or ethnicity by law here and so we don't know any of that for sure. We don't know how many schools need to have teachers speaking their lang
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what happened then?
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Don't know what happened to the poster to whom you're responding, but I always answer the census form only with the number of people here. I've gotten personal visits from census takers; I tell them, "I've told you all I'm going to tell you, good day." I have not yet been dragged off to Gitmo for doing so.
The Constitution authorizes an enumeration, not an interrogation. Other demographic information that the feds may legitimately desire -- it is useful to base policy on data, after all -- can be obtained
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Very well put. What I like to say to people who say that they have nothing to hide is a quote from Cardinal Richelieu: "If you give me six lines written by the hand of the most honest of men, I will find something in them which will hang him." This massive trove of surveillance data can and will be used against anyone whom the powers that be don't like, and it is very easy to twist casual remarks and jokes out of proportion, to destroy the credibility of someone who may rock the boat. God forbid you are act
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In discussions about government spying and surveillance, there is often a vocal group who says "if you don't have anything to hide, then this spying should not bother you."
Answer: "So, if that is the case, then you won't mind giving me your name and address and phone number. After all, `if you don't have anything to hide, then this spying should not bother you'."
Irony (Score:4, Funny)
That Britain is the place where 1984 actually happens.
Re:Irony (Score:5, Insightful)
War is Peace
Freedom is Slavery
Ignorance is Strength
More seriously, it is getting a bit that way here and the idea that you can be held simply for travelling to a country the government of the day doesn't like is outrageous.
For a start anything you do outside the country is none of their damn business. Secondly people may well have very legitimate reasons for going, perhaps they have friends/family there, perhaps they're working for an aid agency, amnesty, independent media or doctors without borders? This country is going to hell in a handbasket.
Additionally, this scumbag government is trying to get rid of the human rights act and withdraw us from the european convention on human rights, the tabloid fodder they're using to justify it is that prisoners may get the vote if we stay in. (which they should have anyway, they're supposed to lose their liberty, that is all, not be tortured/raped/beaten in private prisons or detention centres and not disenfranchised.)
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Some countries (i think the US) have laws against sex tourism. So if you go to another country, where it's legal, and have sex with a prostitute, you could be prosecuted for that. Yes, I know, the point of the law isn't that. It's about discouraging sex tourism to places like cambodia where people go to have sex with children. But really, even with that, it's really a bit too far fetching. The intentions of the law may be good... but punishing people for what they do outside their own sovereignity isn't the
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Well, George Orwell, who was British, wrote the novel.
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Wikipedia says he was English, but born in India.
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Re:Irony (Score:4, Insightful)
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This Britain is where 2014 is actually happening, and is making 1984 look outdated, and optimistic.
So a boot stamping on a human face forever is better than the UK now?
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Iron curtain? (Score:5, Interesting)
The notion of this being an Iron Curtain is a bit silly IMHO.
You're right. What they're doing is far more oppressive and effective than anything the creators of the Iron Curtain ever dreamed of.
However every country on Earth has laws against their citizens defecting to the enemy, and serving as enemy combatants.
Those laws are supposed to be applicable when the country is at war, at least in a country with rule of law. I wasn't aware that Britain was at war with Syria.
Why should Muslims get a free pass, because it's currently unfashionable to call them out on antisocial and illegal behaviour (under the rubric of "anti racism")?
So now what you're saying is that "antisocial behaviour" is the equivalent of serving as enemy combatants.
The Western Democracies are so far down the slippery slope people like you can't even see the top anymore. They've got their propaganda machines cranked up to a level that would leave Goebbels in a highly admirable daze.
As someone further up posted, your chances of dying from choking on a grape are far higher than dying from a terrorist attack. Yet here you're defending the government monitoring and oppressing a group simple for have what you define as "antisocial behaviour".
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> what you define as "antisocial behaviour".
Perhaps he/she was just being literal - I think it is literally correct, no? Perhaps he's English who are famed for their use of 'understatement'.
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Why should Muslims get a free pass, because it's currently unfashionable to call them out on antisocial and illegal behaviour (under the rubric of "anti racism")?
Because the vast majority Muslims who either enter or leave "the land of milk and honey" are not enemy combatants or terrorists or intending to fight any kind of war. For every genuine terrorist in the Muslim community, there are approximately 250,000 who have nothing to do with it. What you seem to be arguing is that we should oppress 249,999 innocent people in order to catch the 1 bad person.
My guess is that you don't know any Muslims personally. I've known a few over my life, from a bunch of different ar
Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)
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A self-cleaning oven, if you will.
That's a pretty fucked up way to put it. +1
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Try telling anything thing to that asshat.
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A hero's welcome ha ha.
What would the festivities be like? Letting them bomb a few buses?
Most people in the west oppose both Assad and Al-Qaeda.
Abuse of power... always (Score:2, Interesting)
Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis said "The objections to despotism and monopoly are fundamental in human nature. They rest upon the innate and ineradicable selfishness of man. They rest upon the fact that absolute power inevitably leads to abuse."
Look at what happened to people's politicians like Tony Blair and Obama, or government goons like Clapper and Alexander who defile the Constitution and flip us the bird. History as far back as we know it shows absolute power is always abused, to the point now w
This does not make for an "Iron Curtain" (Score:5, Insightful)
The Iron Curtain's primary goal was to keep the information (about West's superiority) out — and own citizenry in.
As long as the British are free to leave their country, things are Ok... Letz [wikipedia.org], I believe, once said: "A country you can leave is the country you can live in."
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You fail to comprehend that there can be something bad that isn't an "Iron Curtain."
Other bad things have different bars. That is expected.
Well, duh... (Score:5, Informative)
Gee, ya think? What has it been, like over a decade since the Patriot Act and people are just now figuring it all out?
I'm glad that the totalitarian impulses of the global elite are finally starting to penetrate peoples' realityTV-addled brains. Maybe pretty soon they'll figure out that it's just a mechanism to promote the redistribution of wealth upwards.
Then it will get interesting. I can't really fault people for taking a long time to figure out that ubiquitous surveillance and a corporate/government surveillance regime is a bad thing. I didn't want to believe it myself until around the middle of last decade, when it became impossible to deny.
But it's one of those things that once you see it clearly for what it is, you can never un-see it. Now, it's impossible to see practically any major news story without seeing the effect of developed, industrial nations turning into gulags.
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I can't really fault people for taking a long time to figure out that ubiquitous surveillance and a corporate/government surveillance regime is a bad thing. I didn't want to believe it myself until around the middle of last decade, when it became impossible to deny.
Considering that there is still substantial disagreement and debate about if it is good or bad, I don't think you're going to persuade anybody by telling them that their opinion is impossible.
I think a better approach is to communicate why it is bad. You're probably going to need to figure out how to get that message into a "Reality TV" format in order to get through to most people.
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So we are told.
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I'm glad that the totalitarian impulses of the global elite are finally starting to penetrate peoples' realityTV-addled brains. Maybe pretty soon they'll figure out that it's just a mechanism to promote the redistribution of wealth upwards.
So you are suggesting a scheme along the following lines?
1) Track people going to terrorist training camps / fighting alongside terrorist groups
2) Arrest them when they return home
3) ???
4) Profit!
I'm not sure what #3 is, and how it leads to meaningful profit for the "global elite."
Does arresting something on the order of 40 people for this over the last 2 years really make Britain a gulag?
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Here you go
1. Track people
2. If they do anything that you don't like arrest, them terrorism is a convenient starting point Really a very small problem.
3. Track any exchange of information, knowledge, can't have the people owning knowledge that is the domain of super rich. Evil pirates you know.
4. Charge people for using, that information
5. Anybody who runs for political office against you have a convenient database of information against them and/or their family.
6. If that fails you know exactly where they
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There isn't much profit to be made in trying to corner the market on training to fire an AK assault rifle.
I think very few people that fight along with al Qaida are going to be running for office in either the US or UK. There isn't much profit in trying to exploit them either.
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The story didn't say we had an Iron Curtain, but asked whether or not we are building one.
Have you ever heard the expression "soft tyranny"? Well, it's getting harder. Ask people whose political web sites are being blocked by Britain's "porn filter". Or people who have found themselves on a no-fly list in the states, who are offered a fair hearing to be taken off the no-fly list, as long as they
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I have lived behind the Iron Curtain and met my wife, who was born in such a place, there. I still visit an ex-Soviet satellite state every year. So I have family who can fill in the details that I did not experience first-hand.
The difference between that and this is that the technological tools of repression and surveillance are much more advance today.
slashdot: idle speculation for ignorant morons (Score:5, Insightful)
There are British citizens or residents who, in a private capacity, engage in armed conflict abroad, often due to alliegance to ideologies and religious beliefs that deem their home country to be a target, and they come to the attention of the state, and other states who also fear being targeted by the same people for the same reasons. They may have to explain themsleves on their return home, and may be arrested if suspected of criminal activity. In the mind of some slashdot submitters and editors this can apparently be equated to the imprisonment of hundreds of millions of people, and the killing of many hundreds or even thousands simply for trying to travel abroad.
Dear fucking cretins at slashdot,
here is a small hint: there was no equivalent of Heathrow or Gatwick airports or Dover or Southampton ferry ports in the DDR, the USSR, or any of the other "people's" republics. If you're British and you want to travel abroad do you know how hard it is? You go to the ferry port and get on a ferry. You need some money and some ID such as a driver's license. That's it.
I'm pleased that people who train for and engage in murder and kidnapping are actually faced with the prospect of being held to account, whether they do it here or in Syria or Pakistan or Ulster or anywhere else.
So if you think just getting on a boat or aplane and crossing a national boundary should amount to a license to do as you please and some kind of immunity then just fuck off and get a clue or if that is too difficult maybe you can ask mommy, but please stop whining and regurgitating your misunderstandings, half truths, and flat out lies.
Re:slashdot: idle speculation for ignorant morons (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, this is no different than Americans traveling to Northern Ireland in the past, and having their finances examined when they get back to check if they gave money to terrorists.
I say that as a Celtic-American with Irish Republican sympathies. I can imagine being on either side of this sort of issue, in the right circumstances. My country should check me out if I come back from a conflict region. That is simple and practical.
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Exactly. In the Netherlands and Belgium, there have been hundreds of youths recruited to go fight in Syria. Dozens of them have been killed already, often by fellow fighters or competing groups. They mostly end up with the most radical factions, related to Al Quada, adhere to strict Sharia law, and are too extreme for all other groups (citizens and "decent" rebels alike). These are the guys that send back videos of them decapitating innocent elderly people, playing football with their heads, raping and muti
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Well, we had a good run (Score:2, Insightful)
Iron Curtain? (Score:5, Insightful)
Iron curtain, no. Stasi, maybe.
Advanced version ? (Score:2)
Iron curtain, no. Stasi, maybe
http://www.rawstory.com/rs/201... [rawstory.com]
Even a true-blue Stasi operative (retired) couldn't help but to marvel at the level of sophistication the Western Stasi has in their possession.
Wolfgang Schmidt, 78, a retired lieutenant colonel in the Stasi, lamented that during his stint in the Stasi organization, their listening devices could only spy on 40 telephone lines at once. Targets had to be prioritized, and to take on a new spying subject, an old one had to be let go.
Democracy can be totalitarian. (Score:2)
Do you have freedom?
There are ideas that get you thrown out of your job, ostracized by others and possibly arrested or publically censured.
If you don't toe the line and you lose your job, you probably don't have the money to hold out for long.
We have the same totalitarian state as the Soviets, we just found a decentralized method to control it.
3......2......1 (Score:2)
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Yes, I'm kidding, but only a bit.
Yeah, right (Score:2)
Just try traveling to North Korea for a nice pickup game of basketball and see what happens to you when you get back.
It may have already started (Score:2)
NSA Youth (Score:2, Interesting)
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Sorry, but I'm not sure your English is good enough for me to take seriously you telling me what British citizens do or do not detest.
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Wow, I was thinking the same thing. The punctuation is terrible and makes it painful to read. I have to parse a few of those points at least twice - I didn't bother after the first few.
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How is this insightful? Sometimes a question is just a question, and the point is to have a discussion. If anything, ending this with "nuff said" shows just how intellectually bankrupt you are. I guess you just weren't fast enough to say "first post!", huh?