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BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China

robomatic 16 Aug 18 - 06:32 PM
FreddyHeadey 16 Aug 18 - 04:31 AM
Nigel Parsons 10 Aug 18 - 11:30 AM
Iains 09 Aug 18 - 05:31 PM
Iains 09 Aug 18 - 04:30 PM
Steve Shaw 09 Aug 18 - 04:10 PM
Iains 09 Aug 18 - 03:57 PM
Jim Carroll 09 Aug 18 - 08:21 AM
Jim Carroll 09 Aug 18 - 07:16 AM
Iains 09 Aug 18 - 06:44 AM
Steve Shaw 09 Aug 18 - 06:16 AM
Jim Carroll 08 Aug 18 - 04:29 PM
Iains 08 Aug 18 - 03:17 PM
Iains 08 Aug 18 - 03:09 PM
Jim Carroll 08 Aug 18 - 02:25 PM
Jim Carroll 08 Aug 18 - 02:23 PM
Iains 08 Aug 18 - 02:17 PM
Keith A of Hertford 08 Aug 18 - 01:38 PM
Jim Carroll 08 Aug 18 - 12:58 PM
Keith A of Hertford 08 Aug 18 - 12:41 PM
Jim Carroll 08 Aug 18 - 12:22 PM
Iains 08 Aug 18 - 12:03 PM
Jim Carroll 08 Aug 18 - 11:49 AM
Keith A of Hertford 08 Aug 18 - 11:04 AM
Nigel Parsons 08 Aug 18 - 09:53 AM
Jim Carroll 08 Aug 18 - 09:52 AM
Jim Carroll 08 Aug 18 - 08:50 AM
Nigel Parsons 08 Aug 18 - 07:05 AM
Iains 08 Aug 18 - 06:56 AM
Jim Carroll 08 Aug 18 - 06:46 AM
Iains 08 Aug 18 - 06:31 AM
Senoufou 08 Aug 18 - 04:21 AM
Nigel Parsons 08 Aug 18 - 04:00 AM
Jim Carroll 07 Aug 18 - 03:55 PM
Iains 07 Aug 18 - 01:51 PM
Jim Carroll 07 Aug 18 - 11:19 AM
EBarnacle 07 Aug 18 - 11:01 AM
Nigel Parsons 07 Aug 18 - 08:20 AM
Iains 07 Aug 18 - 07:26 AM
Iains 07 Aug 18 - 07:04 AM
Iains 07 Aug 18 - 06:50 AM
Jim Carroll 07 Aug 18 - 06:42 AM
Iains 07 Aug 18 - 06:33 AM
Iains 07 Aug 18 - 06:21 AM
Senoufou 07 Aug 18 - 05:49 AM
Iains 07 Aug 18 - 05:41 AM
Steve Shaw 07 Aug 18 - 05:33 AM
Iains 07 Aug 18 - 05:06 AM
Senoufou 07 Aug 18 - 03:28 AM
The Sandman 07 Aug 18 - 02:43 AM

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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: robomatic
Date: 16 Aug 18 - 06:32 PM

"One on every street corner."

At first I thought you meant Starbucks!


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: FreddyHeadey
Date: 16 Aug 18 - 04:31 AM

"one on every street corner. "
To any historians reading this in 2118
.... find a better source than mudcat for FACTS.


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Nigel Parsons
Date: 10 Aug 18 - 11:30 AM

Christopher Robin trailer (from YouTube)

Pooh & president Xi - Google search

Bringing us back where we started


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Iains
Date: 09 Aug 18 - 05:31 PM

When the USSR invaded Afghanistan it was the British that first trained the Mujahideen to use sophisticated weaponry against the Russians. It has gone downhill ever since.

"Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap."


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Iains
Date: 09 Aug 18 - 04:30 PM

It is rare that you and I agree Mr Shaw, but in this case you are largely correct.


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Steve Shaw
Date: 09 Aug 18 - 04:10 PM

"Your happy clappy deluded view of the world is not born out by the statistics. The greatest threat is from Islamic Jihadis."

The greatest threat is from American foreign policy and has been for decades. And, in the interests of balance, the UK (with the honourable exception of Harold Wilson, who refused to be bullied into the Vietnam war by Lyndon Johnson) has been serially complicit. This is not to excuse in the slightest the depredations of Islamic jihadists, but let's face it: without those foreign policy interventions, in the Middle East especially, there wouldn't BE any Islamic jihadists.


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Iains
Date: 09 Aug 18 - 03:57 PM

"This really is make-it-up-as=you-go-along nonsense Iains"
Well you can believe whatever you want to believe.
If intelligence sources are clever enough to track terrorists from thousands of miles away and subsequently obliterate them, then I am quite sure they can track likely lads in their own back yard.
On the one hand you provide a link giving a cursory breakdown of the electronic surveillance tools enshrined in recent legislation in the UK, and yet in the same breath deny the security services keep tabs on persons of interest. Is the dichotomy real or some figment of your imagination?
Security services in the Uk have been monitoring people at least since the days of Peter the painter, in fact it started earlier with Germans taking an interest in the fleet immediately prior to WW1.
Do you not think their techniques have improved somewhat over the last 100 years?
Having worked in a few dodgy places where daily intelligence briefings
were the norm, you might be amazed at the level of detail private contractors can hoover up. A government with far greater resources in people, money, technique and technical backup can unsurprisingly accomplish far, far more.
It comes as no surprise to a person with any kind of savvy that such data as may be gathered will not be plastered over the 6 o'clock news each day.

"can be categorized as hi, lo, or zero."
Your happy clappy deluded view of the world is not born out by the statistics. The greatest threat is from Islamic Jihadis.
If the government issues threat warnings at different levels it stands to reason the threat, when assessed, is labelled at escalating levels.
It would be stupid to deal with the situation in any other way.
    low - an attack is unlikely.
    moderate - an attack is possible but not likely.
    substantial - an attack is a strong possibility.
    severe - an attack is highly likely.
    critical - an attack is expected imminently.
The above threat levels used by the UK government rather suggesst a pecking order of threat is established.
If everything was as hunkydory as you would have us believe perhaps you would care to explain what the government saw fit to produce the publication below:
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/recognising-the-terrorist-threat/recognising-the-terrorist-threat


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 09 Aug 18 - 08:21 AM

UNDOUBTEDLY
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 09 Aug 18 - 07:16 AM

"Resources are concentrated where the threat is felt to be highest."
Do you have any evidence of this?
Mass surveilance has been a major part of British life for several decades, long before terrorism, or even serious street crime was an issue.
As an establishment view that the British people need to be watched, it goes back for well over a century.
A BRIEF HISTORY

You have totally failed to establish that there are any "terrorist hot sopts" (other than right-wing tabloid rhetoric) yet you are claiming a spohistcated approach to people-watching, where no such insight is apparent
"can be categorized as hi, lo, or zero."

When I asked, Nigel makes the point that we don't know what they are doing - it's protected under the Official Secrets Act"
How do you know - do you have somebody o he inside surveying the surveillers?
This really is make-it-up-as=you-go-along nonsense Iains
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Iains
Date: 09 Aug 18 - 06:44 AM

"Well I'm not very wary of surveillance, though I am wary of the police wasting their precious resources."

Rather misses the point. If the perceived threat is low,the surveillance remains, but superficial. Resources are concentrated where the threat is felt to be highest. This means threats from all sources must to be studied before they can be categorized as hi, lo, or zero.
You may feel it clever to trivialise the activities of those monitoring you, perhaps you feel the same about the sharp end of surveillance.
For example in the last four years UK reaper drones have carried out 2604 surveillance missions. Weapons have been released on 880 occasions during these missions. Collateral damage is normally an estimate, but undoubtedly innocent children and civilians have been killed.


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Steve Shaw
Date: 09 Aug 18 - 06:16 AM

Well I'm not very wary of surveillance, though I am wary of the police wasting their precious resources. I suppose that a couple of blokes selling CND badges and car stickers from a little trestle table in Loughton High Road on a Saturday morning desperately required all the clandestine photographing, videoing and phone-tapping we were subjected to in case we were embryonic terrorists. Why, the chairman of Loughton CND had his allotment right next to mine. Very dangerous, as we could so easily slip away from the High Road to plot the downfall of capitalism over a bit of tomato pinching-out and spud earthing-up...

"Plots on the plots." Heh, just spotted that one!


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 08 Aug 18 - 04:29 PM

Not bad except it predates the present manifestation of terrorism
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Iains
Date: 08 Aug 18 - 03:17 PM

An unusually neutral review by the BBC, a recap of how we got to where we are in defining radicalism and jihadism.


https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-27777892


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Iains
Date: 08 Aug 18 - 03:09 PM

Today, the government defines extremism as "vocal or active opposition to fundamental British values, including democracy, the rule of law, individual liberty and mutual respect and tolerance of different faiths and beliefs".

It goes on to say that Islamist extremism is an ideology that accuses the West of perpetrating a war on Islam.

"The chances of young Jihadists being radicalised in their own communities were virtually non existent yet these communities are being branded by the rednecks as "terrorist hot-spots" and to re-arrange your post into a well known phrase or saying, "You couldn't make this shit up"

Jim if you post nonsense expect to be treated as a fool.

"The young Muslims are so incensed by what's happening in Syria that they volunteer to fight there" Rubbish

Have they been radicalised by a bunch of mad mullahs we have not had the sense to deport? Yes they most certainly have.

"Britain takes so serious th atrocities committed by the Assad Regime that it takes a vote as to whether we should intervene - we decide not to" More jimmy rubbish. Has the RAF not carried out bombing missions in Syria? (Without UN sanction and therefore totally illegally as in Iraq, Libya, Yemen) Do you ever check anything that pops into your head? Obviously not, and you wonder why no one takes you seriously?


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 08 Aug 18 - 02:25 PM

""What totally asinine statements
Tell me, is your day job being a contortionist?!"
There goes you inability to come up with a rational response again - you could set you watch by it
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 08 Aug 18 - 02:23 PM

No. A hotspot is an area with an exceptional number of terrorists,"
You referred to a high proportion of convicted terrorists who are apparently banged up otrr have been deported
Thos those left behind are guilty by living where they do
You've done this consistently - making Muslims 'the Enemy within'
The real 'Enemy within' are the rednecks who apparently deliberately set out to alienate a peaceful, law- abiding community by branding them 'potential terrorists'
The whole "terrorist" thing is crazy
Britain takes so serious th atrocities committed by the Assad Regime that it takes a vote as to whether we should intervene - we decide not to
The young Muslims are so incensed by what's happening in Syria that they volunteer to fight there - for doing what Britain just voted on they are branded "terrorists"
Now, when they are imprisoned or deported, the communities they left to go and do Britain's and the UN's job for them become "terrorist hot-beds"
The parallels of this and what happened to my father's generation is spooky
Britain decided not to intervene in the rise of Fascism in Germany
Young men decide to take up the slack and go off to fight in Spain - they retuern to be branded "premature anti-fascists" and are punished for going to fight the same fascists Britain was then fighting - at the same time as "premature anti-fascist" records were being handed out.
You couldn't make this shit up
The chances of young Jihadists being radicalised in their own communities were virtually non existent yet these communities are being branded by the rednecks as "terrorist hot-spots"
Feckin' barmy - and dangerous
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Iains
Date: 08 Aug 18 - 02:17 PM

"The young jihadists who went to fill the gap left br Britain and the U.N. and went off to fight Assad are living examples of the radicalisation of young British Muslims
The rednecks never learn, do they?"

What totally asinine statements
Tell me, is your day job being a contortionist?!


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Keith A of Hertford
Date: 08 Aug 18 - 01:38 PM

So the whole "hot spot" is guilty by association

No. A hotspot is an area with an exceptional number of terrorists, as indicated by an exceptional number of convictions of terrorists from that area.


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 08 Aug 18 - 12:58 PM

"have been home to a high proportion of convicted terrorists.""
So the whole "hot spot" is guilty by association "Now that makes sense" as the red M and M says in the ad
Youve just been given the reason why tha Government should be anxious to create "hot spots" were there are none
In order to probe "hot spots" you have to give examples of terrorism and arrests
The crazy sodding thing about all of this is the Muslim communities in Britain remain the most trouble-free and law abiding in Britain
Slanders like this stand to alienate those communities big-time and drive young people into the arms of terrorists, just as they did with Isis
The young jihadists who went to fill the gap left br Britain and the U.N. and went off to fight Assad are living examples of the radicalisation of young British Muslims
The rednecks never learn, do they?
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Keith A of Hertford
Date: 08 Aug 18 - 12:41 PM

Birmingham Post,
"Birmingham City Council will be asked to work closely with police and the MI5 to fight terrorism, Home Secretary Sajid Javid has announced.
The West Midlands will create one of three new anti-terror partnerships designed to step up the fight against violent extremism. The others are in London and Greater Manchester.

It follows warnings that parts of the West Midlands, and the Birmingham wards of Springfield, Sparkhill, Hall Green and Hodge Hill in particular, have been home to a high proportion of convicted terrorists."

https://www.birminghampost.co.uk/news/regional-affairs/home-secretary-wants-birmingham-city-14740462


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 08 Aug 18 - 12:22 PM

"nd the British Government states the threat of terrorism in the UK is severe."
Then they have to specify where they are
The Government is in the process of preventing emigrants and refugees from entering Britain based on a populist decision to do so pushed though on a racist ticket
What else are they going to say?
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Iains
Date: 08 Aug 18 - 12:03 PM

"There have been at least two 'terrorist hot-spot' maps featured in the press recently - Britain features on neither - not a blip"

And the British Government states the threat of terrorism in the UK is severe.

If no hot spots, this must mean no terrorists. I know who I believe!
Funny we employ The Counter Terrorism Command (CTC) or SO15 to keep tabs on terrorists and a lone person in the west of Ireland is presumptuous enough to believe he knows better.


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 08 Aug 18 - 11:49 AM

Hannah Shory is a Government adviser with links to the Henry Jackson Society "a neoconservative British foreign policy think tank.[1][2][3][4] It has been described as right-wing, but positions itself as cross-partisan, with support from some left-leaning politicians.[5][6][7] The former think tank Centre for Social Cohesion has been a part of HJS since 2011. It is named after the American politician Henry M. Jackson, the late Democratic Senator, civil rights advocate, and anticommunist liberal hawk.[8][9]

Presumably there is evidence to back up this claim in the form of arrests of terrorists or proven terrorist activities
Or maybe it's because Birmingham has a large immigrant population

"If I were a member of the security services I might know where such hot spots would be. "
Then, until you have, you have no grounds in claiming that there are any
Hiding behind the very secrecy of the security measures we are discussing
There must be hotspots because the spooks can't or won't tell us where they are
A somewhat circular discussion, don't you think

There have been at least two 'terrorist hot-spot' maps featured in the press recently - Britain features on neither - not a blip
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Keith A of Hertford
Date: 08 Aug 18 - 11:04 AM

Birmingham Mail.
"Hannah Stuart, Senior Research Fellow at The Henry Jackson Society and the report’s author, said: “Birmingham has become the country’s second major terrorism hotspot. Such a high concentration of offenders in Hall Green and Hodge Hill will focus the minds of policy makers and the police when it comes to deciding where to target our counter-terrorism efforts."
https://www.birminghammail.co.uk/news/midlands-news/birmingham-major-terrorism-hotspot-problem-12688808


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Nigel Parsons
Date: 08 Aug 18 - 09:53 AM

There are no hot spots (as referred to in this thread) in these islands - none whatever
If there are, it is your responsibility as the accuser to say where they are
Jim Carroll

If I were a member of the security services I might know where such hot spots would be. But I would still not be able (or permitted) to say.
The fact that I cannot say where such hot spots are does not support your insistence that there are none.


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 08 Aug 18 - 09:52 AM

You do know about your tendency to becomee abusive when your argumentis slipping away from you I assume
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 08 Aug 18 - 08:50 AM

So you are suggesting that his Mosque should be covered by security cameras?
WE are discussing the proliferation of cameras and other tracing devices all over urban Britain - it is in this context 'Hot Spots' arose
You might claim that the front room of the home of someone who has gone off to fight for Isis is a "hot spot" - it would be Islamophobic to claim that the streets of Clapham, or Southall or Merton are.
You've mentioned a Mosque - care to expand on that Nigel?
There are no hot spots (as referred to in this thread) in these islands - none whatever
If there are, it is your responsibility as the accuser to say where they are
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Nigel Parsons
Date: 08 Aug 18 - 07:05 AM

"The amazing claim that "There is no terrorist "hot spot" in these islands" is obviously impossible to prove."
The burden of proof lies with the accuser Nigel
If there are "hot spots" it would be possible to prove there were - that's what "hot spots" are
Nobody argues that there aren't potential terrorists.
The suggestion that there are identifiable areas or communities is disconcerting nonsense - much used by racists, anti-immigrationists and Little Englanders
Jim Carroll


Until the removal of Abu Hamza the Finsbury Park Mosque was a 'hotspot' for radicalisation, and I expect the necessary forces kept close tabs on it.
Since that time, it has, unfortunately, become a target for others.

If you believe there are currently no 'hot spots' I believe you are deluding yourself.


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Iains
Date: 08 Aug 18 - 06:56 AM

From Kent County Council counter terrorism strategy
Kent has unique characteristics, such as its ports, the Channel Tunnel and its proximity to France. The county remains relatively safe and doesn't have terrorist hotspots that other parts of the UK have. We are working hard to maintain this situation for the people of Kent.

Fink they know a tad more than our garrulous exile





https://www.kent.gov.uk/about-the-council/strategies-and-policies/community-safety-and-crime-policies/contest#


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 08 Aug 18 - 06:46 AM

"The amazing claim that "There is no terrorist "hot spot" in these islands" is obviously impossible to prove."
The burden of proof lies with the accuser Nigel
If there are "hot spots" it would be possible to prove there were - that's what "hot spots" are
Nobody argues that there aren't potential terrorists.
The suggestion that there are identifiable areas or communities is disconcerting nonsense - much used by racists, anti-immigrationists and Little Englanders
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Iains
Date: 08 Aug 18 - 06:31 AM

Current threat from international terrorism UK Goverbnment sources.

The current threat level for international terrorism in the UK is SEVERE.

The current threat level for Northern Ireland-related terrorism in Northern Ireland is SEVERE.

The current threat level for Northern Ireland-related terrorism in Britain is MODERATE.

There are also returning jihadis from the middle east who pose an unquantified threat, those that have not been executed by drone track and splat operations.

To say there are no terrorist hotspots in the UK is either wishful thinking, an ostrich impersonation, or simply a refusal to accept reality.

https://www.albawaba.com/news/how-britain-living-its-isis-returnees-part-iii-1167690


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Senoufou
Date: 08 Aug 18 - 04:21 AM

When you've finished laughing at me for mentioning 'closet terrorists', perhaps you'd reflect that there are many radicalised groups around UK, (and some mosques have been complicit in encouraging/indoctrinating them) which present a very real danger to our safety and security.

Several young Muslim people (male and female) have taken themselves off to Syria for 'training'. A young British woman was convicted only last week for planning a bomb attack after going off to be with an Isis chap. She removed her hijab for the trial and tried to maintain she'd 'given up' Islam. (as if!) but the court convicted her nonetheless.

I'm grateful that there are agents monitoring these folk. Their activities need watching. If you find this sinister, I suggest you have a look at the accounts of the Manchester bombing. If such atrocities can be prevented by keeping an eye on certain suspects, I'm all for it.


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Nigel Parsons
Date: 08 Aug 18 - 04:00 AM

"Jim already the police use predictive software to determine crime spots, in order to optimise limited resources."
We are not talking about crime spots - we are talking about closet terrorists
There is no terrorist "hot spot" in these islands
THis is a ploy to keep an eye on all of us for future reference
Jim Carroll


The amazing claim that "There is no terrorist "hot spot" in these islands" is obviously impossible to prove.
Without identifying such a hotspot it is also impossible to disprove. But the fact that there have previously been 'hotspots' in the past means that there are likely to be such hotspots at present. It is just that they're unknown to the public at large.


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 07 Aug 18 - 03:55 PM

"Jim already the police use predictive software to determine crime spots, in order to optimise limited resources."
We are not talking about crime spots - we are talking about closet terrorists
There is no terrorist "hot spot" in these islands
THis is a ploy to keep an eye on all of us for future reference
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Iains
Date: 07 Aug 18 - 01:51 PM

Jim already the police use predictive software to determine crime spots, in order to optimise limited resources.
The problem the police have at the moment is lack of relational databases, and lack of suitable software to efficiently query and datamine what records they already have. To an extent human rights legislation from the EU rather cramps their style but the events in Northern Ireland during the troubles meant that the army/security forces/police had tags on virtually everyone.
While life is quiet the police have control, any whiff of insurgency and policing devolves to the army with the police as an ancillary force. May be uncomfortable reading for some but you can rest assured it is actively planned for and wargamed. All those emergency planning officers in various uk council offices are not there purely to deal with to deal with weather extremes. Government protects itself, people come a very poor second. There may be a reluctance to mobilise troops but if the situation warrants it, it will happen.

https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/644968/UK_National_Risk_Register
https://www.nam.ac.uk/explore/civil-enforcement


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 07 Aug 18 - 11:19 AM

"Well if the state does not decide, who does?"
Nobody can - without a crystal ball
If they could, we wouldn't need a justice system
I sometime think there are two people posting under your name Iains, - one minute you make perfect sense, the next minute
Are you doing a Bozo and pulling our chain?
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: EBarnacle
Date: 07 Aug 18 - 11:01 AM

Censorship of this sort is a weapon of those who consider "face" more important than freedom. Consider what the Orange One would do if it were not for the First Amendment. Any time anyone questions him in public, he attempts to restrict their access to information, often without success, fortunately.


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Nigel Parsons
Date: 07 Aug 18 - 08:20 AM

But, Back to "Winnie The Pooh".
I see the new film co-stars Hayley Atwell.

She looked great in "Marvel's Agent Carter", (and played the part well) and this is set in a similar era.
I'm looking forward to this one, even if it is Disney.


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Iains
Date: 07 Aug 18 - 07:26 AM

By way of another perspective of surveillance, the following is interesting.
Police histories make much of the violence of the mob. But between the
Porteous riots of 1736 and the chartist demonstration of1848 in london, there were around 20 major riots.
Thecrowds caused adozen deaths
The courts hanged 118
Troops shot dead 630.

By contrast, the capitalist system of violence against workers went unpunished. Between 1850 and 1920 8500 miners were killed (1/3 in Wales)
The state has always been scared of the bourgeoisie especially in that earlier period where only capitalists had the vote and the majority were disenfranchised and had little to be happy about. The establishment will fight to maintain the status quo and use all its powers to maintain supremacy over all that might question its role too vociferously, or pose any kind of threat.


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Iains
Date: 07 Aug 18 - 07:04 AM

https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/leftie-movements-inflitrated-by-mi5-police-officers-jeremy-corbyn-bernie-sanders-labour-party-a7156241.html

"Giving the state the right to decide that someone is likely to become a criminal or a terrorist is the stuff of Fahrenheit 451 and 'Minority Report'"
Well if the state does not decide, who does?

and predictive policing is in the works.


https://rusi.org/sites/default/files/201709_rusi_big_data_and_policing_babuta_web.pdf


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Iains
Date: 07 Aug 18 - 06:50 AM

Do all those subjected to extraordinary rendition from uk airfields and subjected to waterboarding and incarceration under inhuman conditions at Guantanamo Bay not have human rights?

Or how about using weaponised drones to track and smack "Suspected terrorists"
Judge, jury, executioner sitting in a container thousands of miles away.


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 07 Aug 18 - 06:42 AM

Interesting links apart from the Indi which "CANNOT BE FOUND"

"closet terrorists" Sen!!
A terrorist becomes a terrorist when he/she commits or tries to commit an act of terrorism (unless you mean someone who goes around blowing up closets, of course)
Giving the state the right to decide that someone is likely to become a criminal or a terrorist is the stuff of Fahrenheit 451 and 'Minority Report'
Jim


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Iains
Date: 07 Aug 18 - 06:33 AM

Food for thought!


https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/leftie-movements-inflitrated-by-mi5-police-officers-jeremy-corbyn-bernie-sanders-labour-par

https://golem.ph.utexas.edu/category/2014/08/why_it_matters.html

http://classic.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/CICrimJust/2001/16.pdf


https://www.amnesty.org.uk/press-releases/uk-leading-europe-wide-race-bottom-orwellian-counter-terrorism-laws-new-report

WHO POLICES THE POLICEMEN?


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Iains
Date: 07 Aug 18 - 06:21 AM

“if you have nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear”.

The origin of the phrase is unclear but it is most famously associated with Goebbels who is believed to have used it in 1933.

The phrase is often used in defence of spying and intelligence services.


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Senoufou
Date: 07 Aug 18 - 05:49 AM

One doesn't have 'human rights' if one is breaking the law and putting others at risk of accident or death on the roads.

I have no problems at all with 'them' looking into details about my car insurance, driving licence, possibility of a criminal record (not that I have one!) or any other facts about me. I'm not ashamed of anything in my life and have nothing I want to be kept a secret.

I do feel more secure however, that miscreants, illegal drivers, closet terrorists, street muggers, ram raiders, drug dealers etc etc are under surveillance by CCTV cameras, and that 'they' have tabs on all those type of people.

Nothing to hide - nothing to fear.


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Iains
Date: 07 Aug 18 - 05:41 AM

"As a law-abiding sort of chap I care not a jot about any of that."

Even though there are documented cases data collection, data baeses and data mining breaching EU legislation on human rights?


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Steve Shaw
Date: 07 Aug 18 - 05:33 AM

As a law-abiding sort of chap I care not a jot about any of that. Apart from the fact that it soaks up some of my tax money it can't possibly disadvantage me. I do keep a weather eye open for speed cameras on the M5 and M6 though. I don't object to any measure at all that might deter drivers from using hand-held phones in cars. The police in the UK are now using unmarked tall vehicles to nab people doing it on motorways. Good.


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Iains
Date: 07 Aug 18 - 05:06 AM

"number plate knowledge enables […] social security details"

Unfortunately, when you extrapolate from fact to utter fiction, your argument breaks down, and I personally am left with a feeling of "why should we believe anything else you might say?"


I admire your confidence in the above statement, I only wish it were true.
ANPR gives access to the MOT data, car tax data, insurance data, and car ownership data. Discrepancies in the above ping the vehicle with a high degree of accuracy(that is ever increasing) Persons of interest can also have their number plate tagged to register a hit when captured.
Assuming this leads to a roadside stop other databases can be interrogated. Facial recognition of driver licences was trialed in 2015, in order to verify identity. Ident1 allows roadside checking of fingerprints against a database of 5.5million.
and of course Central government routinely gathers information when registering people or carrying out transactions, or for record keeping – usually when delivering a service. Such data can include:

    social security payment records
    educational attainment records
    health records
    court records
    tax records

The single uniting feature of all this data is the individual's address. Do you seriously think such collections of data cannot be interrogated? If Administrative Data Research Network offers a bespoke service, negotiating with government departments to make these data available to researchers on a case-by-case basis, do you not think official bodies cannot do the same to the Nth degree?
I did not state such information was immediately available, but for those being investigated such information can be acquired rapidly.
If you believe such procedures and outcomes are pure fiction, then continue to be oblivious to the 21st century realities.

When Australia is trialing roadside cameras to capture in car phone usage, where do you think the process of surveillance is going?


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: Senoufou
Date: 07 Aug 18 - 03:28 AM

Pwaaaaaghaaaaaaagh Steve!!!! I hadn't heard that one!!

True story:-

My sister was on the bus into Dundee and a small girl, about 5yrs old, boarded with her dad.
They sat behind my sister, and she heard the child say, (strong Dundonian accent)
"I want to sit next to the bloody window!"
Father said,
"Weesht! Don't swear!"
The child replied rather loudly,
"Och, that's no swearing dad! FUCK is swearing!"

Everyone on the bus shook with suppressed giggles.


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Subject: RE: BS: Winnie the Pooh banned in China
From: The Sandman
Date: 07 Aug 18 - 02:43 AM

Was Winnie The Pooh a terrorist?


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