Civil and Human-rights Joe Neilson MP for Brighton Kemptown Constituency Brighton Queens Park Moulsecoomb & Bevendean Rottingdean Saltdean Telscombe Cliffs Ovingdean Peacehaven

 

 

JOE NEILSON FIGHTING FOR YOUR RIGHTS

 

 

You are losing your Civil and Human-rights I say no to gagging laws  ID cards and cutting Legal Aid. As your MP I will do all I can to preserve your Civil & Legal Rights. I will have a law centre for Brighton Kemptown constituents.

 

BUT WE ALL MUST KEEP PROTESTING AND PROTESTING

 

Join    now       www.38degrees.org.uk

 

Join   now      www.change.org/en-GB

 

 

www.savelegalaid.co.uk

 

YOU ARE LOSING YOUR HUMAN-RIGHTS

 

DURING MY CAMPAIGN I WILL BE SAYING MORE ON OUR RIGHTS SO WATCH THIS PAGE

 

 

If you think that the below is fiction.

GOOGLE Carnivore while we still have a free internet is all true and a lot more besides.

 

Joe Neilson

 

We drink our morning coffee with a drop of fear. The television news gives us  new threats to our lives: terrorism and airline crashes, global warming and road rage, an epidemic of avian flu. All the threats are different, but they have one common theme: it's impossible to truly be safe. Somehow all of us have become victims — or potential victims - of a long list of dangers.

 

With these threats fresh in our mind, we travel to work tracked by pervasive electronic monitoring systems. There's a Global Positioning device inside our car and another within our mobile phone; both inform a computer of our exact location. Our travel card records our trip on the tube and stores the infor­mation in a central data bank. And everywhere we go, there are closed-circuit surveillance cameras — thou­sands of them — to photograph and record our image. Some of them are 'smart' cameras, linked to computer.

 

programs that watch our movements in case we act differently from the rest of the crowd: if we walk too slowly, if we linger outside certain buildings, if we stop to laugh or enjoy the view, our body is high­lighted by a red line on a video monitor and a security guard can decide whether he should call the police.

This new technology of control and the wide-scale manipulation of fear combine to create something I call a police state. Does the it really exist? Are we living in such an environment? And, if this fiction turns out to be the truth, what difference does it make to our lives?

 

United Kingdom has millions of CCTV cameras and the average person in London is photographed hundreds of times a day. The establishment of these cameras has been remarkably quick and pervasive. In the mid-1990s John Major's Conservative government decided to dedicate 75 percent of its crime-prevention budget to encouraging CCTV cameras. Tony Blair's Labour government continued the trend and, by 1998, 440 city centres in Great Britain had CCTV cameras.

 

The outline of a police state becomes apparent when we examine the new 'smart' cameras used in London. The computers attached to these machines contain a template of what should be determined 'normal' behaviour for a person. If anyone behaves differently, those actions are immediately detected.

 

MORE TO FOLLOW

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A DISABLED CANDIDATE BEING HELPED BY THE

www.access-to-elected-office-fund.org.uk

 

I have signed the following statement:

 ‘I confirm that in standing for election, my activities will uphold the rule of law, democracy, individual liberty and mutual respect and tolerance for different faiths and beliefs.’

 

“The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.”

I do not stand under any political banner and totally independent do not stand for the masons or any other group our financed by any political parties.