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another reason to vote no

category international | eu | news report author Saturday May 17, 2008 12:36author by F.E.M. - F.E.M. Report this post to the editors

they see, they hear, they spy.

Dutch minister Hirsch Ballin wants txt, telephone conversations and emails that people send in the Netherlands and from and to the Netherlands to be kept for 18 months on file instead of the 6 months it is currently kept for. The law on the protection of privacy is outweighed by the need for protection of the state they conclude. The new European law states that the states will have to keep the conversations on file for more than lf a year. Another reason to vote no to the treaty.

Dutch minister Hirsch Ballin wants txt, telephone conversations and emails that people send in the Netherlands and from and to the Netherlands to be kept for 18 months on file instead of the 6 months it is currently kept for. The law on the protection of privacy is outweighed by the need for protection of the state they conclude. The new European law states that the states will have to keep the conversations on file for more than lf a year. Another reason to vote no to the treaty.

author by Bazooka Joepublication date Tue May 20, 2008 17:43author address author phone Report this post to the editors

"What I am about to tell you is controlled unclassified information enhanced with specified dissemination."

The European Union or 'Europe' as it likes to be called, is only mimicing the US and Ireland of course is quite directly controlled by the US in many areas of policing and security.

Related Link: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/05/18/AR2008051801806_pf.html
author by Stuartpublication date Mon May 19, 2008 16:47author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Actually Ireland has studiously avoided passing data retention legislation, allowing the Gardai completely unacceptable continued "informal" use of anti-terrorism legislation to view anything up to six years old - far more than the Netherlands - and without court orders.

http://www.indymedia.ie/article/87288

Of course the Lisbon Treaty makes no difference whatsoever to the implementation of acceptable data retention legislation, to which Ireland is already committed, has failed to implement and has been censured internally (by the Data Commissioner) and externally. Much like the failure to implement workers' rights and environmental protection.

 
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