Whilst it is easy to get caught up in the jubilation over the Irish rejection of
the Lisbon Treaty, it behoves us to remember that, alas, the EU is still here
and still attempting to build
its new empire. A reminder of this comes from
Bruno Waterfield, who reports,
via EU Referendum (ahead of the curve as usual), that the EU now wants to
attempt to monitor blogging.
Blogs. Apparently MEPs, those people with all that cash, are worried about them. You see it is all a bit of a free for all. People can write blogs without applying for a licence or being approved by the proper authorities. Shocking isn’t it?
Euro-MPs want action: blogs with “malicious intentions or hidden agendas pose a danger”. Marianne Mikko, an Estonian centre-left MEP, is calling for something to be done in a report. Thanks to EU Referendum for this amazing story.
“Blogs are publicly available web pages, with personal views and links expressing the opinions and observations of a particular person, usually on a specific topic or theme and are usually updated regularly reflecting the personality of the author,” so says the Parliament’s website.
How terrible. Just imagine, anybody can think what they like or say what they like, and all by themselves too. People can (easily, what’s worse) publicly write what they think online. And, what is really worrying is that other people might read it.
Ms Mikko: “The blogosphere has so far been a haven of good intentions and relatively honest dealing. However, with blogs becoming commonplace, less principled people will want to use them.”
“I think the public is still very trusting towards blogs, it is still seen as sincere. And it should remain sincere. For that we need a quality mark, a disclosure of who is really writing and why.”
“Hidden agenda” is code here for not trusting people to be able to judge for themselves over arguments put forward by others. It also tends to be the cry from those who are less than sure about being to carry the debate themselves. They think we are stupid and that those who disagree with their world view are malicious and dangerous.
Well, fuck me sideways; the EU wants to protect the people from those evil
bloggers! And in order to protect the people from
"malicious intentions or hidden agendas",
the EU wants to introduce a special mark to show that a blog has been approved
by our Soviet EU masters. And this will be
"a disclosure of who is really writing and why".
So, that will be an end to anonymous blogging then.
This is a fucking appalling imposition but hardly a surprise: we have, after
all, already seen proposed EU legislation
deliberately designed to target bloggers.
My Lord Cramner has a few words to say about this too.
Since when has one needed permission from the State to express more than one’s personal view? Are we about to surrender the freedom to blog to the EU’s licensing authorities? Will Euroblogs become the only permitted mechanism for placing information in the public domain? Goebbels would take great pride in this control of information and public opinion, for bloggers who are deemed to incite hatred against the EU will most likely be classified as terrorists, with terrorism now defined succinctly as 'acts which seriously affect the political, economic or social structures of a country or organisation governed by public international law.'
So, the EU is concerned about certain ‘pressure groups’ who may wish to disseminate ‘their message’, and this may be seen as ‘a threat’. And there must be ‘disclosure of who is really writing and why’. And when these criteria are fulfilled, the blogger will be issued with an EU ‘quality mark’ in order that he or she may continue blogging to their heart’s content.
Cranmer can hardly wait to see if his august blog shall be awarded such a mark, which he would be proud to display amongst his other awards and honours, if only as a perpetual reminder of the identity of Caesar—his temporal sovereign, lord and master.
On the other hand,
Jon Worth thinks that this whole outrage is a fuss over nothing.
Get a grip folks. What’s the first thing to do when someone in the EP sounds off? Look at what sort of document we’re talking about… In this case it’s an EP resolution - you can find the original report and a list of amendments here. It’s not legislation (i.e. not a Directive or a Regulation). It’s only a little bit more formal than an EDM in Westminster - and there 87 MPs have signed one complementing Fidel Castro.
Yes, and
I was happy to call them a bunch of
fucking cunts too. Just because these arseholes are not affecting the rest
of us with their poisonous opinions does not mean that they aren't a bunch of
fucking cunts and should not be called out as such.
Does Marianne Mikko know much about blogging? I doubt it. Did anyone in Brussels bother to lobby her about the parts of her resolution about blogging? Probably not, as any lobbyist who’s any good knows resolutions are rather a waste of time (and rather something for journalists and British eurosceptics to get into a lather about).
Jon, you should know as well as I do that just because a politician knows less
than fuck all about a particular subject does not mean that they will not try to
legislate. Amongst anything else, if the actors of the EU had the first fucking
clue about economics, they wouldn't be trying to stifle free trade.
Plus if Helen and Bruno had dug a bit deeper they would have found, among the amendments to the resolution, amendments proposed by Maria Badia i Cutchet cutting back the text and saying only clarity is needed when it comes to legal protection for bloggers, and suggestions to delete the article about voluntary standards for bloggers from Ignasi Guardans Cambó and Claire Gibault.
That's all well and good, but that does not mean that we should not be on our
guard: I absolutely guarantee that the EU will attempt to constrain blogging at
some point. Apart from anything else, these bastard control freaks cannot bear
to leave anything unregulated.
At present, EU Directives and Regulations control much of the minutiae of
people's lives (little though they may realise it); the difficulty of pinning
down bloggers has so far defeated the Eurocrats.
However, that does not mean that they will not try, as the
Proposal for a Council Framework Decision on combating racism and xenophobia
[PDF] showed quite clearly.
But the really bad news for bloggers is in Article 10: Jurisdiction (I will publish the whole document, but I need to get some clearance first). [Emphasis mine.]
Article 10
Jurisdiction
- Each Member State shall take the necessary measures to establish its jurisdiction with regard to the conduct referred to in Articles 1 and 2 where the conduct has been committed:
- (a) in whole or in part within its territory; or
- (b) by one of its nationals; or
- (c) for the benefit of a legal person [i.e. a company, charity, etc—DK] that has its head office in the territory of that Member State.
- When establishing jurisdiction in accordance with paragraph 1(a), each Member State shall take the necessary measures to ensure that its jurisdiction extends to cases where the conduct is committed through an information system and:
- (a) the offender commits the conduct when physically present in its territory, whether or not the conduct involves material hosted on an information system in its territory;
- (b) the conduct involves material hosted on an information system in its territory, whether or not the offender commits the conduct when physically present in its territory.
That's right, a blog is "an information system" and it doesn't matter where it's hosted; you can still go to gaol.
As I pointed out when I last wrote about this, if this legislation had been in force at the time, John Band would not simply have taken down Shot By Both Sides: he could be in prison. Further, under provision of this framework, if it was determined that the company that he worked for could have stopped his action, it could have been compulsorily wound up.
This is, in and of itself, a terribly dangerous piece of legislation, but there is a far more worrying aspect to this whole debate; if the EU is allowed to make criminal law, then what use is our veto on Criminal Justice and Home Affairs? And do you want your criminal law made by an unelected Commission; a Commission made up of people like Mandelson? If these people make bad law, there is nothing that we can do about it: neither our current nor future governments can repeal it or alter it (at least, it would be so difficult as to be 99.99% certain to fail).
And where does it stop? After all, the EU has also talked about criminalising "green crimes"; will your humble Devil soon be in a criminal court, charged with "denying anthropogenic global warming"?
Jon may dismiss this story as Europhobic scaremongering, but then a Europhile
who writes under his own name is hardly going to be censured. But I would
seriously recommend that other bloggers be really very careful about the
legislation emanating from the EU.
They will try to control us at some point, and we need to be ready for it...