a vaporous freedom

17:56 by Editor · 0 Post a comment on AAWR

We live in really quite reprehensible times, at least here, here at home in the UK, however friends abroad, tell me that this spreading tyranny grows, that moves to create a global hell continue apace. In this country what passes for government, seeks to eavesdrop upon the people, seeks to place us all upon a database, controlled, scrutinised and shackled. You may have taken the time to read many AAWR posts here, that refer to big-brother, if not you should do so now, you should realise the extent they rob us of freedom, the extent of the growing menace.

We posted here an article concerning this reprehensible regimes plans to record every email and website visit made, alongside that of telephones, yet as reported only quite recently, even car users are not immune, this regime means to obtain complete and unshakable control and I cannot feign surprise.

Leftism is by its very nature artificial and therefore needs draconian law and repression in order to function, it warps reality feigning victim status whilst in reality it is a wolf in sheep’s clothing. Undercover of humanitarianism it will instigate oppression and once the time is right, it will unleash the people’s misery. Of course there have been countless “practices”, countless times when leftism thought it had it right, that is until the people triumphed. Yet for how long can the people triumph, for how long can we hold fast to freedom and inhibit the left, we live in an age of technology, an age whereby machines can and indeed do, replace humans in the workplace.

It is now possible to control a people en-masse with little dependency upon man-power, in the future even the need for the army will become redundant, as weapons become evermore automated and are focused upon the frailties of the human condition. Already weapons are in production that can serve no other purpose than to control the masses, weapons instead of focusing solely upon a singular human being are now developed to control and attack population densities. Instead of targeting group offenders weapons will target the group, the same of course can be said for this mass eavesdropping, they no longer even care if we know, so very certain are they of victory, they know full well that the dysfunctional society they have purposely created allows for no unity, no common purpose, save for what they themselves create.

In fact, as in days of old they ferment disunity, create chaos in order to function, have we no backbone, no courage, did it die long ago, are we so weak, they mean us harm, they ride out for evil and we barely stir. Again I beg you, do not fall for this it is all Islam rubbish, do not let them lead you, it is a trick, a ruse and we sleepwalk to our end, they need a boogieman, need an evil group, need it to implant their security measures. Have you never wondered why it is, in this the age of political correctness, why Muslims can be so maligned, why the owned media can disparage seemingly at will.

What if forces similar to those igniting anti-Islamic sentiment here, operated in the east, spewing anti-western sentiment, what a hotchpotch, what a brew, what a cauldron of cleverness, what if the intent was purposeful, had common purpose and the result a global hell. Here at home they destroy all, is it not the case in the east also, here at home freedom crumbles and tyranny marches in, everything we say, everything we do, everything we are is under scrutiny, is it not fast becoming time that we shake them off, that we take back our countries and our freedoms whatever it takes.

There is a better solution than robbing us of freedoms, a better solution than implementing such evil, leave them alone. Let them live according to their beliefs, unmolested within their own lands, stop supporting the rogue state and let freedom reign. We won’t, we’ll still disparage them, still send troops to sovereign nations, men, women and children will still die and they will ratchet up the hate, the silly among nationalists will contest the wrong for and the people of this country will still permit the loss of their freedoms and nothing will change form the plan.

Good god must it be this way, must we permit this, this evil, must we let evil flourish as good men stand by, what then are we worth, what if we stand idle, have we not seen what the left can do, what elites evoke, what evil endeavours. Are you so content with football and food, gadgets and gossip that you forget what hews nations, what it takes to create them, what it takes also to preserve them.

What a clever game they play, so intricate and fine, not even a fleeting glimpse of true reality amongst such smoke and mirrors, is this then your freedom, your desired state, watched, observed and recorded, is this the land you deserve because I condemn it, every facet. Does it not bother you, are you not moved, do you not fear for those to come and does your heart not clench with dread, do you not mourn what was and what should be and what if we fight now could be or will you sit on your hands and let them take you.

In many ways the last hope of a people are the military, the last line of defence in all circumstance, yet do we have that now or have we lost even that, surely the police work now for other interests, lost to those they once served, now the people who made Britain great, the nation stock, is dying can no-one hear us scream. Must we die unlamented, unfairly for no crime or will any listen, will they close their ears to untruths and rush to our aid, we scream tormented and not a hand reaches out, not a one, for all we gave and all we sired.

We gave the world the concept of freedom and now it is here, in that home, that it vanishes from the world, we an experiment in tyranny, in control and social engineering. We were a fine kind, a fine band, respected once I feel but no more, they ripped apart our empire, until finally coming for the people, America is next, then we are gone, the rise and fall of two empires in a heartbeat. I hope we fight back, I hope I live to be there, to wrest control from evil and give it back to the people, yet who really knows, the young still carefree unknowing, concerned with intimate matters, image and the pursuit of happiness.

Who to tell them, to who will they listen, who to galvanise and crush this tyranny, oh but you need crushing, demolishing, ending, it is either you or we ,better you be gone for the world than we. You need not spy upon me I will tell you, I will be open I shall not hide, you ruin all, destroy everything and think me dim, as if I were nothing, a thing, a white European male in the beginning of the twenty first century, such a despised being, a loathed entity but I am here and I know you. I know what you wish to implement, what already you have done and I know you must be dealt with, I know also that, it is only the people that can do it but they must do it quick, whilst there is time.

We must resist, resist in every way, we cannot let them continue, cannot let them realize their evil, we must of course contest immigration, be it Islamic or any other but lets not rush to evils banner, lets not give them their culture clash, their sought for war of disparate peoples, have we not lost enough on their chosen battles, drenched fields with blood for cause unknown. Dam them, if we must fight we must choose time and place and indeed enemy, we must I am afraid realise that it has gone too far we must gear up to wrestle back our lands, our freedoms and save ourselves in doing so.

I post below the Data Retention Directive, known as Directive 2006/24/EC, these being the newly written laws to spy upon a nation’s people, please remember that these laws apply to many countries, all within mainland Europe, relevant to the UK follows:







    Statutory Instruments
    2009 No. 859

    Electronic Communications

    The Data Retention (EC Directive) Regulations 2009

    Made 2nd April 2009

    Coming into force 6th April 2009

    The Secretary of State, being a Minister designated(1) for the purposes of section 2(2) of the European Communities Act 1972(2) in respect of matters relating to electronic communications, in exercise of the powers conferred by that section, makes the following Regulations (a draft of which has been approved by each House of Parliament):

    Interpretation

    2. In these Regulations—

    (a)
    “cell ID” means the identity or location of the cell from which a mobile telephony call started or in which it finished;



    (b)
    “communications data” means traffic data and location data and the related data necessary to identify the subscriber or user;



    (c)
    “the Data Retention Directive” means Directive 2006/24/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 15 March 2006 on the retention of data generated or processed in connection with the provision of publicly available electronic communications services or of public communications networks and amending Directive 2002/58/EC;



    (d)
    “location data” means data processed in an electronic communications network indicating the geographical position of the terminal equipment of a user of a public electronic communications service, including data relating to—



    (i)
    the latitude, longitude or altitude of the terminal equipment,



    (ii)
    the direction of travel of the user, or



    (iii)
    the time the location information was recorded;



    (e)
    “public communications provider” means—



    (i)
    a provider of a public electronic communications network, or



    (ii)
    a provider of a public electronic communications service;



    and “public electronic communications network” and “public electronic communications service” have the meaning given in section 151 of the Communications Act 2003(3);

    (f)
    “telephone service” means calls (including voice, voicemail and conference and data calls), supplementary services (including call forwarding and call transfer) and messaging and multi-media services (including short message services, enhanced media services and multi-media services);



    (g)
    “traffic data” means data processed for the purpose of the conveyance of a communication on an electronic communications network or for the billing in respect of that communication and includes data relating to the routing, duration or time of a communication;



    (h)
    “user ID” means a unique identifier allocated to persons when they subscribe to or register with an internet access service or internet communications service.


    Communications data to which these Regulations apply

    3. These Regulations apply to communications data if, or to the extent that, the data are generated or processed in the United Kingdom by public communications providers in the process of supplying the communications services concerned.
    Obligation to retain communications data

    4.—(1) It is the duty of a public communications provider to retain the communications data specified in the following provisions of the Schedule to these Regulations—

    (a)
    Part 1 (fixed network telephony);



    (b)
    Part 2 (mobile telephony);



    (c)
    Part 3 (internet access, internet e-mail or internet telephony).



    (2) The obligation extends to data relating to unsuccessful call attempts that—

    (a)
    in the case of telephony data, are stored in the United Kingdom, or



    (b)
    in the case of internet data, are logged in the United Kingdom.



    (3) An “unsuccessful call attempt” means a communication where a telephone call has been successfully connected but not answered or there has been a network management intervention.

    (4) The obligation does not extend to unconnected calls.

    (5) No data revealing the content of a communication is to be retained in pursuance of these Regulations.
    The retention period

    5. The data specified in the Schedule to these Regulations must be retained by the public communications provider for a period of 12 months from the date of the communication in question.
    Data protection and data security

    6.—(1) Public communications providers must observe the following principles with respect to data retained in accordance with these Regulations—

    (a)
    the retained data must be of the same quality and subject to the same security and protection as those data on the public electronic communications network;



    (b)
    the data must be subject to appropriate technical and organisational measures to protect the data against accidental or unlawful destruction, accidental loss or alteration, or unauthorised or unlawful storage, processing, access or disclosure;



    (c)
    the data must be subject to appropriate technical and organisational measures to ensure that they can be accessed by specially authorised personnel only;



    (d)
    except in the case of data lawfully accessed and preserved, the data retained solely in accordance with these Regulations must be destroyed at the end of the retention period.



    (2) It is the duty of the Information Commissioner, as the Supervisory Authority designated for the purposes of Article 9 of the Data Retention Directive, to monitor the application of the provisions of these Regulations with respect to the security of stored data.

    (3) As regards the destruction of data at the end of the retention period—

    (a)
    the duty of a public communications provider is to delete the data in such a way as to make access to the data impossible; and



    (b)
    it is sufficient for a public communications provider to make arrangements for the operation of so deleting data to take place at such monthly or shorter intervals as appear to the provider to be convenient.


    Access to retained data

    7. Access to data retained in accordance with these Regulations may be obtained only—

    (a)
    in specific cases, and



    (b)
    in circumstances in which disclosure of the data is permitted or required by law.


    Storage requirements for retained data

    8. The data retained in pursuance of these Regulations must be retained in such a way that it can be transmitted without undue delay in response to requests.
    Statistics

    9.—(1) A public communications provider must provide the Secretary of State, as soon as practicable after 31st March in any year, with the following information in respect of the period of twelve months ending with that date.

    (2) The information required is—

    (a)
    the number of occasions when data retained in accordance with these Regulations have been disclosed in response to a request;



    (b)
    the time elapsed between the date on which the data were retained and the date on which transmission of the data was requested;



    (c)
    the number of occasions when a request for lawfully disclosable data retained in accordance with these Regulations could not be met.



    (3) The Secretary of State may, by notice given in writing to a public communications provider, vary the date specified in paragraph (1).

    (4) The notice may contain such transitional provision as appears to the Secretary of State to be necessary in consequence of the variation.
    Data retained by another communications provider

    10.—(1) These Regulations do not apply to a public communications provider unless the provider is given a notice in writing by the Secretary of State in accordance with this regulation.

    (2) The Secretary of State must give a written notice to a public communications provider under paragraph (1) unless the communications data concerned are retained in the United Kingdom in accordance with these Regulations by another public communications provider.

    (3) Any such notice must specify—

    (a)
    the public communications provider, or category of public communications providers, to whom it is given, and



    (b)
    the extent to which, and the date from which, the provisions of these Regulations are to apply.



    (4) The notice must be given or published in a manner the Secretary of State considers appropriate for bringing it to the attention of the public communications provider, or the category of providers, to whom it given.

    (5) It is the duty of a public communications provider to whom a notice is given under this regulation to comply with it.

    (6) That duty is enforceable by civil proceedings by the Secretary of State for an injunction, or for specific performance of a statutory duty under section 45 of the Court of Session Act 1988(4), or for any other appropriate relief.
    Reimbursement of expenses of compliance

    11.—(1) The Secretary of State may reimburse any expenses incurred by a public communications provider in complying with the provisions of these Regulations.

    (2) Reimbursement may be conditional on the expenses having been notified to the Secretary of State and agreed in advance.

    (3) The Secretary of State may require a public communications provider to comply with any audit that may be reasonably required to monitor a claim for reimbursement.
    Revocation

    12.—(1) The Data Retention (EC Directive) Regulations 2007(5), which are superseded by these Regulations, are revoked.

    (2) Anything done under or for the purposes of those Regulations that could have been done under or for the purposes of the corresponding provision of these Regulations (if it had been in force at the time) shall be treated on and after these Regulations come into force as if it had been done under or for the purposes of that corresponding provision.

    Vernon Coaker

    Minister of State

    Home Office

    2nd April 2009


    SCHEDULE
    COMMUNICATIONS DATA TO BE RETAINED
    PART 1
    FIXED NETWORK TELEPHONY
    Data necessary to trace and identify the source of a communication

    1.—(1) The calling telephone number.

    (2) The name and address of the subscriber or registered user of any such telephone.
    Data necessary to identify the destination of a communication

    2.—(1) The telephone number dialled and, in cases involving supplementary services such as call forwarding or call transfer, any telephone number to which the call is forwarded or transferred.

    (2) The name and address of the subscriber or registered user of any such telephone.
    Data necessary to identify the date, time and duration of a communication

    3. The date and time of the start and end of the call.
    Data necessary to identify the type of communication

    4. The telephone service used.
    PART 2
    MOBILE TELEPHONY
    Data necessary to trace and identify the source of a communication

    5.—(1) The calling telephone number.

    (2) The name and address of the subscriber or registered user of any such telephone.
    Data necessary to identify the destination of a communication

    6.—(1) The telephone number dialled and, in cases involving supplementary services such as call forwarding or call transfer, any telephone number to which the call is forwarded or transferred.

    (2) The name and address of the subscriber or registered user of any such telephone.
    Data necessary to identify the date, time and duration of a communication

    7. The date and time of the start and end of the call.
    Data necessary to identify the type of communication

    8. The telephone service used.
    Data necessary to identify users’ communication equipment (or what purports to be their equipment)

    9.—(1) The International Mobile Subscriber Identity (IMSI) and the International Mobile Equipment Identity (IMEI) of the telephone from which a telephone call is made.

    (2) The IMSI and the IMEI of the telephone dialled.

    (3) In the case of pre-paid anonymous services, the date and time of the initial activation of the service and the cell ID from which the service was activated.
    Data necessary to identify the location of mobile communication equipment

    10.—(1) The cell ID at the start of the communication.

    (2) Data identifying the geographic location of cells by reference to their cell ID.
    PART 3
    INTERNET ACCESS, INTERNET E-MAIL OR INTERNET TELEPHONY
    Data necessary to trace and identify the source of a communication

    11.—(1) The user ID allocated.

    (2) The user ID and telephone number allocated to the communication entering the public telephone network.

    (3) The name and address of the subscriber or registered user to whom an Internet Protocol (IP) address, user ID or telephone number was allocated at the time of the communication.
    Data necessary to identify the destination of a communication

    12.—(1) In the case of internet telephony, the user ID or telephone number of the intended recipient of the call.

    (2) In the case of internet e-mail or internet telephony, the name and address of the subscriber or registered user and the user ID of the intended recipient of the communication.
    Data necessary to identify the date, time and duration of a communication

    13.—(1) In the case of internet access—

    (a)
    The date and time of the log-in to and log-off from the internet access service, based on a specified time zone,



    (b)
    The IP address, whether dynamic or static, allocated by the internet access service provider to the communication, and



    (c)
    The user ID of the subscriber or registered user of the internet access service.



    (2) In the case of internet e-mail or internet telephony, the date and time of the log-in to and log-off from the internet e-mail or internet telephony service, based on a specified time zone.
    Data necessary to identify the type of communication

    14. In the case of internet e-mail or internet telephony, the internet service used.
    Data necessary to identify users’ communication equipment (or what purports to be their equipment)

    15.—(1) In the case of dial-up access, the calling telephone number.

    (2) In any other case, the digital subscriber line (DSL) or other end point of the originator of the communication.
    EXPLANATORY NOTE

    (This note is not part of the Regulations)

    These Regulations implement Directive 2006/24/EC (“the Data Retention Directive”) of the European Parliament and of the Council of 15 March 2006 on the retention of data generated or processed in connection with the provision of publicly available electronic communications services or of public communications networks and amending Directive 2002/58/EC.

    The Data Retention (EC Directive) Regulations 2007 implemented the Data Retention Directive with respect to fixed network and mobile telephony. The United Kingdom made a declaration pursuant to Article 15.3 of the Data Retention Directive that it would postpone application of that Directive to the retention of communications data relating to internet access, internet telephony and internet e-mail. These Regulations implement the Data Retention Directive with respect to those forms of data, and revoke the Data Retention (EC Directive) Regulations 2007 which are superseded by these Regulations.

    The Regulations impose a requirement on public communications providers (“providers”), as defined in regulation 2, to retain the categories of communications data specified in the Schedule to the Regulations. The Regulations apply to all providers to whom a written notice has been given by the Secretary of State in accordance with regulation 10. Regulation 4 makes provision regarding the obligation to retain the data specified in the Schedule.

    Such data must be retained, in accordance with regulation 5, for a period of 12 months from the date of the communication in question. The data must be stored in accordance with the requirements in regulation 8, and may only be accessed in accordance with regulation 7.

    Data protection and data security are provided for in regulation 6. Regulation 6(2) provides that the Information Commissioner, as the designated Supervisory Authority for the purposes of Article 9 of the Data Retention Directive, is responsible for monitoring the application of these Regulations with respect to the security of stored data.

    There is a requirement on providers to provide statistics to the Secretary of State in regulation 9.

    Regulation 11 provides that the Secretary of State may make arrangements for reimbursing any expenses incurred by providers in complying with the Regulations.






So there you have it, freedom in ruins although it has been for a while hasn’t it, perhaps our bravest died upon the field so long ago and we are unworthy for their shoes. I like to think not, I like to think that we still have it within us to resist tyranny to shake loose its grip and again live in peace upon this planet. I believe that all Europeans and those of full descent, must band together now, must circle the wagons and prepare for a white Alamo.



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