It seems that some members of the government are not happy that legislation to allow innocent people to be sentenced to 42 days in jail failed. From the BBC<\/a>:<\/p>\n [Security Minister Lord West] told peers that while some measures had been taken over the past 15 months to make Britain safer “this does not, I’m afraid, mean we are safe”.<\/p>\n he said: “The threat is huge. The threat dipped slightly and is now rising again with the context of ‘severe’, large complex plots, because we unravelled one the damage it caused to al-Qaeda actually faded slightly.<\/p>\n “They are now building up again. There is another great plot building up again and we are monitoring this.”<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Now, I am not fully sure what Lord West’s point in all this was, other than he is a supporter (albeit in strange circumstances) of the 42 day internment<\/span> detention plans.<\/p>\n With this in mind, it seems that Lord West is trying the age old trick of making people worried about a nebulous threat with the hope it will cloud their judgement. For this to work, you need to whip people up into a panic, then explain that “doing nothing” is bad so doing anything<\/strong> has to be good. (Sounds familiar<\/a>)<\/p>\n As is often the case, this is massively flawed.<\/p>\n For longer than I have been alive the UK has been under threat of a “huge, complex” terrorist plot. Since we became weak and frightened (and the terrorists stopped looking like “one of us”) there has been huge spending on the security services along with a massive increase in technical and legislative procedures to surveil and control the public. All<\/strong> of this has been done on the premise that it would reduce<\/strong> the threat from terrorists.<\/p>\n