Tony Blair thinks that creating a super
database for everyone in Britain is a good idea, then ponder that combined with
all his new laws lets look at the story of
Average Joe Soap, clean, honest living man.
When Joe Soap arrived at his local Jobcentre to look for work, he had little idea of the nightmare that was about to unfold.
Joe, a carpenter by trade, was forced into bankruptcy
last year as his costs continued to outstrip his income, and the small firm
that he used to run was liquidated, so he needed to find new employment.
Joe had lived in Burnley all his life, he had never been in trouble with the police and had always paid his taxes and VAT, and was feeling confident that he would have no trouble finding new work.
The assistant in the Jobcentre was polite
and pleasant and asked Joe lots of questions about his work experience, and
eventually asked for his new super database number, printed on the back of his
£300 ID card.
To his amazement, the assistant politely advised him that she needed to speak to her supervisor, and left Joe alone at the desk.
A short time later, the supervisor called
Joe into his office, where he was met by an officer of the SOCA, cautioned and
arrested under Section 132 of the Serious Organised Crime and Police Act 2005.
Taken to the police station he had his
fingerprints, a photograph and
It transpires that Joe had been in
At some stage during his visit to London, Joe and his wife had gone to see the Houses of Parliament, as any first time tourist to London would do, but upon his arrival found that Parliament Square was full of demonstrators, so he and his wife decided to walk along Whitehall and head for Trafalgar square.
At some time during this walk, he had been photographed by the square with the demonstrators.
The Police had also discovered that Joe was
a member the Communist Party of Great Britain, a legitimate organisation, but
his membership was noted.
They also disclosed that there had been a
form incorrectly filled in during his discussions with the HMRC when he closed down
his firm, and the questioning began to focus on this.
Why had he lied to the inspectors when his firm went bust. Joe insisted that he had filled in the form correctly, but the police were adamant that the information on the form was incorrect and that a supplementary form was missing, therefore he must have failed to provide it, and an investigation into possible fraud would ensue, despite Joe protesting everything was agreed with HMRC at the time.
Police then wanted to know why he had
travelled from
Joe explained that he
had been looking for work, and that someone had told him of work at a company
in
The police told him that they had already listened
to the phone call, and advised that they found its contents to be ‘suspicious’,
as was his journey. No further explanation was given.
Joe appeared before Magistrates the following morning. Police explained that they had conducted exhaustive enquiries, and that in their opinion Joe was a potential threat to his local neighbourhood.
They said that neighbours had been interviewed, some of whom complained that Joe used to start his noisy diesel van up at 6.30 every day when he had been working, and his immediate neighbour who had never particularly liked him, had complained about the noise late at night when he put rubbish out.
As Joe and his wife liked to keep
themselves to themselves they rarely spoke with the people in their
street. Police found this to be suspicious
and anti social.
Police advised that
they had found extremist material during a search of his home (communist party
brochures), had associated with a known criminal in Oxford, and because he had been involved in a bar room brawl 10 years ago, believed
that he was potentially violent, so police also requested that he be put on the
Violent and Sex Offenders register, and be given a super ASBO, with conditions that
he report his movements for the next 2 years to the Police.
So, Joe Soap, clean, honest living man who
wanted to find new work to pay the mortgage and his bills, never been in
trouble in his life, now has a criminal record, his fingerprints and
Joe will never be able to work again,
because the
He is shunned everywhere in his home town,
because the assistant at the jobcentre, having read his entire file, could not keep her mouth shut and told
all her colleagues, who then went on to tell everyone else.
By passing laws and building Databases all your eggs are now in one basket and make everyone, absolutely everyone suspicious, be the target of suspicion, and allow the lowest rated civil servant access to your very soul.
I can hear Mr Blair protesting now that this is not what all these laws are for, but Mr Blair, please understand, THIS IS HOW THEY WILL BE APPLIED, if not in a dictatorial regime, certainly one in which it is very easy to hit all your targets when the laws are all on your side.
In a
free society, the rights and laws protect the individual from the government.
In a
dictatorship, the rights and laws protect the government from the people.





















