Whatsisname’s Britain

Where the foxes caper unmolested, the government packs your school lunch and raising the flag ain’t what it used to be;

How did the UK military evade the ban on spying on UK citizens? A whistleblower from the 77th Brigade, who spoke to Big Brother Watch on condition of anonymity, said it did so by pretending that the British citizens who UK soldiers were spying upon could, perhaps, be foreigners

“To skirt the clear legal issues with a military unit monitoring domestic dissent,” the whistleblower told us, “the leading view was that unless a profile explicitly stated their real name and nationality, which is, of course, vanishingly rare, they could be a foreign agent and were fair game to flag up.”

By “flag up,” the whistleblower referred to the process by which UK government officials sent content to social media companies that they thought should be censored.

7 Replies to “Whatsisname’s Britain”

  1. If the UK’s citizens use their “real name and national status” the UK military can’t spy on them, but using their real name on an offensive X / Tweet or social commentary where the code name “asian” was used, would almost guarantee they’d be visited for “a caution” by the local UK constabulary without even a thank you very much for turning yourself in for our investigation.

    Is there a “first world” gov’t which functions as it should? Is moving to Argentina / El Salvador / Singapore the only option left?

  2. I’d bet dollars to donuts the CAF has a similar program. They were caught some years ago being up to no good in Nova Scotia.

  3. In the end, they’re all civil servants following orders from above and keeping an eye on that pension.

  4. The obvious answer is, who is there to charge them/hold them to account?

    Parliament? they don’t care as long as they aren’t targeted.

  5. They’ll “raise the flag on you” if you raise, or post, The St. George flag … which used to define Britain. However, now it “offends” all the Muslim invaders.

    1. AI to the rescue:
      According to the search results, there is a debate and varying accounts about St. George’s ethnicity and nationality. Some sources suggest that St. George was born in Turkey to a Turkish father and Palestinian mother, while others describe him as a Roman soldier from Cappadocia, an area in modern-day Turkey.

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