Because the government limit the money they can charge advertisers, to level the playing field for the other commercial channels, since ITV went from being a network of regional broadcasters to 1 national entity (or at least that's what they say).So why can't ITV fund local news through advertising then? Why sponge off the taxpayer?
That's even more retarded.
Let me get this logic straight
1) The government stop ITV charging a market rate for advertising.
2) ITV can't fund programming that is actually popular as a result.
3) The government then wants to step in and subsidise this programming
4) They do this by siphoning money off a non-commercial broadcaster.
Net result - inefficient market created by the government, subsidised by the government. Potentially free programming now becomes feepayer-dependent programming through governmental interference in two areas.
What a state.
"Oh.. we'll just violate this part of the constitution once for the greater good. You don't mind do you? We need to observe these potential terrorists to keep ypu safe!"
I think the problem with your argument is here.
First of all, the UK doesn't have a "constitution," as you or I would understand it. But let's put that issue aside.
Your argument assumes, essentially, that people have some kind of fundamental right to not be photographed while in public--and that CCTV cameras violate this right.
To the best of my knowledge, no such right exists, anywhere. Or ever has existed, anywhere.
Not only is there no such constitutional guarantee in Western countries--I'm not even sure that it's against the ordinary laws of most countries to photograph people while they're out in public. Not only is the slope not slippery--there is no slope.
I know there's no such law here in Canada. I found that out when my teaching assistants' union went on strike. Some asshole drove his car right through our picket line, and then parked it nearby. I happened to have a camera, so I went over and took a picture of his car and license plate.
At that point, the asshole got out of his car, got in my face, and demanded that I hand over my film , claiming that I was violating the Criminal Code: he even quoted a numbered section. I told him that, to the best of my knowledge, I was acting perfectly within my rights, and if he thought I had committed a crime, then we could go down to the cop shop and let them sort it out. Eventually, he backed down.
I looked it up afterward. Not only could I not find a section of the Criminal Code dealing with photographing people in public--I couldn't find the section to which the asshole had referred. He just made it up.
When you're out in public, you're just that: out in public. People can watch you. People can listen to you. People can photograph you. If you don't want anyone observing you, then stay in your private residence, with the curtains closed. That's where the limit lies.
Some kind of legal right to privacy while out in public would actually be an intolerable infringement on other people's freedoms. It would essentially give you the right to tell other people where they can look, and where they can't; what they can photograph, and what they can't.
It would essentially give you the power of a king to command that his subjects avert their eyes, and not look directly at him. Now, where would that power come from?
^But in both of those cases, the government is just doing what private citizens are free to do.
A suspicious wife, for example, is free to hire a private investigator to have her husband followed and photographed.
And I have a hard time seeing the force behind FPAlpha's example. It sounds to me like he's arguing that people should have a right to keep their public indiscretions private, which is a contradiction in terms.
Just as an aside: my father has actually done the equivalent of suing the government over taxes, and eventually won his case. In my experience, in such situations, a large institution like a government would be more likely to try to punish a successful plaintiff by simply dragging its heels, and making the whole process as expensive and difficult as possible. That, after all, is what large institutions are best at.
The examples cited by Bob the Skutter are interesting because they illustrate something that Michel Foucault talked about in his book Discipline and Punish: namely, the "margin of tolerated illegality."
Bob may regard his examples as "petty" offences--mere illegalities, instead of actual crimes.
But who decides what's petty? If I can't find a place to park, then the selfish and thoughtless people who parked just a little outside the lines may be causing me an enormous inconvenience. And their pig-like squealing when they got tickets based on CCTV evidence would be music to my ears.
Similarly, people who send their children to schools without paying taxes to support those schools, or who commit welfare fraud, may not seem to be committing very serious crimes individually. But these seemingly petty individual acts can snowball into very serious drains on the finances of the institutions involved.
In such a case, it seems to me that using CCTV evidence would be a cost-effective way of cracking down. Essentially, it would substitute cheap technology for expensive manpower. It's no different, in principle, from substituting speed cameras for police constables manning speed traps.
CCTV does not annoy me, but what I find genuinely sinister and unnecessary is the anti photography rule in the Cabot Circus shopping centre. A security goon approached me.
You misunderstand, they still lived in the city, still owned a house in the catchment area and were still paying their council tax in the area, one child was already at the school and wanted their younger child to go there. There was no fraud involved, they weren't dodging taxes. They were simply trying to keep their kids at the same school, and if they'd been asked about it they could have explained. Instead they had them investigated.
And while we're at it, I think those sorts of things should have limits placed on them for the general public too.
Also the parking thing I was talking about was automated (I believe), It didn't matter if they simply had the bumper on the white line, or actually covered 2 spaces automatic fine.
And while we're at it, I disagree in general with speed cameras too. A police officer can make a judgement of whether you're driving safely, and just going with the flow of traffic, a camera just sees you're doing 55 in a 50 zone and you get a fine. Which personally I believe is wrong, because you could be driving dangerously if you're not keeping up with traffic.
As for CCTV,relax.The fucking government can't even make the buses run on time,I somehow doubt they are capable of running some giant big brother type operation.![]()
Exactly. Every camera generates 24hrs of footage a day. No-one watches all that, you'd have to employ half the country to watch the other half all day every day.
Guh? That makes me feel all stabby. Most of those articles do actually.two Orthodox Jews complain that automatic light sensors in the stairwell area of their apartment are breaching their Human Rights
Just my opinion on the original question..What's happened to the UK is what's happened to most western countries.
The death of common sense.
I'm not going to make a sweeping attack on the cloying death-grip of political correctness,but it seems to me that people have lost the ability to think,feel and act without first refering to some rulebook,mission-statement or set of ministry guidelines.
Therefore you get those news stories that make your jaw drop,those stories regarding social-workers,teachers,police,the kind of things that convince you that the world is disappearing up it's own arse.
I live in Ireland,but we get UK news and TV so I'm familiar with the way things are in your country,believe me,it's no different here.
As for CCTV,relax.The fucking government can't even make the buses run on time,I somehow doubt they are capable of running some giant big brother type operation.![]()
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