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UK court rules MI5 agents can murder, kidnap, and torture (bloomberg.com)
59 points by anigbrowl on Dec 22, 2019 | hide | past | favorite | 27 comments



US police can also be videotaped stealing money for their personal enrichment and not be prosecuted.

https://reason.com/2019/09/20/court-rules-fresno-police-accu...



...in other words, UK court rules that MI5 can continue to carry out its business as usual. Bloomberg would really like you to be outraged by this.


Perhaps you should be outraged by business as usual - looking back historically, the U.K. government has caused quite a bit of havoc (looking at you, Southern Rhodesia). The same power structures that allowed for those atrocities are still in place, so it seems that the fact that they have historically had the authority to murder, kidnap, and torture is a very good reason the courts should remove that authority right now


So if MI5 decided to torture and kill Julian Assange for the luls, they now have that power. What could go wrong?


Nothing that hasn't already gone wrong, they just have a rubber stamp now.


The full judgement is available here: https://www.ipt-uk.com/judgments.asp


From the Irish perspective: Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose.


Uh. How long until we have hundreds or thousands of these agents running around enforcing the will the ministry of truth...


hmmm just let them come for me :D


[flagged]


Please do not take HN threads into nationalistic flamewar or ideological flamewar.

Would you mind reviewing the site guidelines? They ask users to comment quite differently than this.

https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html


German here, I wonder what you consider thoughtcrimes? I never heard of such a thing.



Up until last year, Wolfenstein - a game depicting nazi germany - wasn't allowed to have swastikas.

Holocaust denial is still a crime, causing legal consequences for publications that dispute the actual number of jews killed in concentration camps.

NetzDG obliges websites with more than 2 million registered users to investigate and delete flagged content. This affects social media posts accessed from anywhere in the world, if the German government decides it violates their local laws.

Let's not pretend things are all rosy.


People who aren't antisemites usually don't deny the holocaust when they update the death count based on historical facts. This is called revisionism, not denial. However, it's without much risk of being branded a holocaust denier or revisionist by claiming that the actual number of people having been exterminated is off my say a couple of hundred thousands, wether because of double counting across borders or something along these lines. Since there's existing evidence already proving that at least x amount of Jews was killed throughout WW2 by Germany or it's allies, it's difficult to come up with a number that's way below the official numbers. As long as you're not outright claiming that Jews weren't exterminated or that the number is so low that Nazi ideology shouldn't be judged based on the death count of the holocaust alone, you're free to so without ending up as a persona non grata.

tl;dr: this is a law designed to protect Jewish survivors from having to endure "public debate" about the actual numbers of their ancestors being killed off by a regime. It's not meant to make it impossible to update the numbers based on newly surfaced facts.

Wolfenstein not being allowed to show Swastikas was indeed pretty stupid but that's what you can when you have a conservative majority in the Bundestag. If someone with a gun who also sometimes played ego shooters kills some people because of insanity, you don't want to be the politician who embraced video games and lifted stupid restrictions for them.


Victim's feelings are not an excuse for censorship. Just simple as that.

Free speech will ironically protect victims because it allows us to uncover more accurate truth. Falsehoods like fake news, especially holocaust denials can't win against truth, but with censorship it can.


Things aren't "rosy" but it's a stretch to call these thought crimes - they're not on the same metaphysical level as thought, because speech is not thought. There's no restriction on thinking about Holocaust denial, for instance. All attempts to date in academic philosophy to try and collapse freedom of speech into freedom of thought have failed to convince almost all philosophers or speech law scholars.

Speech is an action, just like any other. Like other actions, it is expressive, context-dependent, subject to interpretation, it is a physical phenomenon, that has physical effects on its listeners. It was also shown by Brison[0], Schauer[1] and others that the consequences of speech, in particular ones of harm, can be remarkably similar metaphysically and in gravity.

Whether or not the German government's regulations are good ones, the conclusion that a government should have no right to regulate speech (just as it regulates other actions) seems to be on shaky ground.

[0] https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/legal-theory/article...

[1] https://www.jstor.org/stable/2381631?seq=1#metadata_info_tab...


I upvoted you because I agree that thought and speech are clearly different things.

However, regulating people's speech leads to contradictions that can only be solved by picking a side- the side that the government decides is the right one, ie the more powerful side. If you're on this side, it's clear that you think it's the true one.

How do you balance the "harm" (hurt feelings, something that all but the most isolated delicacies learn to deal with by the age of 15) against the harm of restricting someone's speech? Certainly there's a similar psychological harm in not being allowed to express one's thoughts? (Not to mention the lost opportunity to engage in productive development of one's understanding..)


While I agree with you, it'a a bit more nuanced. In most European contries that were on the Axis side there's a ban on swastikas and Holocaust denial. This is probably why it's heavily enforced in Germany:

https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.dw.com/en/nazi-memorabilia-...

I've also seen an underground limited edition Italian wine depicting Adolf H. on it's labels. Probably illegal in Italy and most of the EU as well.


UK is no longer EU, well very soon not to be.

Why the negative votes? We just had our party elections, and Boris is now the current elected PM for the next five years, who wants brexit. So it’s going to happen whether you like it or not. We will not be tied to EU laws and so we can authorise the MI5 to do above.

I don’t want it to happen but there are no other options available for us.


There are always options. Joining the EEA or the EFTA which the UK was a founder of are a few amongst many. It would have at least fixed the Northern Irish backstop. I wish you the best of luck and pray Scotland and Northern Ireland to not secede and that free trade agreements with the EU are maintained. The EU might not be rosy but it's a better option than full self governance for my country. Too bad we won't have the UK to put a break on German and French ambitions.


Even if it’s not in the union, it’s still part of Europe, the geographical region.


[flagged]


American democracy has it's flaws but at least it's protecting rights for free speech. I'd happily live in a state with free speech rather than some 1984 nation with slightly fair representation of votes.

Basic rights are order of magnitude more important than everything else. Good luck supporting candidates you like when you're censored.


I agree that free speech is important, but unless you're openly a nazi, you're free to run for any office – and it's been that way since we had that big problem with nazis in the 30s and 40s which resulted in millions of dead. That left a really bad taste.


Didn't James Bond always have that license?


He’s MI6, not that that should make much of a difference.


Maybe, but he was a fictional character.




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