Re: [OPE] Sweden's new surveillance law

From: Dave Zachariah (davez@kth.se)
Date: Thu Jun 12 2008 - 17:39:04 EDT


Thanks for sharing this Martin. Things are moving at an alarming pace 
with alarmingly poor opposition. We have a mass media that does its best 
--- unconsciously or not --- to prevent an active and vigilant citizenry.

One has to expose the hypocrisy, moral contradictions and paranoia that 
comes from the proponents of the surveillance law. Moreover, this is 
necessary in order to win over the liberal bourgeois ideologues.

//Dave Z


on 2008-06-10 15:04 Martin Kragh wrote:
> Dear all,
>
> When the former Social Democratic government representative Thomas Bodström (nowadays a rather retired and poor fiction novelist) argued for total surveillance of e-mail and mobile communications a few years ago, few people took him seriously. This proposal has now been made real, as the new right wing coalition parties are in agreement, and majority, to push this legislation through parliament. This legislation is the most far reaching ever on an international level, even in comparison with the criticized American "Patriot Act", and obviously way more advanced than could ever China or North Korea dream of. The organization in charge is the "FRA", a military institution whose previous goal was to scan the traffic of the Baltic sea (which they still are?). Since the end of the Cold War, they're raison d'être seems to be "terrorism". Transparency is very low, and threatens individual integrity. Anyone is subject to surveillance on political ground (by government decision), with no need for court decision or scrutiny. Any communication going through the borders of Sweden - which is a lot considering the structure of the global hub network - will be subject to surveillance. In Sweden, the media debate seems however more concerned over other issues deemed more urgent. After all, the European Soccer Cup is in full effect.  
>
> More info in English can be found here:
>
> http://www.edri.org/edrigram/number6.11/nsa-fra-sweden
>
> Considering the current power balance of the parliament, only four right wing party representatives will need to vote against party line to stop this legislation. The Social Democrats, the Green Party and the former Communist Party are voting against. It will be interesting to see what happens. 
>
> Many kind regards
> Martin       
> _______________________________________________
> ope mailing list
> ope@lists.csuchico.edu
> https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/ope
>   


_______________________________________________
ope mailing list
ope@lists.csuchico.edu
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/ope


This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.5 : Mon Jun 30 2008 - 00:00:16 EDT