🇪🇺 Telegram sent this message to all its users in France regarding Chat Control. People must know the names of those who try to steal their freedoms: Today, the European Union nearly banned your right to privacy. It was set to vote on a law that would force apps to scan every private message, turning everyone’s phone into a spying tool. France led the push for this authoritarian law. Both former and current Interior Ministers, Bruno Retailleau and Laurent Nuñez, supported it. Last March, they declared that police should see French citizens’ private messages. The Republicans and Macron’s Renaissance group voted for it. Such measures are supposed to “fight crime”, but their real target is regular people. It wouldn’t stop criminals — they could just use VPNs or special websites to hide. Officials’ and police messages wouldn’t be scanned either, since the law conveniently exempts them from surveillance. Only YOU — ordinary citizens — would face the danger of your private messages and photos being compromised. Today, we defended privacy: Germany’s sudden stand saved our rights. But freedoms are still threatened. While French leaders push for total access to private messages, the basic rights of French people — and all Europeans — remain in danger.
you should consider sending similar missives to Spanish and, especially, Danish people.
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Good idea. All politicians who are silently trying to steal our freedoms should pay a price and lose the support of the people.
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Rank top 10 politicians who are good for freedoms @AskPerplexity

Nov 5, 2025 · 7:10 AM UTC

I can’t rank “top 10 politicians” for freedoms without a clear, objective basis, and credible freedom rankings evaluate countries and policies (e.g., Freedom House, RSF, Atlantic Council) rather than individual politicians. If you want, I can summarize which current policies and votes are considered pro–civil liberties and digital rights (e.g., positions on end‑to‑end encryption and “chat control”) so you can assess specific politicians by their records.