Hoon Mines the Moron Meme
One of Tony Blair's stupider statements was the following:"The biggest civil liberty of all is not to be killed by a terrorist."
Let's call this the Moron Meme: it assumes that people are stupid enough to confuse basic rights to life with others rights to liberty, when in fact they are two quite distinct dimensions. And having made this false comparison, Blair was then able to use false logic to demand a trade-off: if you don't want to be killed by terrorists, then you must give up some/many of your civil liberties.
What this glosses over is the real possibility that you can have *both* by bringing a mature and calm intelligence to bear on the situation, instead of respondingly disproportionately out of abject, unthinking fear ("Terrorists! Terrorists! Everybody panic!")
It was stupid when Blair said it, and it's just as stupid now Geoff Hoon is parroting it:[Julia Goldsworthy] asked: "How much more control can they have? How far is he prepared to go to undermine civil liberties?"
Mr Hoon interjected: "To stop terrorists killing people in our society, quite a long way actually.
...
He added: "The biggest civil liberty of all is not to be killed by a terrorist."
This exchange contains another extraordinarily stupid statement:"If they are going to use the internet to communicate with each other and we don't have the power to deal with that, then you are giving a licence to terrorists to kill people."
- As if the Internet were some magic pixie dust that, when sprinkled on terrorist activies, makes them murderously efficacious.
And yet today, without those powers, the British secret services seem to be doing a pretty good job at stopping misguided idiots attempting to spread mayhem and murder (not least thanks to the latter's enormous incompetence): seen any good terrorist attacks recently? No, nor me.
The only possible reason for bringing in more snooping powers is because it gives the Government even more control over everything - its current obsession.