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Freedom of Information : the Big Lie

Having to justify why he's given us the truth : Wikileaks' Julian Assange today.

Thanks to Wikileaks, the power of the internet and the Guardian, we now have some kind of truth about the war in Afghanistan.

A truth that, if we had ever given it more than a moment’s thought in our busy lives, we probably could have guessed for ourselves.  A truth that says more about the state of British democracy than what goes on behind the stories and lies we are fed about a shabby and ill-conceived military campaign.

The expectation of openness or honesty from our elected politicians – and the secret army of faceless, civil servants and Whitehall mandarins who manipulate them -  clearly still has a long way to go before it becomes a reality, if it ever will.     A considerable amount of wool has been pulled over our eyes by introducing a Freedom of Information Act that is simply window dressing and – despite a policy of Open Government – very little has changed in real terms.

We, or rather the politicians, are just going through the motions.  Paying lip service to the notion of a democratic government which is accountable to the people it is supposed to serve.  Theirs remains a world of lies and deceit, of smoke and mirrors, of spin and outright propaganda: not aimed at a terrorist ‘enemy’, but at the ordinary citizens of Britain and America.

The lack of truth is ‘in the interests of national security’, we are told.   However, national security is unlikely to be compromised by information which is months or even years old, and which is already history.    Nor is anyone suggesting that the armed forces’ detailed strategy against our Taliban foes should be given to the newspapers in advance. There is, in any case, enough reportage and hypothesis on Allied tactics in the broadsheets every week. Any Afghan warlord who cares to stump up two quid at his local newsagent can read it for himself.

The politicans miss the point, as usual.  Why do they think we need to know?

It is because our sons and daughters are being killed and our money is being spent by the billion to fight this questionable cause.   We are entitled to more honesty and transparency from our politicians about the reasons for war and the mistakes they have made in waging it – without having to wait to get it from whistleblowers.

Whether it’s good or bad news, we must have the truth.  Only then can we make proper choices about who to elect and who to sack; about what we are prepared to let them to do in the name of our country and what we are not; about whether we want them to build more schools and hospitals for our society, or go to war.

Just give us the truth and let us – the people – decide, through the ballot box, by referendum, gathering a petition or by whatever other means we have at our disposal in order to make our voice heard.

…but of course, that’s what they are afraid of.

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Afghanistan – whistle blown on U.S./UK failures

Young British soldiers in AfghanistanAs usual, our so-called democratic leaders deal in death in the name of ‘freedom’ and ‘homeland security’ without our proper consent as citizens and without telling us the truth. That’s one issue…

But now we are where we are… when it comes to IEDs killing our young men and women every day, why don’t we just end it one way or the other?

Either pull out and let the Afghans get on with doing what they want to do to each other (probably not feasible), or put enough men and equipment in there to finish the Taliban off once and for all.

This has ‘Vietnam’ written all over it… a long, pointless war which we finally lose and live to regret for generations, creating thousands of dead and maimed young people in the process.

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The royals’ need for secrecy…

Most members of the Royal Family gathered for ...

Image via Wikipedia

A little-noticed aspect of a current Parliamentary bill is an amendment to the Freedom of Information (FOI) Act. In short, the royal family’s communications with government will be completely excluded from the act.

How can we allow this to happen?

The so-called ‘royal family’ places itself at the head of our society without any true merit, and as a result of historic oppression and subjugation of the British people. They get however many billions every year from us but also sit upon tremendous wealth gained after centuries of unearned and undeserved privilege.
That wealth should belong to us – the people – not a bunch of eccentrics calling themselves ‘prince / princess’ this or the duke and duchess of never-neverland.

We certainly have the right to know – as their paymasters – what goes on behind the closed doors of the monarchy and the reality of its privileged, self-seeking little world.

The people who say ‘they only cost us tuppence a day’ are missing the point about the whole outdated concept of ‘kings’ and ‘queens’ – and this is why we’re stupid enough to let the ‘royals’ get away with it while we’re going through hardship, recession, unemployment and poverty. The notion of ‘royalty’ in the 21st century – or any other century – is obscene and morally disgusting.

I’d rather pay for a bunch of better-looking actors who could do it better and cost us less, if we want to hold on to the ‘pageantry’ and ceremonial duties they perform – supposedly in our name.

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The history of a Citizen’s rights…

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