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Britain’s Thought Police: A Warning Against State Censorship

“Knock, knock, it’s the Thought Police”—so reads the latest revelation of how the British state is prioritising censorship over actual crime. According to the Mail on Sunday, thousands of genuine criminals are left uninvestigated while police instead interrogate an elderly woman for criticising Labour councillors on Facebook. This should not surprise anyone who has been paying attention. Britain is fast becoming a place where having the wrong opinions is more dangerous than committing real crimes.

The article exposes a scandal that is both grotesque and predictable. The police have been swamped with real crime—shoplifting, violent attacks, stabbings, fraud. Yet, instead of allocating resources to these, officers are dispatched to investigate “hate speech” on social media. We are told:

Some 90,000 serious offences – including rape and GBH – went uninvestigated last year, while police found time to visit people accused of social media thought crimes.

This statistic alone should be enough to destroy the credibility of modern British policing. What kind of government allows violent criminals to roam freely while treating pensioners with Facebook accounts as existential threats? A government that fears its people, that’s what.

The case of 74-year-old Valerie Cameron is a good example. After making critical remarks about Labour councillors—comments that were not remotely criminal—she found herself visited by detectives. What was her “crime”? Posting in a private Facebook group that one Labour councillor was at the centre of a “Hope Not Die” WhatsApp scandal. That was enough to warrant police intervention. Meanwhile, had she been mugged on the street, the response would likely have been an automated crime reference number and nothing else.

This is what modern Britain has become: a country where the police force acts not as an instrument of justice but as a tool for managing dissent.

The British ruling class has perfected a particular form of tyranny—not overt violence, but bureaucratic suffocation. Unlike in traditional dictatorships, where secret police might break down your door at dawn, in Britain, repression comes in the form of softly spoken detectives “just having a word” about your social media posts. The result is the same: fear, self-censorship, and an atmosphere where people are terrified to speak their minds.

This is not accidental. As Mr Bickley wrote in his piece Extremism and Censorship, the British government is no longer interested in merely stopping crime or even preventing terrorism. Instead, its focus is on suppressing speech it finds inconvenient:

The Starmer Government has decided that suppressing dissent is more important than dealing with real security threats.

This is why people like Valerie Cameron are harassed while actual criminals walk free. It is why the police arrest those who criticise mass immigration but turn a blind eye to the ethnic grooming gangs that terrorised northern England for decades. It is why shouting “child killers” at the police in anger over a stabbing spree is punishable by years in prison (The Southport Stabbing), but actual stabbings are dismissed as “complex societal issues.”

It is fashionable to compare Britain’s surveillance state to Orwell’s 1984. But a better comparison might be East Germany. The Stasi did not rely on mass executions or brutal torture chambers. Instead, it destroyed dissent through psychological warfare. It encouraged people to inform on their neighbours, created files on ordinary citizens, and made it clear that those who stepped out of line would face social and economic ruin.

In modern Britain, the police are using the same tactics. We now have “non-crime hate incidents,” where police record your speech even if it does not break the law. Employers, landlords, and even banks can be informed of your opinions. As the Mail on Sunday notes, police visited an entire family after one of them retweeted a joke about Muslims. This is not about safety—it is about control.

At its core, this is an attack on free speech, the foundation of any free society. If people cannot criticise those in power without fear of police harassment, then Britain is no longer a democracy in any meaningful sense. Once the government is able to decide which opinions are acceptable and which are criminal, then it has total power.

This is why freedom of speech must be absolute. There can be no “reasonable limits” set by politicians who have a vested interest in silencing opposition. The only speech laws should be those against direct incitement to violence—everything else must be protected.

The alternative is clear. If the ruling class is allowed to continue down this path, Britain will soon be a country where speaking out against the government will cost you your job, your bank account, or even your freedom. We are already well on the way.

The British police have made their priorities clear: they will not protect you from crime, but they will protect politicians from your opinions. If this continues, the country will slide further into authoritarianism. The question is whether the British people will resist before it is too late.

To those who believe free speech is an “outdated” concept, I offer this warning: a government that can silence its critics today can turn on you tomorrow. And when that happens, there will be no one left to speak in your defence.

 

 

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