Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
August 15, 2016
While terrorists returned from Syria roam the streets and Pakistani gangs are operating child sex rings right out in public, the British authorities have decided that the prime focus of police needs to be on people saying mean things on the internet.
After all, people recover after their family members are murdered by terrorists and 11-year-old girls who are drugged, gang-raped and trafficked get over it very quickly. But a Moslem or a Jew who reads something mean on the internet is never the same again.
RT:
A generously funded “online hate crime hub” has been set up to tackle online vitriol by identifying suspects and encouraging citizens to report them to police, but critics fear the newly-established unit might endanger freedom of speech.
The project was published by the London Mayor’s Office and is being partially funded by the Home Office, which will contribute £450,000 ($581,000) to the £1.7-million ($2.2-million) project, which is expected to run for at least two years.
The Mayor’s Office for Policing And Crime (MOPAC) came up with the idea due to the “increasing role that online hate played in targeting individuals and communities.” Disguised under a “veil of anonymity” on social media, online abusers are hard for conventional police forces to find, as they lack the necessary skills and equipment.
By establishing this unit, we are sending a strong message to those who use online forums to spread hate that their actions will not be tolerated,” Metropolitan police said in a statement, as cited by The Business Standard.
The newly-established cybercrime unit will consist of five trained detectives, aided by volunteers who will be urged to report both “criminal and non-criminal incidents.” Under the auspices of a joint partnership program run by police and social media services, the volunteers will learn how to use “online tools” to respond to hate crimes they encounter on the web.
While the authors of the project argue that it will provide police with “additional intelligence gathering opportunities,” not everybody seems to be enthusiastic about the idea, as the prospect of a Twitter joke or an “insensitive” Facebook post landing someone in jail is disturbing to those who see the internet as a free speech zone.
…
While online hate speech presents a complex problem, having police officers take up the role of “chatroom moderators” doesn’t seem like the best way to tackle it to many people. Liberal Democrat leader Tim Farron argues that this approach will likely result in “undermining our very precious freedom of speech.”
“We want more police on the street, not thought police,” he told the outlet.
Yeah, either you need more police on the streets or you need to send all of these people committing the crimes back to their own countries. Which would also remove the need for thought control police, because no one would be saying mean things about brown people on the internet if the country wasn’t being overrun and destroyed by brown people.
It is just mind-boggling that the government views it as so important to force ethnic cleansing on the country that they are ready to arrest everyone who complains about it on the internet.
I wonder who could be responsible for this?
Who is this London Mayor who launched this program?
Oh…
Well, who is this Sophie Linden, the Deputy Mayor who is heading up the program?
Hm…
By the way, this order was signed on my birthday, July 27th.
I wonder if they did that on purpose?
I’ve talked to several of the prominent trolls arrested for saying mean things on the internet, and they all said they were asked about me.