UK Home Secretary Theresa May’s plans to give the police and security services more power to monitor people’s internet use without the need for a warrant further erodes the British public’s right to privacy for very little intelligence gain.
UK Home Secretary Theresa May’s plans to give the police and security services more power to monitor people’s internet use without the need for a warrant further erodes the British public’s right to privacy for very little intelligence gain.
Bulk surveillance impedes already over-stretched authorities, who would be better off recruiting more and better-trained investigators and analysts.
Britain has always been a multilingual society, so why do politicians insist that speaking English is a sign of ‘Britishness’
The UK will no longer tolerate Islamist extremists who “reject our values”, Home Secretary Theresa May has said.
After three deranged men murdered 17 people in Paris over the course of three days, millions took to the streets to express solidarity with the victims – it’s a shame that this display of support from world leaders for the notion that we will not walk in fear was marred by such dreadful hypocrisy.