The Stasi spying on children: It's an Orwelllian new scheme -  a State snooper for EVERY child in Scotland compiling a dossier on their family life... and it has chilling implications for us all

Just imagine that you are a parent and one of your daughters cuts the hair off the Barbie dolls belonging to her younger sister. Cue screaming, shouting and tears before bedtime. But it’s the kind of thing that happens in families, isn’t it?
In later years the crew-cut Barbies will be chuckled about over Sunday lunch. ‘Do you remember when . . .’
But now imagine someone else learns about the Barbie incident — during a seemingly casual conversation with that hurt younger sister, say.
Being watched: The one million children in Scotland will be checked over by 'state guardians' as part of new laws in Children and Young People (Scotland) Act that comes into force from August
Being watched: The one million children in Scotland will be checked over by 'state guardians' as part of new laws in Children and Young People (Scotland) Act that comes into force from August
This person is not a relative or friend but an official appointed by the state, without your permission, and allowed to gather information about you and your children — in secret, if it is deemed necessary — and circulate it among other state agencies such as the police and social services.

It so happens that this snooper doesn’t possess the sense of proportion or humour that is essential when addressing the issue of warring children. This hacking-off of synthetic blonde locks appears a bit odd to our ‘state guardian’. Disturbing, in fact.
So, this government-appointed busybody opens a file on you and your family and enters a remark: ‘Older girl exhibiting signs of aggression against younger. Doll disfigurement may indicate deeper issues of anger management within family unit.’
And suddenly it isn’t just about Barbie dolls any more.
George Orwell understood this kind of thing: how the state, always wary, always contemptuous of the people it claims to represent, forever seeks to exercise control over them.
Knowledge is power — and what better knowledge can one have of a person than that pertaining to the inner workings of their family?
It just so happens that Nicola Sturgeon cut the hair off her sister’s Barbies during a childhood spat, according to that sibling, Gillian. The First Minister of Scotland denies the allegation but adds that if she did it — ‘and it’s an “if” ’ — she would have had ‘provocation’.
‘She (Gillian) behaved the way younger sisters tend to behave, but I love her dearly,’ said Miss Sturgeon.
Being British, and lovers of liberty and privacy, we are all glad that Miss Sturgeon never merited a mention in some state dossier for her alleged Barbie-barbering.
The SNP, led by Nicola Sturgeon, has introduced a law that indeed creates a state guardian for every one of Scotland¿s one million young people under the age of 18
The SNP, led by Nicola Sturgeon, has introduced a law that indeed creates a state guardian for every one of Scotland’s one million young people under the age of 18
But the leader of the Scottish National Party does not return the compliment.
Incredible as it seems, the government she leads — newly re-elected, though short of an overall majority in the Scottish Parliament — has introduced a law that indeed creates a state guardian for every one of Scotland’s one million young people under the age of 18.
The Children and Young People (Scotland) Act comes into force in August but is already being trialled across Scotland. If it is seen as a success, inevitably there will be those who will argue for it to be introduced south of the border.
For children under five, this so-called Named Person will be their health visitor; for older children the most likely candidate is their head teacher. These Named Persons are just like the one in the scenario above.
Intelligence-gatherers, imposed on each and every family by the State, they are able to mould perceptions — often in secret — of the families allotted to them.
There is no right of appeal against their findings — indeed, no automatic right to know what those findings are — and no way to prevent their judgments spreading out into the state bureaucracy via a soon-to-be-created mass database.
The idea is that these people will provide a ‘single point of contact’ for those concerned about a child, including its parents. No longer will a boy or girl in distress be allowed to ‘fall between the cracks’ created by different agencies.
But this is a benign interpretation of something regarded by opponents as profoundly sinister in its ambition and scope.
Among others, doctors and dentists will be compelled to surrender information on youngsters in a move that tears down the concept of patient confidentiality.
Taxi drivers, too, if they are employed on council contracts to transport children, will be compelled to relate anything ‘of interest’.
This SNP-inspired ‘McStasi’ is not there simply to stop harm coming to children. Its remit, according to the legislation that has given it life, is to promote child ‘wellbeing’.
In that single, elastic word lies the danger of this project. Because when a Named Person is looking to improve the life of a child, as opposed to saving him or her from abuse and death, there is no end to how he or she may interfere in family life.
Instead of focusing on a few exceptionally vulnerable children, the ‘wellbeing’ test will make every child in Scotland a potential target for official intervention.
Doctors and dentists will be compelled to surrender information on youngsters in a move that tears down the concept of patient confidentiality as part of the scheme
Doctors and dentists will be compelled to surrender information on youngsters in a move that tears down the concept of patient confidentiality as part of the scheme