Look how quickly you diverge into talking about stuff that have nothing to do with freedom. You do not have a real argument here. And the idea that somehow cops in the UK are somehow better than US ones is laughable, when the UK ones are afraid to arrest rapists. The US is working on fixing it's cop problem, in our slow, plodding way. I know very well that most cops aren't good. But then neither are UK cops. Both will enforce evil laws if they are told to without question.And yet, those officers very often continue on in their job, usually without any real consequences. When a system so consistently produces a result, and that result is shrugged off and accepted, it is a part of the system. Also, the end result is that you might be somewhat inconvenienced in the UK for stupid shit, or you might be shot dead for no real reason in the US. If I had to move to one or the other, I know which way I'd lean. And that's before we even get into metal detectors at school and cops dragging kids out of classrooms, the tens of thousands who die preventably each year because funding healthcare is evil, or the ridiculous political system that basically forces you to accept one of two ideologies or go ignored. To my mind, those all impinge more on freedom more than whether the cops scrutinise my social media.
The US doesn't promise safety. It promises dangerous freedom. Freedom, shockingly, isn't free. That' isn't just a cute statement about supporting veterans/the troops. It means that no, there is no government heathcare. No, there will be people walking around with guns. Yes, there will be people with abominable viewpoints espousing them on public streets.
The UK, meanwhile, has almost nothing free about it. It has almost no limitations on government, limits speech, has a state religion, and I could go on. It isn't a free country.