I used to think going from the US to the UK was like escaping from prison. Damn, these days it's the other way round? How have you guys let it come to this?
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Originally posted by expat View Post...
England has gone from being one of the most liberal and private countries in the world, to one of the most controlled and spied-upon.Down with racism. Long live miscegenation!Comment
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Originally posted by expat View PostIt didn't start then. Personally I remember well the Jamie Bulger case. When it was solved with CCTV footage, I remember thinking Oh Bugger, that's CCTV here to stay.
The Soham murders meant a summer of the papers going on and on about "think of the children" and "no expenditure is too great if it saves one child from coming to harm". That gave the excuse for national databases.
That Twin Towers malarkey got the ID cards ball rolling.My all-time favourite Dilbert cartoon, this is: BTW, a Dumpster is a brand of skip, I think.Comment
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Originally posted by NotAllThere View PostWell, if you will vote Labour.Comment
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Originally posted by Payload Bollington View PostI used to think going from the US to the UK was like escaping from prison. Damn, these days it's the other way round? How have you guys let it come to this?
Goddammit or some other Merkinism
You are no good at sockpuppetry, try another approach, please. Pretty please.My all-time favourite Dilbert cartoon, this is: BTW, a Dumpster is a brand of skip, I think.Comment
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Originally posted by RichardCranium View PostThat was one of the three.
The Soham murders meant a summer of the papers going on and on about "think of the children" and "no expenditure is too great if it saves one child from coming to harm". That gave the excuse for national databases.
That Twin Towers malarkey got the ID cards ball rolling.Comment
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Originally posted by Peoplesoft bloke View PostVery interesting... But ultimately it's because there are enough authoritarians and thick "if you have nothing to hide" twats about along with people who don't give it a second thought.
When there are mass demos, e.g. against invasion of Iraq, the Gov trots out the line that is takes hard, unpopular measure because they're (supposedly) 'right'. I'm pretty sure it then justified ID cards, for a number of ever changing reasons, on the basis they were 'popular'.
IMO, any party in government too long loses the plot.
And don't look at me; I never voted for this shower.Comment
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Originally posted by expat View PostIt didn't start then. Personally I remember well the Jamie Bulger case. When it was solved with CCTV footage, I remember thinking Oh Bugger, that's CCTV here to stay.Comment
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Originally posted by Peoplesoft bloke View PostI had a ahem....debate with her indoors about CCTV at the weekend. We were watching Police Camera gotcha you slaaaag or something similar - she's all busy extoling the virtues of CCTV. I pointed out that we couldn't watch these crimes if CCTV had eradicated them. I admit the CCTV makes crimes easier to solve, but there ain't a lot of evidence to suggest it stops crime.Comment
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Originally posted by minestrone View PostPeople who are caught bang to rights with CCTV will usually plead guilty thus taking pressure off the police, legal aid, witnesses and the court system to pursue a prosecution.Comment
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