A world without crime: the slide-deck …

… but would we want it?

This slide-deck is a sandwich around a shorter, focussed and market-ready proposal I made a few years ago. A brief selection of slides can be found in the gallery at the top of this whitepaper.

The full deck with a downloadable pdf can be found below.

The questions we ask are twofold:

  1. How can we rid the world of most crime in two decades from now?

  2. If we managed to achieve this goal, would most of us consider it desirable that we did?

Neo-terrorism on the Individual (NoI)

Background, content, and links

An early online whitepaper on GB 2 Earth which first mentioned — and then incorporated into its philosophy — the concept of Neo-Terrorism on the Individual (NoI) can be found here:

A more recent one, with a connected series of proposed apps, can be found here:

It specifically mentions NoI here:

What follows is the lead-in to the first, draft proposal for a PhD on the subject, presented about six years ago, separately, to two English universities.

One responded supportively. The second, my own, despite me having my dissertation supervisor’s agreement to proceed, didn’t even reply to my email and enquiry.

Neo-terrorism on the individual (NOI) in a 21st century Western liberal democratic context

Cyber-bullying and democracy-gaming deepened, in an age of encroaching #ai

A proposed PhD investigation into the visual language and communication systems of neo-terrorism on the individual, in the framework of the picture superiority effect and nudge theory, and the resulting weaponisation of a mental distress aimed at modifying democratic behaviours and discourse in Western liberal democracies and their citizens

Introduction to this research proposal

My name is Mil Williams. I have a recent MA in International Criminal Justice from Liverpool John Moores University, where I took a particular interest in UN law, crimes of the powerful, surveillance and sousveillance, and the repurposing of mental health legislation for criminal justice ends.

My dissertation discussed the relationship between the modern British state and surveillance understood in its widest sense.

The four end-goals of the PhD research proposed today are:

1. To develop a body of thought and praxis which supports those who have policing responsibilities across Britain and the EU, in order that they may ultimately incorporate what this author has been recently describing as neo-terrorism on the individual (NOI) — ie cyber-bullying in the age of AI which serves to connect intimately the virtual and real worlds, to the clear detriment of sovereign subjects and their democracies — as a legal figure in legislations across the Continent, and ultimately globally.

2. Alongside the above goal, gain intellectual and financial support for developing not only the still nascent philosophies of intuitive-thought capture, evidencing, and validating, but also the software tools and platforms themselves which would deliver such possiblities.

3. With such tools to hand, and where legally evidenced and correctly validated, institute in the UK and the EU, and as a guiding principle at UN level, the legal figure of neo-terrorism on the individual as something properly detectable and punishable by law.

4. Assuming that in order for such a case to be made to a change in the law, the relevant software tools would also first need to be developed and tested, this then would form a key part of the proposed PhD research programme.