Sunday, October 19, 2008

THEY DIDN'T SECRETLY TAKE DNA SAMPLES IN THE LIVES OF OTHERS

The Lives of Others won an Oscar in 2007 as Best Foreign Film. Set in East Germany during the autumn years of The Cold War and the Fall of the Berlin Wall, The Lives of Others shows what life was like under the East German tyranny, and the abuse of surveillance powers.

Today I read that it is being proposed that MI5 and the police should be able to secretly collect DNA samples of law-abiding British citizens...and share them with other governments!

This is a very sinister proposal, and shows the desperation to get a DNA database created.

This then raises the question as to why they want a DNA database.

They created anti-terrorism laws to catch terrorists, but the laws were instead used to spy on children.

They said there were WMDs in Iraq ready to strike Britain in 45 minutes and that after Saddam Iraqi oil would go to the Iraqis, but instead they found rusting, useless grenades and Iraqi oil is going to Anglo-American oil corporations.

They have been fascinated by DNA and social engineering. They financed the early eugenics movement in Great Britain and the USA. They financed Hitler's racial hygiene program.

And they were able to finance all that because we gave them the power to create money.

Whatever it is, it always comes back to that; they have the power to create money.

We don't.

BTW read the comments. Not one is in favour of this proposal. Every comment shows how savvy the public are becoming to the plan. They are not just against this one proposal. They know for a fact what's going down, and are not afraid to say so.

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From http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1078821/New-law-allow-police-collect-DNA-secret-teacups.html#comments


New law to allow police to collect DNA in secret from teacups

By Jason Lewis
Last updated at 12:33 AM on 19th October 2008


MI5 and the police may be allowed to secretly collect genetic samples from items such as cigarette butts and teacups under new laws that could massively expand the national DNA database.

The powers would allow investigators to break in to suspects’ homes to collect DNA which could then be shared with foreign governments to check for links to crime and terrorism.

The new law, being discussed by Parliament, would mean the ‘stolen’ samples – thousands of which have already been taken by the security services – would be admissible in court and at a stroke hugely expand the Government’s controversial DNA database.

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