Posts Tagged Big Government

The Illusion of Freedom

This is my article as published in the Boar of week 1 term 1 2009.

Two weeks ago Rowan Lax­ton, the head of the South Asia desk at the FCO, was found guilty of racial­ly ag­gra­vat­ed ha­rass­ment. He was in a Lon­don gym watch­ing a tele­vi­sion re­port about the death of a farmer killed by Is­raeli bombs dur­ing the Gaza con­flict when he ex­claimed: “Fuck­ing Is­raelis, fuck­ing Jews.” It is also al­leged that he said “If I had my way, the fuck­ing in­ter­na­tion­al com­mu­ni­ty should be sent in and if the Is­raelis got in the way, they’d be blown off the fuck­ing earth.”

What he did was in­ap­pro­pri­ate and this is ag­gra­vat­ed by the fact he is a diplo­mat. One would hope that Her Majesty’s rep­re­sen­ta­tives be able to ex­press them­selves in a more diplo­mat­ic man­ner. He should re­sign.

What Mr Lax­ton said is of ab­so­lute­ly no use to the de­bate about what Is­rael did in Gaza and it was not meant to be. As the judge said “it was an emo­tion­al re­ac­tion”.

He was con­vict­ed under the Crim­i­nal and Dis­or­der Act 1998, one of the many Acts passed by New Labour re­lat­ing to crim­i­nal jus­tice. Here is how the Home Of­fice sum­maris­es the law: “A crime will count as “racial­ly ag­gra­vat­ed” if it can be shown that it was mo­ti­vat­ed ei­ther whol­ly or part­ly by racism. A crime will also count as “racial­ly ag­gra­vat­ed” if it can be shown that – even though the mo­ti­va­tion for the at­tack was not racist – racist hos­til­i­ty was demon­strat­ed dur­ing the course of the of­fence or im­me­di­ate­ly be­fore or after it.” A “racial group” is, for the pur­pos­es of the new of­fences, “a group of per­sons de­fined by ref­er­ence to race, colour, na­tion­al­i­ty (in­clud­ing cit­i­zen­ship) or eth­nic or na­tion­al ori­gins”. The Act does not cover re­li­gion but it “makes it clear that even where there is a re­li­gious el­e­ment to a crime, so long as some part of the mo­ti­va­tion is racial, the of­fence will count as a racial­ly ag­gra­vat­ed of­fence.” So shout­ing “fuck­ing French” at me (I am French) even if your mo­ti­va­tion is not “racist” (say­ing that French is a race would cause an out­cry in France) counts as racial­ly ag­gra­vat­ed.

If your racial­ly ag­gra­vat­ed ac­tion hap­pens to be con­sid­ered ha­rass­ment or “putting peo­ple in fear of vi­o­lence” with­in the mean­ing of the Pro­tec­tion of Ha­rass­ment Act 1997 (a New Labour law which has very often been used against peace­ful protesters) then you would be, like Mr Lax­ton, guilty of “racial­ly ag­gra­vat­ed ha­rass­ment”. In any event should the rea­sons why some­one does some­thing be rel­e­vant in con­vict­ing him?

I men­tioned above that re­li­gious ha­tred was not cov­ered by the Act. This is now the case thanks to Racial and Re­li­gious Ha­tred Act 2006. That act goes even fur­ther than the pre­vi­ous laws by its ref­er­ences to “threat­en­ing” words, be­haviour, writ­ten ma­te­ri­al and pub­lic per­for­mance of a play.

In any event these laws will not de­feat racism: the law can­not con­trol what peo­ple think. They could even be counter pro­duc­tive.

These new laws re­flect a very wor­ry­ing de­vel­op­ment, the cre­ation of a right not to be of­fend­ed. This of course goes against free speech, which after all means not the right to ex­press views you agree with but also views you whole­heart­ed­ly dis­agree with. It is es­sen­tial that in a demo­crat­ic so­ci­ety one should be able to of­fend.

It’s in­ter­est­ing to note the con­trast be­tween what hap­pened with Mr Lax­ton and what hap­pened in Swe­den re­cent­ly. A tabloid news­pa­per pub­lished an ar­ti­cle claim­ing that Is­raeli sol­diers had har­vest­ed the or­gans of some Pales­tini­ans whom they had shot. With­in hours, Is­rael’s deputy for­eign min­is­ter had de­nounced the ar­ti­cle for racism and de­mand­ed that it be con­demned by the Swedish gov­ern­ment. How­ev­er the Swedish for­eign min­ster wrote on his blog that Is­rael want­ed the Swedish gov­ern­ment to dis­tance it­self from the ar­ti­cle or take steps to pre­vent a repli­ca­tion, but that was not how the coun­try worked. “Free­dom of ex­pres­sion and press free­dom are very strong in our con­sti­tu­tion by tra­di­tion. And that strong pro­tec­tion has served our democ­ra­cy and our coun­try well”, he wrote. This ro­bust de­fence of free­dom of ex­pres­sion was en­dorsed by the prime min­is­ter.

It seems Britain is no longer the land of lib­er­ty it used to be.

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My Case against Identity Cards.

By Laveen Ladharam

Originally, I must admit, I was in favour of introducing Identity Cards in the United Kingdom. Being a holder of a Hong Kong Permanent Identity Card, like many other students at the university, I could see a situation where they came into practical use.

I realise now how wrong I was, as you shall see.

One of the main arguments used for ID cards is that it will prevent illegal immigration. However this is something that only works if the carrying of ID cards is made compulsory. In Hong Kong, we had a very bad case of illegal immigration ever since the rise of communism in Asia especially in China and Vietnam. To cut a long story short, the Hong Kong government made the holding of ID cards compulsory, but it was in conjunction with other factors, such as patrolling Hong Kong waters and having more vigilant land borders. This was done under the British and it was the British Army who secured the Chinese Border. Introducing such an intrusive system in the UK would not attract popular support and the alternative chosen by the Government, ID cards with no compulsion has no deterrent effect against illegal immigrants.

The other main argument for ID cards brought forward by the government is that they can prevent terrorism. In reality, ID cards would be irrelevant as the perpetrators of the most recent terrorist attacks in the western world were entitled for ID cards anyway. Such was the case with the Madrid bombings and the Bali bombings. The 7/7 terrorists had British passports and thus by extension would have been issued ID cards. Similarly, the IRA campaigns would have held either British or Irish passports. ID cards preventing terrorism is a non-argument. The only way to prevent terrorism is through hearts and minds and through intelligence which is, by and large very good in the UK.

Furthermore, the introduction of ID cards requires something that our government and many governments before it are incapable of doing – seeing a project through correctly. For instance, the government has tried to improve the efficiency of the NHS without trying to make it spend money more efficiently and Lord Adonis successfully implemented the (Tory) City Academies scheme only for it to be obliterated by Ed Balls through bringing them under government control. With ID cards, the cock-up resulting from the creation of an enormous database overloaded with information would be even greater. One only needs to remember the case of the loss of data about members of the RAF in 2008 to fear the consequences should our biometric information find its way onto discs or memory sticks in public. And those are great risks that I do not wish to take.

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I want to break free. Do you?

Tom Wales introduces the society, in an article originally published in The Warwick Boar on the 23rd of June 2009


You may be excused for assuming that the pursuit of liberty is old hat.

Global intervention to save fal­ter­ing banks, mas­sive Gov­ern­ment debt and a na­tion­al ID card sys­tem cost­ing more than five bil­lion pounds all seem to sig­ni­fy a shift of power from peo­ple and busi­ness to Gov­ern­ment.Why should stu­dents seek to chal­lenge such paradigms? What is in it for us in our cosy lit­tle bub­ble of War­wick?

As stu­dents, we are af­fect­ed by the con­trol­ling grasp of Gov­ern­ment in many more ways than oth­ers. From next term, all in­ter­na­tion­al stu­dents will be forced to hold ID cards. On this issue, NUS Pres­i­dent Wes Street­ing hits the prover­bial nail on its head: “By sin­gling out in­ter­na­tion­al stu­dents from their peers with bio­met­ric iden­ti­ty cards, a group al­ready at risk of stig­ma­ti­sa­tion will be in­deli­bly marked as dif­fer­ent.”

The issue is even scari­er if we as­sume that Gor­don Brown gets his way and they start to roll out amongst the gen­er­al pub­lic from 2012. The im­pli­ca­tions of de­nial of rights to those who refuse to take them out and a na­tion­al ID reg­is­ter con­tain­ing fingerprint, bio­met­ric and over fifty other forms of personal in­for­ma­tion gives the power to Gov­ern­ment to fol­low every as­pect of our lives.

“Func­tion creep”, the in­evitable use of the sys­tem for more than just iden­ti­ty check­ing, and the de­mands of the se­cu­ri­ty ser­vices in the “War on Ter­ror” would no doubt en­cour­age any weak-​willed Gov­ern­ment to cur­tail the civil lib­er­ties of card-​car­ry­ing cit­i­zens even fur­ther. It is the start of a slip­pery slope for the fu­ture of Britain.

A poll last year by the Joseph Rown­tree Re­form Trust mea­sured that a ma­jor­i­ty of cit­i­zens are against the cards and a quar­ter strong­ly against them.

In ad­di­tion to this, mas­sive spend­ing and bor­row­ing under Gor­don Brown’s gov­ern­ment has par­tic­u­lar rel­e­vance to every stu­dent that wish­es to stay and work in the UK. We will be ser­vic­ing the debt for years to come, just as the gen­er­a­tions be­fore did so to pay for the Sec­ond World War.

Labour has amassed debts equal to £23,000 for each man, woman and child in the coun­try. Gov­ern­ment debt re­pay­ments alone equal the amount cur­rent­ly spent on the Po­lice Force. Whilst Labour and Con­ser­va­tives argue about how many pub­lic ser­vants have to be sacked in order to re­duce the bud­get deficit, bet­ter fi­nan­cial man­age­ment in the past means that we could af­ford to em­ploy even more if we so wished.

In order for this sit­u­a­tion to change we don’t just need a change be­tween the two par­ties in Gov­ern­ment, we need a greater cross-​par­ty clam­our for change. The for­ma­tion of a lib­er­tar­i­an so­ci­ety here at War­wick will give us the chance to broad­en our un­der­stand­ing of Gov­ern­ment and its many fail­ings.

In ad­di­tion to the ques­tions of civil lib­er­ties and mas­sive Gov­ern­ment spend­ing, lib­er­tar­i­an pol­i­tics ques­tion the very as­sump­tions that exist in so­ci­ety. Why should cer­tain drugs be con­trolled? Is in­ter­net pira­cy a bad thing? Should Gov­ern­ment be in­volved in cur­tail­ing pros­ti­tu­tion?

Con­se­quent­ly, in order to shape the fu­ture of British pol­i­tics we shouldn’t be scared to think out­side the box. Rather than act­ing as a fringe party, War­wick Lib­er­tar­i­ans will be open to mem­bers of all par­ties as well as peo­ple who hold just a pass­ing in­ter­est on the issue.

The root of the many branch­es of lib­er­tar­i­an­ism is a be­lief in free­dom. How­ev­er, as the ac­tions of Gov­ern­ment be­come more and more au­thor­i­tar­i­an that basis is be­com­ing in­creas­ing­ly frag­ile.

I hope you can join us in sup­port­ing that the metaphor­i­cal tree of lib­er­tar­i­an­ism, and hav­ing a damn good time in the pro­cess.

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