April 15, 2006
Continuing Quiet Death Of Democracy
By John Pilger
People
ask: Can this be happening in Britain? Surely not. A centuries-old
democratic constitution cannot be swept away. Basic human rights cannot
be made abstract Those who once comforted themselves that a Labour
government would never commit such an epic crime in Iraq might now
abandon a last delusion, that their freedom is inviolable. If they
knew.
The dying of freedom in Britain is not news. The pirouettes of ambition
of of the prime minister and his political twin, the treasurer, are
news, though of minimal public interest. Looking back to the 1930s when
social democracies were distracted and powerful cliques imposed their
totalitarian ways by stealth and silence, the warning is clear. The
Legislative and Regulatory Reform Bill has already passed its second
parliamentary reading without interest to most Labour MPs and court
journalists; yet it is utterly totalitarian in scope.
Presented by the government as a simple measure for streamlining
de-regulation, or "getting rid of red tape", the only red tape it will
actually remove is that of parliamentary scrutiny of government
legislation, including this remarkable bill. It will mean that the
government can secretly change the Parliament Act and the constitution
and laws can be struck down by decree from Downing Street. Blair has
demonstrated his taste for absolute power in his abuse of the royal
prerogative, which he has used to bypass parliament in going to war and
in dismissing landmark High Court judgements, such as that which
declared illegal the expulsion of the entire population of the Chagos
islands, now the site of an American military base. The new bill marks
the end of true parliamentary democracy; in its effect, it is as
significant as the US Congress last year abandoning the bill of rights.
Those who fail to hear these steps on the road to dictatorship should
look at the government's plans for ID cards, described in its manifesto
as "voluntary". They will be compulsory and worse. An ID card will be
different from a driving licence or passport. It will be connected to a
database called the NIR (National Identity Register), where your
personal details will be stored. These will include your fingerprints,
a scan of your iris, your residence status and unlimited other details
about your life. If you fail to keep an appointment to be photographed
and fingerprinted, you can be fined up to £2,500.
Every place that sells alcohol or cigarettes, every post office, every
pharmacy and every bank will have an NIR terminal where you can be
asked to "prove who you are". Each time you swipe it, a record is made
at the NIR. This means that the government will know every time you
withdraw more than £99 from your bank account. Restaurants and
off-licences (liquor stores) will demand that the card is swiped so
that they are indemnified from prosecution. Private business will have
full access to the NIR. If you apply for a job, your card will have to
be swiped. If you want a London Undergound Oyster card, or a
supermarket loyalty card, or a telephone line or a mobile phone or an
internet account, your card will have to be swiped. In other words,
there will be a record of your movements, your phone records and
shopping habits, even the kind of medication you take. These databases,
which can be stored in a device the size of a hand, will be sold to
third parties without you knowing. The ID card will not be your
property and the Home Secretary will have the right to revoke or
suspend it at any time without explanation. This would prevent you
drawing money from a bank. ID cards will not stop or deter terrorists,
as Home Secretary Charles Clarke has now admitted; the Madrid bombers
all carried ID. On 26 March, the government silenced the last
parliamentary opposition to the cards when it ruled that the House of
Lords could no longer block legislation contained in a party's
manifesto. The Blair clique does not debate. Like the zealot in Downing
Street, its "sincere belief" in its own veracity is quite enough. When
the London School of Economics published a long study that effectively
demolished the government's case for the cards. Charles Clarke abused
it for feeding a "media scare campaign". This is the same minister who
attended every cabinet meeting at which Blair's lies over his decision
to invade Iraq were clear.
This government was re-elected with the support of barely a fifth of
those eligible to vote: the second lowest since the franchise. Whatever
respectability the famous suits in television studios try to give him,
Blair is demonstrably discredited as a liar and war criminal. Like the
constitution-hijacking bill now reaching its final stages, and the
criminalising of peaceful protest, ID cards are designed to control the
lives of ordinary citizens (as well as enrich the new Labour-favoured
companies that will build the computer systems). A small, determined,
and profoundly undemocratic group is killing freedom in Britain, just
as it has killed literally in Iraq. That is the news. "The kaleidoscope
has been shaken," said Blair at the 2001 Labour Party conference. "The
pieces are in flux. Soon they will settle again. Before they do, let us
re-order this world around us." John Pilger's new book, Freedom Next
Time, will be published in June by Bantam Press
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