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I disagree. These are exceptional powers (they deliberately negate several important rights like the right to know the charges against you and have a lawyer present), and if they are being misused, they should be taken away.

They are justified to the population on the basis of extreme measures for extreme opponents - if that is shown to be a smokescreen and the security services to be inveterate liars, I think the population will be far less inclined to accept any calls for special terror laws.

The war on terror as an excuse just became rather more transparent.



I'd rather see these powers as an institutionalized state of emergency. They're permanent -- there's no concept of "taking them away".

And I'm not so sure about the role of the population either. It's not exactly them who can either accept or not accept the call for such laws.

If you had someone, on a national ticket, who would openly call for their abolishment, matters would be different, of course.

But then -- how do you get onto a national ticket? A hysterical, broken democracy is a hard thing to fix from inside.




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