- Measures already agreed or in force, including surveillance databases;
- What to expect next.
- collection and storage of communications (email, 'phone, internet usage, etc.);
- DNA and fingerprint sharing across the EU, in a massive database;
- EU-wide ID card;
- Mass surveillance;
- Health information on citizens, being available to bureaucrats;
- Making international agreements/treaties without recourse to 'sovereign' states (which would no longer be sovereign, should the Lisbon Treaty prevail).
- 5-year strategy for 'justice' (read, injustice);
- Collecting and sharing surveillance data;
- Monitoring and sharing data on people's travelling histories, such as information from travel agencies;
- Remote computer searches (which already exist in the US - when you connect to government web sites, you explicitly grant them access to your hard drive);
- Being tried for 'offences' which are not illegal in your country;
- Police to be trained by EU;
- Largest fingerprint system in the world;
- Exploding of extradition via the European Arrest Warrant;
- EU defining laws on citizens' right to internet access;
- Access to member states' tax databases.
Cross-posted
2 comments:
More is less.
What annoys me is that we get more and more surveillance, but less and less law and order.
Softer and softer punishments are given to criminals.
It seems that all this surveillance is getting us nowhere.
Steve, call me cynical, but I believe increasing lawlessness is the means by which the ruling classes wish to persuade us that we need more surveillance.
Surveillance isn't intended to be the solution - it is the goal.
Prolem, reaction, solution.
Problem: lawlessness (which Labour fostered).
Reaction: "something must be done".
Solution: ever more surveillance, which was their goal, all along.
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