

The BlockFather
23.3K posts

@robhallam9
Military Veteran and investor! #Bitcoin & #Crypto advocate! Founder - https://t.co/KNucoiNgXO - WA Ambassador - https://t.co/tTO6YL3QTq




🇬🇧 UK SURVEILLANCE STATE: THE DYSTOPIA NOBODY ORDERED Sir Keir Starmer promised a return to “grown-up politics” when Labour won the election. What he’s delivered is a creeping, tech-wrapped police state that would make Orwell choke on his morning tea. Remember when digital ID cards were an idea so radioactive even Tony Blair flinched? Starmer’s government just greenlit them - mandatory for right-to-work checks, and soon, maybe everything else. It’s being spun as “streamlining” services. Because nothing says efficiency like tagging the entire population like parcels. It’s not just that no one asked for this - it’s that no one was told. The digital ID plan wasn’t in the manifesto, not splashed across campaign posters. It’s being rolled out like malware - quietly, surgically, in the background while the public was distracted by cabinet reshuffles and the latest round of Labour MPs eating each other alive. And then there's the Online Safety Act. In theory? Protecting kids from harm. In practice? A censor’s wish list dressed up as moral panic. It gives regulators and tech platforms the power to scrub “lawful but harmful” content - an Orwellian phrase if there ever was one. Harmful to whom? Harmful how? That’s up to unelected bureaucrats and whichever AI bot Ofcom is outsourcing judgment to this week. Combine this with laws already on the books that let you be arrested for mean tweets, and the UK isn't tiptoeing into tyranny - it's sprinting. They're a few policy memos away from arresting grannies for spicy Facebook posts about potholes. Starmer, meanwhile, stands at the helm of this tightening noose and mutters vaguely about “patriotic renewal,” as if patriotic now means obedient, monitored, and mute. His defenders say he’s serious, thoughtful, diligent. Great. So is the average compliance officer at a bank. The problem isn’t just that he lacks charisma - it’s that he lacks any apparent fire for liberty, any appetite for questioning the ever-growing machinery of state control. You get the sense that if he were handed emergency powers in a crisis, he wouldn’t give them back. Not out of malice - just because it never occurred to him that maybe he should. This isn’t a man running a country. This is a manager running a bureaucracy. And the system he’s building isn’t built to serve the public - it’s built to monitor it, rate it, control it, and punish it. UK voters were told the adults were back in charge. But if this is adulthood - surveillance IDs, online censorship, algorithmic policing - then bring back the chaos. At least then, people were free to speak their minds without the police coming to arrest them. What’s being built isn’t leadership. It’s quiet, procedural dystopia. And the worst part? No one voted for it. The UK just woke up one morning and found itself living in it.






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⚠️ BUCKLE UP: The next 48 hours are critical for markets. Wednesday: U.S. PPI (Producer Prices) Thursday: The big one - CPI (Consumer Prices) Stagflation risk or bigger Fed cut fuel? These prints will set the tone for #Bitcoin & crypto market. 👀