🇬🇧 STARMER HAS NO MANDATE FOR A SURVEILLANCE STATE
Keir Starmer says he will continue delivering the agenda he was elected on.
The problem is that mass online surveillance, digital ID checks, facial recognition requirements and internet censorship were never put to the British people.
No one voted for this.
No one was asked whether they wanted the Government monitoring access to social media or expanding state control over the internet.
This was not in the manifesto.
Starmer is governing as though he has a mandate for measures the public were never given the chance to approve.
@ChaosLensX Why are all of the Police officers in this country such bellends, they say it with such confidence as well, even when you prove them wrong they simply cannot handle their authority being challenged.
He was an obnoxious, smug little prick as well, wasn't he.
@ChaosLensX@davidoff31249 There's actually been a couple of times where I have forgotten my wallet, all you need to do at the petrol station is fill out a form and you pay for the fuel within 24 hours.
I don't understand how this got to this point.
What happens when a police officer gets the law completely wrong?
In this video, a UK police sergeant is seen threatening to arrest a driver at a petrol station pump. The issue? The driver filled his car with £60 of diesel and attempted to pay using a genuine, Royal Mint-issued £100 silver commemorative coin. The supermarket staff refused to accept the coin and called the police, leading to the dramatic stand-off caught on camera.
Is it legal? Here is the actual law:
The answer is both yes and no, depending on who you look at:
Could the shop refuse the coin? Generally, yes. While the coin is technically "legal tender" under the Coinage Act 1971, contract law allows a private business to decide which payment methods they prefer. However, because the fuel was already inside the car, a debt had been created. Legally, a business cannot "pick and choose" payment methods after the fact unless they clearly state their exclusions on the pump before you fill up.
Was it a criminal offence? Absolutely NOT. The officer arrested the driver for "Making Off Without Payment" (Theft Act 1978). To commit this crime, a person must dishonestly run away to avoid paying the bill. The driver wasn't running, hiding, or acting dishonestly—he was standing right there actively trying to hand over cash worth more than the fuel!
The Result: Because the police treated a civil contract dispute as a criminal theft, the arrest was entirely unlawful. The driver later took legal action against the police force, winning a formal apology and a £5,000 settlement.
@SteveLovesAmmo@Li13937Lisa This ban has nothing to do with protecting children. They still allow access to the far Left social media platform Bluesky. Even though it is a clear danger to children. It's all about indoctrinating and pushing their woke agenda.
CSAM - Child Sexual Abuse Material.
This is so absolutely insane that this is happening.
But don’t you worry — 16-year-old kids in the United Kingdom never see this on platforms like BlueSky.
They’re hiding the truth from them.
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