Damian Green, who you voted your Opposition Frontbencher of the Year, has launched a new campaign today, RETURN MY DNA - with the aim of persuading the Government to release innocent people's DNA from the DNA database.
I'd have thought this is a campaign that people from all parties can support. The very idea that any police force should be able to retain the DNA of an innocent individual is clearly a step too far in the direction of the Big Brother state. If you are innocent of committing an offence the state should have no right to retain your DNA. I just cannot believe any intelligent person could think otherwise.
You can find more details and sign the petition HERE.
You get to keep it too, you know. They don't take all your DNA - I don't get people acting like some primitive tribe fearing that the camera might steal their soul. What about your photo? Surely your face is your property too, so why do the passport office and the DVLA have a copy?
ReplyDeleteBig brother state? Little bit. A price worth paying for a substantial increase in the conviction rate across a broad swathe of crimes, and the virtual elimination of stranger rape? Yes.
Petition signed.
ReplyDeleteHowever, I have my doubts about the ever-increasing accusations that this Regime is Orwellian.
I don't dispute that they're damaging civil liberties, or that they're imposing levels of control previously unseen in this country - but the Orwellian image was of power for power's sake, and I think this bunch of cretins actually believe that their actions are creating a fairer society.
Needless to say, they're wrong.
D
Nice to see a Tory opposing unnecessary state control. Lets hope this extends to reversing the Nanny state and that both approaches make the election manifesto.
ReplyDeleteHope I can express this simply :
ReplyDeleteConstant control freaks (like New Labour) and police and other officials are a type who KNOW people need to be controlled and contained.
They are of course judging others to be exactly like they know themselves to be.
Alan Douglas
Perhaps I am insane Tory but I believe DNA should be taken at birth for newly born babies and the rest of the population should be DNA'd as soon as possible,
ReplyDeleteI will lay money on this not happening. They will keep it, and work out a way of keeping it forever.
ReplyDeleteThe state is not interested in giving power to the people, it is interested in keeping it, and getting more and more.
Nudge, thats the system that is used, little by little you nudge people towards what you want, total power and control over them.
I signed, but this will only mean, regardless of check boxes or not, I will get more spam and more crap through the letter box, because they took and Adress, and email address.
bryan somers - Sure, this would work from the start if we all knew, but how do you introduce it when you have a population that has been taught freedom above all else?
ReplyDeleteWhat you do is start teaching the children that freedom is the state, and what the state does in all good an knowing. (As is currently being done now)
Then their kids you teach the state is better than good and you adust history to show how the state has always been good. (They are just starting to do this in schools now).
In 100 years time people will be screaming for the state to take their DNA because it will allow them to control the thugs that the state allows out to keep the general public scared, and nudge us into what they want. A little at a time.
I spend time in schools, and some of the current teaching idea and what is being taught is scary.
Obviously you are insane, how to you propose to finance such an undertaking? What about the vast number of people who come into the country and leave every day? not to mention those that are in the country unbeknownst to the authorities? or is it only registered UK citizens that commit crimes? As for management and security costs well.....
ReplyDeleteJohn @ 11:46
ReplyDelete"A price worth paying for a substantial increase in the conviction rate across a broad swathe of crimes, and the virtual elimination of stranger rape? Yes."
No! You're talking utter rubbish. There is little or no evidence that harvesting and storing DNA has led to any increase in conviction rates, for any crimes.
i'd point out that those convicted of the most serious crimes in the years leading up to the introduction of DNA harvesting and retention, are not on the database.
Keep in the back of your minds that your DNA can and will eventually be used by governments for purposes other than the detection of crime. Think what insurance companies will pay to get their hands on this database?
John @11.46: surely the best way to help the police would be if we were also all microchipped at birth, together with the geographical pinpointing technology currently in mobile phones.
ReplyDeleteThen we could all be constantly monitored (that would reduce the jobless total as well), and I am sure it wouldn't be long before control mechanisms could also be introduced, to stop us drinking that second pint, or shouting at the kids, or driving over 30mph in a built up zone, or having sex with the milkman....
Yup, sure sounds like Utopia to me.
Not.
"Think what insurance companies will pay to get their hands on this database?"
ReplyDeleteVery nearly nothing. SGM+ tells you nothing useful about a person any more than their fingerprint does - they even have to record the gender marker separately on the database.
Don't understand why a petition is being raised. If the Police are contravening the law, why are those in charge not being dealt with legally!! Who guards the guards?
ReplyDeleteI fully agree with you there Iain. If you have not been been convicted of any crime, it is not reasonable for the police to take and store your DNA. After all it's your property.
ReplyDeleteAnd to those who disagree, on the grounds that it will help catch criminals etc, etc... all I'd say is that virtually +anything+ can be justfied on 'utilitarian' grounds.
I dare say it would also help to catch criminals if we were all microchipped and had CCTV cameras placed in our homes - but that doesn't mean it would be right.
My DNA is not my property. It was given to me by my forebears and is shared with everyone else one way or another. It might be natures way of giving me a personal identity and the way it connects to others. For those who have children they give it away, more or less freely. Mine is already in genetic research databanks, freely given. There is an intelligent case to be made for holding everyone's DNA in controlled conditions, and that is primarily a medical one.
ReplyDeleteHave signed it....about time the Tories started to fight back..
ReplyDeleteWith respect, Ian, it is unlikely that non-Conservatives will join this: when you click on the button to register as a part of this, which I wanted to do, you are directed to a page called 'Joining My Conservatives' which I didn't want to do, being a UKIP supporter until Cameron makes up on his pledges.
ReplyDeleteIt is clearly wrong for the police to be given the tools necessary to catch criminals that are stupid enough to leave behind their DNA.
ReplyDeleteSupport your local rapist!
@ John
ReplyDeletePut up some figures. 'Substantial increase'? It's the 'increase' which is so questionable, let alone the question of how that 'rate' is calculated.
'Virtual elimination of stranger rape' - which constitutes what proportion of the total rape and sexual assault figures?
Next, 'price worth paying'. For you, maybe.
He wants to "persuade the government" - WTF?
ReplyDeleteIn a few months (hopefully) he'll BE the Government. Don't prat about, just release a policy document telling voters what the new rules will be, what their rights will be under a Tory government and how quickly any DNA records that don't meet the new rules will be removed from the database.
Makes sure ACPO is brought to heel!!
good campaign
ReplyDelete