Basingwerk wrote:
I’m sorry to break your illusions, but police officers, footballers, doctors, TV presenters, pop-stars, judges, politicians, magistrates, engineers and web-masters etc. can be the most twisted people in our midst.
Anyone else, Basingwerk?
This is barely relevant. The fact is, the British constitution is being dragged into disrepute by the sheer volume of new laws (I've heard the figure of 700 in the last decade) which put millions of ordinary people at risk of becoming criminals by going about their daily business. When the man in the street loses respect for the law, the system breaks down.
The vast majority of these laws are preventative - designed to stop something happening - when there are already perfectly good laws in place to act as a deterrent. You cannot go on sermonising "the law is the law - obey it or face the consequences", as you do Basingwerk, when so many people are beginning to question the very existence of all this legislation.
I, for one, despair at the damage so-called road safety law is doing to the relationship between police and public. It's a particularly important subject because it so visible, affecting so many decent folk who just want to get on with their lives.
Health & Safety has become the other great object of ridicule for similar reasons. No-one minds sensible precautions but when, as happened recently, a group of carol singers are told to move because they are obstructing a fire exit - which was actually one of several tracks in the middle of a large car park - one wonders if any sanity remains in the great god Health & Safety.
Of course when billions of pounds are poured into these new industries, complete with their self-serving propaganda machines, they make a convincing enough case to carry on their good work. I can only feel sorry for the likes of Basingwerk who are so easily taken in by it.
And if you want a second opinion, see
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0, ... 76,00.html