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European Countries Seek Sweeping New Powers To Curb Terrorism 219

New submitter cooler-than-ice (3981829) writes with this story from the Washington Post: Belgian leaders on Friday sought sweeping new powers to monitor and punish their citizens for involvement with terrorism, joining France in an effort to rewrite laws just hours after dozens of arrests across Europe offered dramatic evidence of the threats security officials say are facing the continent. From the article: Apart from expanding powers to strip citizenship for dual nationals, Belgian leaders on Friday proposed devoting an additional $348 million to counterterrorism efforts. They also said they wanted the ability to take away identity documents to make it more difficult for people to travel to Syria and elsewhere. ... “As a result of the events in Paris, combined with what happened yesterday in Belgium, the political unanimity is quite great,” said Rik Coolsaet, a terrorism expert at Ghent University. “It is a bit of 9/11 syndrome.” France is also charging forward with attempts to expand government powers to monitor threats — and to punish those who praise or do not readily condemn terrorism. Leaders this week called for new legislation to significantly bolster domestic intelligence agencies.
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European Countries Seek Sweeping New Powers To Curb Terrorism

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  • by Mordok-DestroyerOfWo ( 1000167 ) on Saturday January 17, 2015 @11:17AM (#48838597)
    I was hoping your be the ones to bail us out when the U.S. went full fascist. Alright, New Zealand, all eyes are on you. No pressure!
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Action - reaction.

      I've noticed that the Al Quai-da, ISIS or whoever want a war with the West. They should be careful what they wish for. And they shouldn't assume they'll be victorious because their god will help them.

      They are under the impression that the war is happening and it's with the USA and Western Europe. Where the Al-Quaida pussies can run and hide in a mosque, sleep, get something to eat, jack-off etc ... knowing that the US will not go in. Same for hiding among civilians.

      As this BS continues, t

      • Re:Dammit, Europe! (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Karmashock ( 2415832 ) on Saturday January 17, 2015 @11:39AM (#48838687)

        Unlikely. A good deal of the west is more likely to go out with a whimper rather then a bang.

        This has happened before. Rome fell under similar circumstances.

        The collapse of its national religion, serious economic problems, worn out from war, massive immigration from cultures not loyal to the empire... and lots of corruption.

        This is how the West falls.

      • Re:Dammit, Europe! (Score:4, Insightful)

        by rasmusbr ( 2186518 ) on Saturday January 17, 2015 @01:21PM (#48839277)

        In case you've been living under a rock for the last 14 years, they already have a war with the West/NATO.

        In a somewhat ironic turn of events, Muslim fundamentalists in countries like Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq, Syria and Gaza now have an actual real honest-to-science angry skydaddy with winged creatures that shoot fire from the sky.

        Of course, this does not really bring us any closer to peace with the Islamists. If anything it probably helps them recruit.

    • by mpe ( 36238 )
      I was hoping your be the ones to bail us out when the U.S. went full fascist. Alright, New Zealand, all eyes are on you. No pressure!

      Recently New Zealand introduced tougher speeding and drink drive penalties. With the result that road deaths over the Christmas period went up. So probably best not to expect too much of The Beehive. There's also the Megaupload mess to consider.
  • We have exited the steaming waters of the Acheron and now the maelstrom of the Lethe pulls on our prow.

  • by NoNonAlphaCharsHere ( 2201864 ) on Saturday January 17, 2015 @11:26AM (#48838633)

    ...an effort to rewrite laws just hours after dozens of arrests across Europe offered dramatic evidence of the threats security officials say are facing the continent.

    'Cause the Patriot Act worked out so well for us.

    Never mind worrying about the terrorists winning, it's the fascists who are doing the winning

  • by gurps_npc ( 621217 ) on Saturday January 17, 2015 @11:26AM (#48838641) Homepage
    That sounds like a clear abuse of power.

    "Yes, you called the terrorists evil, damn, evil S.O.B.S. But you paused before you said evil. Take him away BOYS."

    It's bad enough to punish those that use their freedom of speech to praise criminals, but to go that far pushes you beyond the bar of reason and into tyranny.

    If we used this in America, I think Obama could arrest the entire cast of Fox News for praising Putin. That is just plain wrong. Fox news should be laughed at, not arrested.

    • Indeed. This comes awfully close to Thought Crime.

      What I could understand, though I do struggle with it, is identifying those that appear to approve of terrorism, and keeping an eye on them. But of course that would be abused.

  • Wait, What? (Score:4, Informative)

    by Bob9113 ( 14996 ) on Saturday January 17, 2015 @11:28AM (#48838647) Homepage

    France is also charging forward with attempts to expand government powers to monitor threats -- and to punish those who praise or do not readily condemn terrorism.

    WTF? R'ing TFA... not a whole lot, but here's a bit more from the article:

    France is also charging forward with attempts to expand government powers to monitor threats -- and to punish those who praise or do not readily condemn terrorism. Leaders this week called for new legislation to significantly bolster domestic intelligence agencies.

    Another law, a fast-track judicial process for accusations related to terrorism, was on the books as of November but had not been widely used before the Paris attacks. In recent days, however, prosecutors have filled the dockets with more than 100 cases that are speeding through courtrooms. People who have expressed support for the attacks have been sentenced to as much as 15 months in prison.

    A top French opposition politician, Eric Ciotti, said this week that the government should withhold social benefits from the parents of children who failed to observe moments of silence in schools.

    • Re:Wait, What? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 17, 2015 @11:42AM (#48838695)

      The whole recent thing about France being a bastion of freedom of speech has been a lie. Hell, the country won't even let people wear certain (but not all) religious headdress in public places, even when the choice of outfit interferes with nobody else. Trade in various expressions of speech, disgusting as the principles they represent, is illegal - the ban on trade in swastikas is well known, for example.

      To say things like, "Fewer people than reported died in the Holocaust," is illegal to merely say in France, even though

      i) it's accurate - about 5.1 million people died, not 6 million (still one of the worst genocides in history, which is why it needs to be recorded with utmost accuracy);

      ii) it's a straight freedom of speech issue.that a person should be able to spout whatever shit (perhaps as long as their speech isn't part of planning to cause harm).

      Indeed, Charlie Hebdo had to face the French legal system various times for its depictions from Catholicism through Israeli policy (and one of its contributors was an explicit, self-confessed anti-semite - a really nasty chap, but still, merely practising freedom of speech).

      tl;dr France has no freedom of speech. Everything you are hearing on the news is a lie.

      • by robi5 ( 1261542 )

        Maybe still more free than the mean / median / top decile of Muslim religion-states? So whether or not you're right on this point is kind of irrelevant.

    • by reikae ( 80981 )

      I wonder if people sentenced for "expressing support for the attacks" includes any vocal critics of surveillance or related government actions. Also punishing those who don't readily condemn terrorism sounds like terrifying thoughtcrime stuff; I hope governments heard me condemning the attacks to my dog so I don't get raided.

      • by Bob9113 ( 14996 )

        I hope governments heard me condemning the attacks to my dog so I don't get raided.

        I'm sorry, but condemning the attacks to your dog is not considered sufficiently patriotic. You must find at least three people who practice Islam and condemn the attacks to them. For example, "Hey, Muslim guy, apparently you don't know this; terrorism is wrong." Then just ask him if he is planning any terrorist attacks, take down the details if he is, and have him sign your patriotism verification form.

  • Nazis (Score:2, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward

    You know, the Nazis sought sweeping powerrs to curb terrorism after a building was set on fire. How did that slippery slope work out in the 40s'? Are the 2010's the new 1940s?

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reichstag_fire

    • by robi5 ( 1261542 )

      If on one occasion, A preceded B, then A must have caused B and must cause it almost a century later.
      If the alternative to your hypothetical B is a definite C, and a definite C is worse than a hypothetical B, while a realised B would be as bad as C, then we should still remain on course for C.

  • ... about responding to violent threats.

    It's irrational not to respond to violent threats.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Slashjones ( 3879223 )

      But when your response as a supposedly free country is to limit people's freedoms, you have failed to uphold the principles you're supposed to aspire to and have become the enemy of liberty. I'll take freedom over this kind of 'safety.' If they want safety, they have to do it in a way that doesn't violate our freedoms and privacy.

  • by Richard_J_N ( 631241 ) on Saturday January 17, 2015 @11:44AM (#48838713)

    Wouldn't it make much more sense to devote some effort and expense to promoting the values of the enlightenment? In particular, devoting some educational effort towards eradication of irrational beliefs. Why not actually treat Islam (and Scientology, and Christianity) as the mental equivalent of a public heath hazard, where those who believe need to be helped to overcome it?

    I think we make a serious mistake in our public discourse, by considering that:
        violent minority = extremists = misinterpretation of scripture vs. peaceful majority = mainstream = correct interpretation of scripture.

    whereas it would be more intellectually honest to consider:
          violent minority = literalists = correct interpretation of scripture vs. peaceful majority = reformists = those who wilfully mis-interpret their scripture.

    In other words, while almost all humans (of all faith and of none) are decent, good, tolerant peaceful people, they are decent to the extent that they discard their holy books, not to the extent that they follow them. The holy books themselves are beyond redemption, and should be considered to be "on the side of the devil".

    Consider the spectrum of belief: (a)Secular humanist ---- (b) "Moderate" religion ----- (c) Extremist religion.
    Position (b) involves belief in gods, prophets, and veneration of "perfect" scriptures. Position (c) is a very small step beyond, namely to actually read those scriptures, already considered perfect, and interpret them the literally, as they are written. So, if we want to prevent Islamic terrorism, the most effective argument is not detailed discussion of which Koranic verse overrides which other one (an argument which the moderates can never win), but instead, to argue for the wholesale abandonment of holy books.

    Education, science, secular values, and human rights are the most potent weapon we have against faith, and yet politicians refuse to deploy them! If we took the money from the security services, and put it into schools, I think it would be far more effective.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      In particular, devoting some educational effort towards eradication of irrational beliefs. Why not actually treat Islam (and Scientology, and Christianity) as the mental equivalent of a public heath hazard, where those who believe need to be helped to overcome it?

      Should that come to pass then welcome a whole new world where Christian and Scientology driven terrorist organizations are more common than homeowner associations. That in itself does not mean that you are wrong however.

    • Politicians won't embrace that path until the populace at large is already going that way. To do otherwise would be political suicide. As it stands now most state candidates have to declare some sort of religous belief, and so long as it isn't satanic or athieism then your odds of election aren't hurt. And on the national scale you'd best pick some kind of mainstream chrisitan religion. The only exception I can think of in recent US history would be Rommney, and he didn't win.

      • True in the US, but in Europe, we are already past tipping point: the majority of people now see organised religion as a force for harm.

        In the US, the approach might be to apply sanctions to Saudi Arabia etc untill they fix their human rights record - this approach worked on South Africa wrt apartheid.

        • by robi5 ( 1261542 )

          > True in the US, but in Europe, we are already past tipping point: the majority of people now see organised religion as a force for harm.

          Haha, good one :-) There are countries like the UK where there is strong economic sense to be (pretend to be) religious, if not for something else, to benefit from superior schools while not having to pay for "public" (=private) schools.

          Even if what you said were true, it would be a snapshot. Want to guess that families of which religion procreates more? That tipping p

    • In particular, devoting some educational effort towards eradication of irrational beliefs

      If that worked religion would have disappeared a some tiems ago with the itnernet. But it does not, because you cannot use rationality to convince people (rare exception may happen) that belief they came to in irrational way are wrong. Try thisd : go into a creationist forum and try to argue that radiometric dating works and explain why. Good luck with that. So if we are not even able to get ride of creationism in the

      • In particular, devoting some educational effort towards eradication of irrational beliefs

        If that worked religion would have disappeared a some tiems ago with the itnernet

        Educated people are always less religious. Provide more education and religion always fades. It doesn't just go away, because some people just refuse to be educated. But education helps people learn how to ask questions and think, if it's done even vaguely right, and religion can't withstand that.

      • I grant that it doesn't work all the time. But let's at least stop giving "it's my faith" a free pass against criticism, and be done with the faith-schools. Politicians love to think that moderate religion is on their side; it isn't. So they work in the (imho) vain struggle to keep people from moving from position (b) to (c) rather than trying to get them to move from (b) to (a). In epidemiological terms, there are several risk factors for becoming a terrorist... including social exclusion, poverty, griev

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Wouldn't it make much more sense to devote some effort and expense to promoting the values of the enlightenment?
      The CIA did that with modern art.
      Modern art was CIA 'weapon' ( 22 October 1995) http://www.independent.co.uk/n... [independent.co.uk]
      "the CIA fostered and promoted American Abstract Expressionist painting around the world for more than 20 years."
    • by robi5 ( 1261542 )

      > they are decent to the extent that they discard their holy books, not to the extent that they follow them

      There is some very humane and peaceful stuff in the New Testament. So you're simplifying to the extent of being wrong.

      But I agree with your larger point that hazards to society should be treated as such, because we have one life, one planet etc. so let's do a good amount of risk prevention to protect what's important to us, and good risk prevention starts with earnest analysis of causes and effects

  • The Islamist terrorist groups perform attacks in order to limit free speech, and in response, these counties help the terrorists along by limiting speech even further?

    Who's side are these guys on anyway?

    • Not accurate at all.

      The editorial cartoons created a lot of stir, which attracts a lot of eyeballs, and therefore money. After the initial thrust by the editors, it became a pissing contest -- a reality show -- that crossed the line of common sense.

      Delfeil adds: “I believe that we are fools who took an unnecessary risk. That’s it. We think we are invulnerable. For years, decades even, it was a provocation and then one day the provocation turns against us.

      He shouldn’t have done it, but Charb did it again a year later, in September 2012. [independent.co.uk]”

  • European Countries Using Terrorism to Seek Sweeping New Powers

  • by VernonNemitz ( 581327 ) on Saturday January 17, 2015 @12:05PM (#48838835) Journal
    The word "terrorism!" can be mis-used, much like the word "treason!", if it is not formally defined in Law. So, if such a definition has not been codified, the politicians have no business requesting powers to do such things as "punish those who praise or do not readily condemn terrorism" --after all, the person you want to punish might be using a different definition than YOU used (the one YOU used was specifically intended to help you steal political power, see?).
    • by robi5 ( 1261542 )

      Wishy-washy thing you're saying. Who cares about the 'definition'. These terrorists killed a dozen or two, for political reasons, in Europe, sounds un-vague enough for me and probably another few hundred million EU citizens.

  • When you're angry, the media is spreading fear, and citizens are demanding action from their government, its all to easy to swing wildly too far in giving up freedom and privacy. We've had more than a decade of that in the US and it isn't pretty.

    We get mad when we hear about the Snowden revelations. We get mad when the government doesn't monitor "known" threats. We get mad when our government doesn't treat captured terrorist killers kindly. You cannot have it both ways.

    The best answer is for each citize
    • by robi5 ( 1261542 )

      > When you're angry, the media is spreading fear, and citizens are demanding action from their government, its all to easy to swing wildly too far in giving up freedom and privacy. We've had more than a decade of that in the US and it isn't pretty.

      A lot of us here are in STEM or work with data in some way. How on Earth are you going to prevent shit like this from happening if not by close surveillance? For it is not an individual action but a pattern of individually innocent-looking actions that is predi

  • by kheldan ( 1460303 ) on Saturday January 17, 2015 @01:13PM (#48839221) Journal
    Disclaimer (for benefit of the knee-jerk-reactionaries): I passionately hate Al Qaeda, the so-called 'Islamic State', and all pseudo-religious nutcases who, for some reason, think 'God' (whoever the fuck that is) wants them to cut off people's heads 'for offending the Prophet', throw acid in little girls' faces/kill little girls because they have the audacity to want to go to school/learn to read/learn history/learn to do math/learn in general, and all the rest of the bullshit these fucking assholes are out there doing/condoning/supporting. I think they all desperately need to be brought to justice for their innumerable crimes, no question about it.

    ..now, that all having been said:
    If you don't, for more than a second or two, think that these 'sweeping powers' they want to grab (and make no mistake, it's a power-grab) are going to end up being grossly and indiscriminately mis-used to further political agendas that have nothing to do with anti-terrorism, then you are incredibly, unbelievably naive, because that's exactly, precisely what's going to happen. Euros, you need to clamp down on this shit right now, because once they get this kind of power, they will not let go of it, ever, and they will ironically enough use it to destroy whatever freedom of speech you have in your country. Mark my words.
    • by robi5 ( 1261542 )

      It may still be the smaller bad, in comparison to not doing anything on the excuse that it incurs the risk (or even the likelihood) of what you talk about. Life is action -> reaction, get used to it. Noone believes that the states won't misuse their powers, but it's naive and insulting of YOU to assume that people don't consider that self-defense and self-preservation has costs. If you think about it, the modern state is way more knowledgeable about you than it was in the medieval or industrial times, cr

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