We installed a couple of microphones in one of the main streets of Glasgow, Kuipers said.
It's working. We detected aggression and it's currently under evaluation.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/7886656.stm
The move towards compulsory data retention represents a major step towards the creation of "super-database" to track all phone, email, text and internet use.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2009/feb/13/data-storage-privacy-home-office
UK's first police drone takes to the skies
http://www.merseyside.police.uk/html/news/news/may/cd21-05b-police.htm
The Identity Cards Act became law in March 2006 and the Home Office rolled out biometric residence permits for foreign nationals in 2008, with the first ID cards being issued to British citizens in 2009.
http://www.pinknews.co.uk/news/articles/2005-11106.html
GPS in phones cars, the ability to track people even when there mobile phones are switched off, but the thing that scares me the most.
Political Correctness or to give it it's original name Newspeak both have the same agenda, to change our thinking patterns by changing the words we are allowed to use. Political Correctness, or PC, is designed to be inoffensive. So was Newspeak. PC avoids harsh words like “shellshock” and prefers softer-sounding words that don’t run the risk of waking people up to reality (“post-traumatic stress disorder”). So did Newspeak. Political correctness seeks to be “secular” by making “God” a bad word.
The only difference between use and people in jail is they can see the bars.