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  1. Well put Martyn. Message the Privacy Commissioner now people, let him know you agree with him.

    The track record when “the authorities” are presented with new tools and extra powers is that ‘purpose creep’ usually occurs. Govt. departments spy on citizens at meetings, sometimes using private contractors like Thompson and Clark. Taser and Pepper Spray become compliance and punishment devices rather than alternatives to lethal force. Armed Police units used in non urgent situations become intimidatory militarised squads in predominantly brown suburbs. Security Agencies use warrantless snooping to track NZ citizens exercising their freedom of speech, assembly and association, and on it goes.

    Terrorism Suppression (Control Orders) Bill will be no different and is a serious attack on legal rights for all of us snuck in on the popular disdain for the publicised targets of the Bill.

    Particularly with the example of the Christchurch massacre, these agencies cannot be trusted. They rely on the mindless, unengaged support for Authority from middle NZers. Resist this Bill all the way.

  2. Privacy commissioner might also like to wake up to many other privacy abuses occurring in NZ by government officials to the general public, who are not returning terrorists as well!

    1. In my view its just a progression of the surveillance laws we saw under the previous Nat led govt. Clamping down on people, making them afraid to protest or speak out of turn in case they end up with a label they don’t want. Personally I think its ugly stuff. Not helped by the MSM incessantly making excuses for them.

  3. This sounds a lot like the laws we are seeing in Australia under the Libs. Much the same focus and mentality which in my opinion is more about bullying the public than so called terrorism.

  4. Finally seeing the light, and for what it is, I notice.

    I opposed it firmly from the start.

    For once the Privacy Commissioner Mr Edwards takes a proper and firm position on a piece of legislation, I am impressed.

    And the arm twisted Greens agreed to the BS law draft. Hopeless, really hopeless and gutless.

  5. Aside from the obvious issues here, the other problem is that repressive laws tend eventually to cause the very radicalization that they are seeking to prevent.

  6. “You get the feeling all anyone has done is a ‘Lees-Galloway’ and read the Police spin sheet without understanding how it’s implemented.”
    and
    “This feels like the Oranga Tamariki uplift policy but with guns.”

    The two paragraphs that suggest cargo cult thinking is alive and well in ‘lil ‘ole NuZull that punches above its weight.

    I have complete faith in my officials. We’ve even given them as fancy a job title as we can dream up, and put in place robust processes and procedures to ensure good outcomes in this space going forward,

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