This comes from Unlock Democracy.

Modern Liberty - what's next?
The Convention on Modern Liberty took place this weekend across the UK. Thousands of people participated in person and online. The media have hailed it as a tremendous success.

The big question is "what's next?"

DO THIS TODAY: STOP CLAUSE 152!

The Coroners and Justice Bill is currently going through Parliament. The most outrageous part in this Bill is Clause 152, which would allow any Minister by order to take any information gathered for one purpose from anywhere, and use it for any other purpose.

Your information, your family's information, arbitrarily used without your consent or even knowledge. This is the very reverse of 'Data Protection'.

An 'Information Sharing Order', as defined in Clause 152, would permit your information to be trafficked and abused, not only all across government and the public sector - it would also reach into the private sector. And it would even allow transfer of information across international borders.

Write to your MP - www.WriteToThem.com makes it very easy - and tell him or her that you 'refuse consent to having your information shared under any information sharing order', and ask him or her to vote to have Clause 152 removed entirely from the Coroners and Justice Bill.

For more information see the Stop 152 page on our website. www.unlockdemocracy.org.uk

Spectrumites' angle -

This concern can be linked to the government's announcement on Feb 23, of a duty upon local government to share with "other agencies" information on autistic adults and all forms of disabled children, living locally. That is without permission, behind the folks' backs.

Yet, Mark Lever, Chief Executive of the NAS is not acknowledging that side of it at all. He said: "The failure of many local authorities to recognise the needs of people with autism made it absolutely necessary to try and create an autism law. Today, thanks to the overwhelming level of support galvanised by Cheryl Gillan MP's Autism Bill from our campaigners, across all the political parties and the 15 other autism charities we have been working with; we have achieved our major political goals. This is a landmark victory which could also have a far wider reaching impact on others in the disabled community. We warmly welcome the announcement and look forward to hearing the Government categorically reaffirm their commitment to transforming the lives of people affected by autism when the bill is debated in Parliament on Feb 27."