Roman Candle
Member
I was watching Any Questions just now, (big mistake, I now feel furiously angry at all those people pretending they're actually human beings with valid opinions). Anyway, they were discussing the imprisonment without trial, which currently can last up to 28 days, and some people were asking for it to be extended.
This is a mainly British issue, but I think it applies to anywhere where overbearing anti-terrorism legislation is being introduced.
I keep hearing this argument - "Sometimes, we have intelligence, but not evidence. Evidence will only be availlable after the crime has been commited. So we must be able to imprison on basis of 'intelligence' alone,"
Well, this might be acceptable, but of course we're not allowed to know what that 'intelligence' is. Because that would be a possible breach of security. Right, ok. So without trial, with no solid evidence, without even telling anyone what material they have that might become evidence, you can be imprisoned. There is absolutely no transparency. Get this - we're not even allowed to know what kind of material might be considered as 'intelligence'.
So as far as I know, I could be locked up tomorrow on whatever basis someone in the secret services decides is suitable, which could be either fairly well founded, or could be utterly pananoid nonsense. No one is actually allowed to know what methods are being used to decide what's good 'intelligence' and what's not.
It makes me utterly sick that the government considers this a valid argument:
"We can't find good enough evidence to arrest you. We must use intelligence"
"What intelligence, exactly?"
"Can't say"
"Wait a minute - could you at least define what intelligence is, in general?"
"Nope"
If the government wants to use terms like 'intelligence' in an argument that is supposed to persuade us to overule our own human rights, then you would have thought they would at least tell us what they're talking about. But no!
This is a mainly British issue, but I think it applies to anywhere where overbearing anti-terrorism legislation is being introduced.
I keep hearing this argument - "Sometimes, we have intelligence, but not evidence. Evidence will only be availlable after the crime has been commited. So we must be able to imprison on basis of 'intelligence' alone,"
Well, this might be acceptable, but of course we're not allowed to know what that 'intelligence' is. Because that would be a possible breach of security. Right, ok. So without trial, with no solid evidence, without even telling anyone what material they have that might become evidence, you can be imprisoned. There is absolutely no transparency. Get this - we're not even allowed to know what kind of material might be considered as 'intelligence'.
So as far as I know, I could be locked up tomorrow on whatever basis someone in the secret services decides is suitable, which could be either fairly well founded, or could be utterly pananoid nonsense. No one is actually allowed to know what methods are being used to decide what's good 'intelligence' and what's not.
It makes me utterly sick that the government considers this a valid argument:
"We can't find good enough evidence to arrest you. We must use intelligence"
"What intelligence, exactly?"
"Can't say"
"Wait a minute - could you at least define what intelligence is, in general?"
"Nope"
If the government wants to use terms like 'intelligence' in an argument that is supposed to persuade us to overule our own human rights, then you would have thought they would at least tell us what they're talking about. But no!