When did criticising policy make you a target of the state?
Why is a secret government unit policing public opinion?
What exactly is happening behind the scenes in government?
A secretive government unit, empowered by the Online Safety Act, is quietly flagging and suppressing online criticism of immigration policy. It operates behind closed doors. It is unelected. It is unaccountable. And it is being used to control the narrative under the guise of safety.
A front page Telegraph exposé, titled "Exposed: Labour’s plot to silence migrant hotel critics"reveals disturbing details .
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2025/07/31/exposed-labour-plot-silence-migrant-hotel-critics/
The article uncovers that a secretive Whitehall unit called NSOIT (the National Security and Online Information Team), formerly known as the Counter Disinformation Unit, has been used by Labour ministers in the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT) to flag and monitor social media posts that criticised migrant hotels, asylum seekers, or raised concerns about “two-tier policing.”
According to internal government emails dated August 3 - 4, 2024, during the peak of the Southport riots, officials actively flagged posts with “concerning narratives,” warning that they might inflame public tensions. These posts were then forwarded to platforms like TikTok, many of them labelled as urgent, despite simply reporting factual information such as hotel locations or referring to asylum seekers as “undocumented fighting-age males”.
One flagged example involved a user sharing a Freedom of Information (FOI) rejection letter regarding migrant hotel sites. Another was a video captioned “Looks like Islamabad but it’s Manchester,” flagged for fuelling racial stereotypes, yet still not unlawful under current speech laws.
Although the government insists it did not request content removals, civil liberties advocates, including Big Brother Watch and the Free Speech Union, argue that this behaviour amounts to censorship of lawful dissent, carried out by unelected officials with no statutory oversight, using the infrastructure created by the Online Safety Act.
This has the fingerprints of the 77th Brigade all over it, covert monitoring, narrative control, and a quiet war on the public's right to speak freely.
This is not safety. It’s censorship and control.
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Replies (9)
Well said nostr:npub1hwgw0uznr49t4gullpgfz4m5xnakl5a0l88m3k382xv7ys0tfmlsd503sg
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Every day I'm becoming more & more black pilled on the UK every day.
nostr:nevent1qqsffxtdh6zvwmsmvcuunqc4w98v8pu6qk8l900gr8tns8j37graexgpzamhxue69uhhyetvv9ujumn0wd68ytnzv9hxgtczyzaepels2vw54w4rnlu9py2hws60km7n4luulwx6yagencjpad807qcyqqqqqqgs0ay2e
nostr:nevent1qqsffxtdh6zvwmsmvcuunqc4w98v8pu6qk8l900gr8tns8j37graexgpzamhxue69uhhyetvv9ujumn0wd68ytnzv9hxgtczyzaepels2vw54w4rnlu9py2hws60km7n4luulwx6yagencjpad807qcyqqqqqqgs0ay2eThe government do the same to anyone who correctly claims that vaccines have deadly side effects (all in the name of safety, obviously)
Normies be like


So anti democracy, anti free speech and anti British?
What’s the punishment for treason?
Asking for a fren
I thought I'd take a look to see what The Guardian said but all I found was US bashing. Such a striking difference in journalistic practice. Kudos The Telegraph for reporting on UK censorship.
I think it's not a secret government unit anymore
😁