Henry Porter writes in The Independent.
This excellent article on 19th October 2006 has many good bits like:
Individual liberty is not just the precondition for civilisation, not
just morally right, not just the only way people can reach their full
potential, live responsibly and have fun; it is also a necessity for
the health of government. Ten years ago I would have felt silly
speaking about liberty and rights in Britain with the very real concern
that I have today. But I am worried. And it's not just me.
Last
month Le Monde asked "Is Democracy Dying in the West?" In the spring of
this year Lord Steyen, the distinguished former law lord, made a speech
despairing at this Government's neglect for the Rule of Law, which was
followed by Baroness (Helena) Kennedy's alarm call in the James Cameron
Lecture.
The inescapable fact is that we have a
Prime Minister who repeatedly makes the point that civil liberties
arguments are not so much wrong as made for another age [my italics].
We have a Government that has ignored the Rule of Law, reduced rights
and has steadily moved to increase the centralised power of the state
at the expense of the individual.
So I don't feel
quite as silly or as alarmist as I might.The relationship between the
state and individual is really at the heart of any discussion about
democracy and rights. In Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union it was the
state's mission not just to prevent people from expressing themselves,
from moving about freely and unobserved, from pursuing their chosen
careers and acting upon their religious and political convictions, but
to stop them from thinking freely. It needed to occupy people's
thoughts - to take up a kind of permanent residency in the mind of the
average citizen. And as the many psychological studies published in the
Nineties make clear, this led to psychic disrepair on a massive scale -
paranoia, clinical depression, chronic internalised anger and learned
helplessness.
We fell morally ill, Havel said in
that speech, because we became used to saying something different from
what we thought. We learned not to believe in anything, to ignore one
another, to care only about ourselves. Concepts such as love,
friendship, compassion, humility or forgiveness lost their depth and
dimensions, and for many of us represented only psychological
peculiarities.Why am I harping on about communism? It died and was
buried 17 years ago, at least in Europe and Russia. We're into another
century. We've got Google and speed-dating and globalisation and
melting ice caps and reality TV and al-Qa'ida and al-Jazeera and Al
Gore. We've moved on.
As a character in Alan Bennett's The History Boys says, there is no
period more remote in history than the recent past. Indeed, but we need
to remember that recent past a little more than we do. For one thing,
our knowledge of what existed on the other side of the Iron Curtain
meant we valued and looked after our own freedoms much more than we do
today.
It is perhaps the absence of an obvious confrontation between freedom
and tyranny that allows Tony Blair to say that civil liberties
arguments are made for another age. I profoundly disagree with this. It
is dangerous arrogance to say that the past has nothing to teach us and
that all the problems we face now are unique to our time.
During his speech to the Labour Party conference, Tony Blair said: "I
don't want to live in a police state, or a Big Brother society or put
any of our essential freedoms in jeopardy. But because our idea of
liberty is not keeping pace with change in reality, those freedoms are
in jeopardy."
What in heaven's name did he mean by that? Liberty is liberty. You
can't update it. You can't divide it. You are either free, or you're
not. A society is either just, or it isn't. People have rights or they
don't. The rule of law is upheld, or it isn't.
But Blair believes there is nothing that can't be modernised, updated,
pared down or streamlined to keep pace with change. And liberty is no
exception to the modernising fury which serves as New Labour's only
ideological foundation. What the Prime Minister is saying in this cute
little Orwellian paradox is that in the particular circumstances of the
war on terror and the rash of crime and anti-social behaviour, we must
give up freedom to be free.
What an odd idea! Who is to decide which freedoms are essential and
which can be sacrificed to make us secure? Tony Blair, Gordon Brown,
Lord Falconer or the former Stalinist and now Home Secretary John Reid?
"Those who would give up essential liberty," observed Benjamin
Franklin, "to purchase a little temporary safety, deserve neither
freedom or safety." That's exactly right because you can't barter one
for the other even though that has been the tempting deal on offer from
the British and American governments since 9/11. The truth of the
matter is that relinquishing our rights in exchange for illusory
security harms each one of us, and our children and grandchildren.
Because once gone, these rights hardly ever return.
But let's just return to the first part of that statement by Tony Blair
- the bit about him not wanting to live in a police state, or a Big
Brother society. Don't get me wrong, we do not live in either a police
state or a Big Brother society - yet. But there is no Englishman alive
or dead who has done more to bring them about.
The trouble is that it's happening so very quietly, so very discreetly
that few really see it. You have to concentrate very hard to understand
what's going on and put the whole picture together because so much has
been buried in obscure corners of legislation.
We used to believe in innocence until guilt was proved by a court. Not
any longer. That distinction disappeared when the Serious Organised
Crime and Police Act came into force and police started taking innocent
people's DNA and fingerprints and treating them as a convicted
criminals.
We used to believe in Habeas Corpus. Not any longer. Under terrorism
laws, suspects may be held for 28 days without being charged. Now the
Home Secretary wants to make that 90 days, and Gordon Brown seems to
share that view.
We used to believe that there should be no punishment without a court
deciding the law had been broken, and that every defendant had the
right to know the evidence against him. Not any longer. Control orders
effectively remove both those rights and John Reid said recently that
he wanted stronger powers to detain and control, and stronger powers to
deport, which would clearly require the UK to derogate from the
European Convention on Human Rights.
We used to believe that an Englishman's home was his castle. Not any
longer. A pincer movement by the Courts Act 2003 and the Domestic
Violence, Crime and Victims Act 2004 put paid to the 400-year-old
principle that entry into your home could not be forced in civil cases.
We used to believe in the right to be tried by jury. Not any longer.
The Government plans to remove trial by jury in complicated fraud cases
and where there is a likelihood of jury tampering. It would like to go
further.
We used to believe there was a good reason not to allow hearsay
evidence in court. Not any longer. The anti-social behaviour order
legislation introduced hearsay evidence. The maximum penalty for
breaking an Asbo can be up to five years in jail. Hearsay can send
someone to jail.
We used to believe in free speech, but not any longer. People have been
detained under terrorism laws for wearing anti-Blair T-shirts. Walter
Wolfgang was removed from the Labour Conference for heckling Jack Straw
about the Iraq war. A woman was charged under the Harassment Act for
sending two e-mails to a company politely asking them not to conduct
animal experiments. Her offence was to send two e-mails, for in that
lies the repeated action that is now illegal. A man named Stephen Jago
was arrested for displaying a placard quoting Orwell near Downing
Street. It read: "In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a
revolutionary act." And a mime artist named Neil Goodwin appeared in
court recently charged under the Serious Organised Crime and Police Act
for what? Well, doing an impersonation of Charlie Chaplin outside
Parliament. His hearing was a grim comedy. Mr Goodwin's statement to
the court concluded: "In truth, one of the first things to go under a
dictatorship is a good sense of humour."
We used to believe that our private communications were sacrosanct. Not
any longer. The Regulatory Investigatory Powers Act 2000 and its
subsequent amendments provide such wide terms for the legitimate
tapping of phones, the interception of e-mails and monitoring of
internet connections that they amount to general warrants, last used in
the 18th century under George III.
I could go on because there is much more, but I worry about boring you
and I know I am beginning to seem obsessed. There will be many
reasonable people among you who will argue that the fight against
terrorism or some other compelling problem makes the removal of a
fragment of liberty the best option available to us. A little bit here,
a little bit there doesn't really matter, particularly when it involves
somebody else's rights. Without thinking very deeply, we say to
ourselves "if you've done nothing wrong you've got nothing to fear from
these new laws". Not true. There is something to fear - because someone
else's liberty is also your liberty. When it's removed from them, it's
taken from you even though you may not be able to conceive of the
circumstances when you might need it. A system of rights must apply to
bank managers, illegal immigrant cockle pickers and every type of
defendant otherwise it doesn't count.
Cumulatively, these small, barely noticed reductions in our rights add
up to the greatest attack on liberty in the last hundred years. No
wonder the Prime Minister dismisses traditional civil liberties
arguments as being made for another age. With his record he can do
nothing else.
In an e-mail exchange between him and me in the spring, he suggested a
kind of super Asbo for major criminals. This is what the unmediated
Blair sounds like. "I would go further. I would widen the powers of
police to seize cash of suspected [my italics] drug dealers, the cars
they drive round in and require them to prove that they came by them
lawfully. I would impose restrictions on those suspected of being
involved in organised crime. In fact I would harry, hassle and hound
them until they give up or leave the country."
I'm sure that echoes many people's desire just to be rid of these awful
people. But think about it for a moment: Tony Blair is a lawyer, yet
nowhere is there any mention of due process or the courts. Apparently
it will be enough for the authorities merely to suspect someone of
wrongdoing for them to act. And the police won't be troubled by the
tiresome business of courts, defence lawyers or defendants' rights. I
wonder what Vaclav Havel would think of such a suggestion. Certainly,
he would be all too familiar with the system of arbitrary arrest and
state persecution that Blair seems to be suggesting.
Blair dresses up his views in a vocabulary of modernisation and
inclusivity. Yet when he talks about rebalancing the criminal justice
system in favour of the victim, it takes just a few moments to see that
this will be achieved by doing away with the priority in our legal
system of protecting the accused from miscarriages of justice. He
simply wants to reduce defendants' rights in order to satisfy public
demand for more prosecutions.
It is now plain that he intends nothing less than to open the ancient charters of British rights in order to tip acid into them.
The way cabinet ministers think of themselves today and what they do
are at odds. They think of themselves as reasonable, tolerant, humane
and liberal people, but their actions tell an altogether different
story. This brings me to the Big Brother state that Tony Blair says he
doesn't want to live in, but which has nevertheless rapidly come into
being during his premiership.
Most people have very little understanding of what the ID card scheme
will actually mean for them. They think that it just involves a little
plastic identifier. But it is much more than that. Every adult will be
required to provide 49 pieces of information about themselves which
will include biometric measurements - probably an iris scan and
fingerprinting. If you refuse to submit to what is called, without
irony, enrolment, you will face repeated fines of up £2,500. The
Government is deadly serious about this thing because of a simple
truth. They want to know pretty much everything there is to know about
you.
Personally, I find the idea of having a card repugnant and I cannot
believe it will be long before policemen are stopping us on the street
and asking for our papers. But this is by no means the most sinister
aspect. Every time your card is swiped when you identify yourself, the
National Identity Register will silently make a record of the time and
date, your location and the purpose of the ID check. Gradually, a
unique picture of your life will be built, to which nearly
half-a-million civil servants are apparently going to have access.
But of course you will never be told who is looking at your file, or why. And nor will you be able to find out.
Read full article here.
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