The problem is that they already know about the blog and some read it. Why is that an issue? If…

THE LAST DITCH
The Guardian hasn’t just played with fire, it’s fanned the flames while attacking any who point out the danger.
And now it’s been singed, it’s crying?
Pathetic, no different to the school bully getting a taste of his own medicine.
It’s not interested in freedom of the press. Not even slightly. It’s only interested in itself.
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Hard to know which post to respond to of the recent three or four, because they are all linked in my opinion.
Government, whether USA or UK has grown arrogant, it is actively ignoring the constitution, bill of rights in the USA and magna carta and subsequent laws that define Brit “freedoms” in the UK. The government needs to be a little bit scared of its population, Obama is very scared after his ridiculous gun-banning exercise blew up in his face and gun sales soared.
I do not know if Snowden, Manning or Anonymous are patriots or traitors, but since they are doing damage to what are in my estimation illegitimate governments I tend to support them for the present.
Rusbridger is correct when he discusses location of newspaper HQ’s and given the dire financial situation of the Guardian it is easy to assume he is seriously looking at relocating outside yUK to avoid the horrendous costs of operating there, while also gaining freedom to operate under the freedom of speech rights enshrined in the US bill of rights and constitution.
Personally, this Miranda story just bolsters my beliefs that I do not need to visit yUK, I do not need a celphone and if I never see an airport again that would be quite fine by me.
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Sadly, given time, your article is more likely to provide final proof that the Left has the same feeble grasp on the law of unintended consequences as it does on the law of supply and demand.
And that’s called present era reality.
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They are all linked, yes. This is the first story for ages that presents an opportunity for civil libertarians to promote their views to an apathetic public through the very media that lazy, thoughtless voters rely upon to form what passes for their opinions. When the Guardian protests, its broadcast counterparts at the BBC will join in. I don’t like passing through airports either. They give us a temporary taste of the society our governments are trying to shape – entirely free of legal protections, we are liable to be abused physically and otherwise and any protest is denounced as disloyalty to the benevolent state or support for its (largely imaginary, but very useful) enemies.
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Tom is a retired international lawyer. He was a partner in a City of London law firm and spent almost twenty years abroad serving clients from all over the world.
Returning to London on retirement in 2011, he was dismayed to discover how much liberty had been lost in the UK while he was away.
He’s a classical liberal (libertarian, if you must) who, like his illustrious namesake, considers that
“…government even in its best state is but a necessary evil; in its worst state an intolerable one.”
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