I don't know (You tell me, I tell You )Melchior Timmers wrote:Indeed hard to maintain. And what about photography during public air shows?
This seems to be expending on daily base ; in the worst case this might backfire hard as people will stay away (just like the flighttax here in the Netherlands, not exactly the same but in general the idea match)ehusmann wrote:.... What kind of freaky society are we living in these days?
Which makes matters even worse. This calls for arbitrary action. As you have read in the article, there are the weirdest examples where people now are being told not to even take pictures of their own children! If it were a law, it would be clear. One of the differences between democratic societies based on the rule of law and authoritarian regimes is that first is based on equality, not on arbitrary actions....Key wrote:While I am deeply concerned over this kind of hysteria by 'law' enforcers, I do want to urge to stick to the facts, chaps. There is no law forbidding photography in public places in the UK, at least not according to the article (page 3, para. 2). In stead, there is random action by officials who have, or seem to have, the power to forbid photography.
As such, political statements/discussions are not forbidden here. But those discussion do tend to end up with throwing mud at each other somehow, at which point we indeed do pull the plugehusmann wrote:But now I am getting into political statements, which is forbidden on this board I believe....
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