Sky Blue Pete
Well-Known Member
Any thoughts?
My friend posted this on Facebook-I think he's right
I wasn't intending to write another status about our PM's behaviour today but I just can't let this one slide. Theresa May is now proposing that we withdraw from human rights laws to make us safer.
1) (This is the most important point) It absolutely will not make us safer. Negating human rights in a way that will disproportionately target muslims will be used as a propoaganda tool for terrorist recruiters. It will further alienate the "muslim community" (whatever that is) which will further undermine already struggling programmes like Prevent and make it less likely vital security information will be passed to authorities. It adds fuel to the fire of the ideology.
2) It is another change on a manifesto pledge before the election has even taken place. The Conservative manifesto says we will not be taken out of the European Court of Human Rights. Changes to human rights laws would inevitably do so. They can't just make policy up off the cuff when they have a manifesto stating what they will do. Come on chaps, at least wait until after the election before you break your pledges, otherwise it's just not cricket.
3) Human rights laws, initially forged in the aftermath of the horrors of WW2, are the absolute best and most treasured thing human beings have yet come up with. As a powerful nation trying to be a moral leader we need to be setting the standard rather than opting out of those laws we (or our government) don't agree with. That's how human rights work. The whole point is they are decided internationally, not nationally.
4) The victims of Manchester and London deserve a better legacy than a self harming slide into socially right wing populist rhetoric that restricts freedoms for all yet does not make us any safer.
My friend posted this on Facebook-I think he's right
I wasn't intending to write another status about our PM's behaviour today but I just can't let this one slide. Theresa May is now proposing that we withdraw from human rights laws to make us safer.
1) (This is the most important point) It absolutely will not make us safer. Negating human rights in a way that will disproportionately target muslims will be used as a propoaganda tool for terrorist recruiters. It will further alienate the "muslim community" (whatever that is) which will further undermine already struggling programmes like Prevent and make it less likely vital security information will be passed to authorities. It adds fuel to the fire of the ideology.
2) It is another change on a manifesto pledge before the election has even taken place. The Conservative manifesto says we will not be taken out of the European Court of Human Rights. Changes to human rights laws would inevitably do so. They can't just make policy up off the cuff when they have a manifesto stating what they will do. Come on chaps, at least wait until after the election before you break your pledges, otherwise it's just not cricket.
3) Human rights laws, initially forged in the aftermath of the horrors of WW2, are the absolute best and most treasured thing human beings have yet come up with. As a powerful nation trying to be a moral leader we need to be setting the standard rather than opting out of those laws we (or our government) don't agree with. That's how human rights work. The whole point is they are decided internationally, not nationally.
4) The victims of Manchester and London deserve a better legacy than a self harming slide into socially right wing populist rhetoric that restricts freedoms for all yet does not make us any safer.