If a new social media campaign has its way, the United Kingdom will end up looking like Airstrip One, the official name for the island nation in the dystopian novel 1984.
Starting innocently enough on sites like Twitter, Glasgow police have created the “THINK” campaign to nudge social media users into determining if the material they post is “true, hurtful, illegal, necessary, or kind.” While this may seem harmless enough to the sensitive Left, many are wondering what exactly constitutes “true, hurtful, illegal, necessary, or kind” in the force’s book.
Illegal may seem clear cut enough, but what about, say, hurtful? Is telling somebody they are wrong over the Internet, a famously contentious place for debates, hurtful? If so, what of it? Why is that any busy of law enforcement?
More disturbingly, some are pondering how the force will react to internet users who politely disregard the campaign’s directives and go about their business as they normally do. Will they just let them be, or will they have to pay such users a visit, like police have done in other cases?
Turn to the next page for more info:
Remember, remember, the 5th of November. The gunpowder treason and plot.
UK is no longer. Itsd a danger to visit there wit muslims running streest.
You gonna bring your stick…sunshine?
Wow it seriously sucks to live in stsaes freedom of speach is totally gone , good luck US
Uk is a bunch of wimps for ever giving up the guns ..
The Clintons are controlling the police overseas. Get a clue people!
They took your guns away and this is what you got instead,take your country back!
Hopeing a nuke goes off in the UK they deserve nothing.
perhaps the people or citizens should pay a visit to them…
WE OWN YOU..!
I’ve read about that !!!