
Social media sites are being used to squeeze more benefits from our useless state
It's bad enough that the ruling regime is so deluded. But in the long run, something else may be worse. The state does not understand the internet and social media.
When it is not censoring political speech under rules those implementing them do not understand, and putting British users' data at inevitable new risk from attackers, the state is misunderstanding, on quite an epic scale, how fast information can travel within online groups. And what those groups contain.
When a good number of Australian retirees realised they might be able to claim a British state pension, despite having worked in this county for only a handful of years decades ago, they swiftly mobilised online to line up with their hands out for free money. Australian websites and newspapers made guides about how to get the money their readers were owed. Many of those explanatory pieces began with phrases like 'this may sound like a scam' or 'it may appear too good to be true.'
The British state is analogue, ancient. The modern world is fast moving and online. People make communities about all kinds of things: it would be strange, in a way, if some did not form communities around getting every penny you possibly could from the British taxpayer.
Take, for instance, the ballooning numbers of people shifted from unemployment benefits into the labyrinthine world of incapacity benefits, personal independence payments and the like. Many of the particular schemes and subsidies offered to people who get PIP are essentially without parallel in the developed world.
The very complexity of the system – its bizarre illogicality – might have appealed to a genius in the treasury a decade ago. The more complex it is, the fewer people can claim. But of course, in the modern world, that is not true.
Instead, the more complex the system, the better a given claimant could be coached by supportive Facebook groups and personalities on TikTok. Savvy benefit claimants and asylum seekers use online communities and their abundant free time to generate and refine scripts for getting ever more out of the state.
It has been known for years that anyone arriving in Britain on a small boat or claiming asylum will have at least glanced at a checklist prepared either by people smugglers themselves, or by law firms and charities acting apparently in their interests.
They will have watched the TikToks; they will have been in the Facebook or Telegram groups.
How else would they all know what to say? I am a member of a banned political party; I'm an ethnic or religious minority; I am gay and my sexuality will get me killed back home; and so on.
If you yourself want free money, tell someone working for the British state that you are suicidally depressed, suffer regular attacks of anxiety, and that you can barely leave the house. You may not get any cash but, as the Facebook groups will tell you, there's no harm in trying.
The state is completely helpless in the face of YouTube, TikTok, Reddit communities and Facebook and Telegram groups. The people who want free money have access to Google and ChatGPT; the clever ones will get the free money. Now that's happening at scale, there really isn't a social contract any more.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
16 minutes ago
- The Independent
We're prepared if protests turn violent, police say ahead of string of anti-migrant demonstrations
Police chiefs have warned they are ready to 'mobilise significant and specialist resources' if unrest breaks out at a string of anti-migrant protests planned at hotels housing asylum seekers. The National Police Chiefs' Council (NPCC) is working with forces across the country and monitoring intelligence in preparation for a fresh wave of protests on Friday, with demonstrations planned at up to 14 hotels across the country. It comes as the Metropolitan Police is also expected to come under pressure on Saturday when a National March for Palestine is planned in the capital. A separate pro-Palestine Action rally could result in mass arrests with 500 people expected to hold signs saying 'I oppose genocide, I support Palestine Action' in defiance of anti-terror laws. Anti-migrant protesters are expected to return to The Bell Hotel in Epping, Essex, on Friday, where violence erupted last month after an Ethiopian refugee was charged with sexual assault for allegedly attempting to kiss a 14-year-old girl. Demonstrators are also set to return to the Britannia Hotel in Canary Wharf, where a group wearing face masks and carrying smoke bombs made a 'concerted effort' to break in last weekend. Other anti-migrant demonstrations are planned at hotels in Birmingham, Wolverhampton, Leeds and Norwich, among others, in what is being billed as UK-wide protests to 'abolish the asylum system'. Organisers have said the events will be 'locally led peaceful protests ' with no masks and no alcohol in posters shared widely on social media. Ahead of the widespread action, Chief Constable BJ Harrington, chair of the NPCC Operations Coordination Committee, said: 'We have robust and well-tested proactive plans in place, with the ability to mobilise significant and specialist resources, if necessary. "Public order response officers will be supported by investigation teams who will gather evidence and ensure those responsible for any acts of criminality, should they occur, are identified and held to account. 'Policing is not anti-protest, we are anti-crime and we will continue to work with local communities to ensure that they are safe and serious disruption is prevented.' The Police Federation, which represents rank and file officers, has warned that another summer of unrest places forces and officers under strain. 'Public order duties often mean long shifts, cancelled leave, missed family time and real risk,' a spokesman added. 'That takes its toll. This isn't just about numbers; it's about resilience, wellbeing, and a system under strain.' It comes ahead of the possibility of yet more mass arrests in London on Saturday, after the Met vowed to continue its crackdown on those showing support for Palestine Action. Campaign group Defend Our Juries has said more than 500 people are ready to be arrested by holding placards supporting the banned direct-action group in Parliament Square. They have warned their demonstrations will continue until a legal challenge over its proscription as a terror group is heard at the High Court in November. At least 221 people have been arrested across the country under terror laws for supporting Palestine Action since it was banned in July, with ten people charged so far. Despite plans for a large-scale demonstration with the 'intention of placing a strain on the police and the wider criminal justice system', a spokesperson for the Met said they are prepared for 'any eventuality' and anyone showing support for the group should expect to be arrested. Vicki Evans, senior national coordinator for Prevent and Pursue at Counter Terrorism Policing, said that they have 'robust plans' in place to respond to activity in support of Palestine Action. 'At this time, it remains illegal to be a member of or encourage support for the group Palestine Action,' she added. 'This legislation is specific to that group and does not interfere with the right to protest in support of the Palestinian cause. 'Operational plans are in place to ensure this right can be preserved over the coming days with protests expected in several major cities, including London.' Despite pressures on prison capacity, a Ministry of Justice spokesman insisted the system is prepared to 'act quickly' if more cells are needed. Officials will not hesitate to use contingency measures if they are faced with a sudden influx to the prison estate, The Independent understands. This could include activating Operation Early Dawn, which allows defendants to be held in police cells until prison beds become available. 'The swift and coordinated response to last year's unrest shows the criminal justice system is prepared to act quickly if needed to maintain stability and keep the public safe,' the spokesperson added.


The Independent
16 minutes ago
- The Independent
Fact check: Bank has held rates four out of nine times since Labour took power
The Labour Party has claimed that since it was elected to Government, the Bank of England has cut interest rates 'five times in a row'. The party said: 'Interest rates have now been cut five times in a row since Labour came into power.' The message was also shared in a social media graphic which read: 'Interest rates have been cut five times in a row with Labour.' Evaluation The Bank of England has cut rates five times since Labour got into power. But these cuts were not at consecutive meetings of the Bank's rate setters. At four meetings – every other meeting since July 2024 – the Bank has actually decided to hold rates unchanged. The facts Interest rates in the UK are not set by the Government, but by an independent nine-person committee run by the Bank of England. This group is called the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) and it meets eight times a year. Since Labour got into power in early July 2024, the MPC has made nine separate decisions on rates. The committee has cut rates on every other occasion it has met since the election – starting on August 1 2024 – with the most recent cut being confirmed on August 7 2025. That has produced five cuts in total. But at the other four meetings the MPC decided to hold rates unchanged. By saying 'in a row' it is possible that Labour means that there have not been any interest rate hikes in between the cuts. However, this ignores all the times that the MPC has actively voted to leave rates unchanged. At the time of publication Labour had not responded to an email asking it to clarify how the five cuts are considered to be 'in a row'. Links


Daily Mail
16 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Report: Britain forced to hire an US plane to spy on Gaza
Britain has been forced to hire an American plane to conduct spying missions over Gaza due to a shortage of RAF aircraft, it has been revealed. The Ministry of Defense (MoD) is said to be paying a contractor based in Nevada to look for hostages in the Palestinian territory. But RAF sources told the newspaper that none of its Shadow R1 aircraft are stationed at RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus, around 230 miles north of Gaza. They are said to be assigned to other missions or undergoing maintenance, sparking concerns about the UK's sovereign intelligence-gathering capabilities. Questions have also been asked about the privatization of UK intelligence-gathering in Gaza, at a time when Britain is taking a tougher stance towards Israel. The American aircraft, a Hawker Beechcrat B300 registered as N6147U, has previously been used by the US military in Iraq. It is contractor-owned and contractor-operated, which means British military pilots do not fly it. The MoD did not comment on the reported lease of the aircraft from a subsidiary of Sierra Nevada Corporation - one of the world's largest military contractors. But it said it conducts surveillance flights for the sole purpose of locating hostages, with the UK in control of what information is passed to c. Only information relating to hostage rescue is passed to the relevant authorities, the MoD added, without expanding further in order to protect operational security. Sir Keir Starmer recently announced Britain will recognize a Palestinian state within weeks unless Israel allows more aid into Gaza and agrees to a ceasefire. The Prime Minister hit out at 'appalling scenes' of starvation in Gaza amid Israel's blockade of the territory. Earlier this year, the UK Government sanctioned two far-right Israeli ministers over 'repeated incitements of violence' against Palestinians in the West Bank. Liberal Democrat MP Helen Maguire, the party's defense spokeswoman, said the MoD's use of a private US firm for surveillance flights 'raises alarm bells'. She added: 'The shortage of RAF aircraft for this purpose is alarming. 'There are serious questions to answer about whether this is a direct result of failures of the UK Government to properly invest in these capabilities. 'More broadly, it's right that the UK is supporting efforts to locate the hostages. 'But the Government must outline what steps it has taken to ensure Israel can't use UK-sourced intelligence for its military operations in Gaza.