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Rise of cycle cams debated on This Morning

Use of helmet cams ‘smacks of kangaroo justice’ says guest

Earlier this week, ITV’s This Morning invited two guests on to debate the increasing popularity of helmet cams in a segment entitled ‘Shaming Britain’s drivers – cycling vigilante’. The portion of the show in question is currently available to watch via the ITV Player.

The segment opens with the footage of a woman caught eating a bowl of cereal while driving which was recently uploaded by cycle instructor, David Williams. Williams was subsequently the subject of a Daily Mail article by Michael Gove’s wife, Sarah Vine, which branded people who use helmet cameras the "Cycling Stasi." In the article, Vine described those who used helmet cams as "infuriatingly, throat-throttlingly, red-mist-inducingly smug."

The two people involved in the This Morning debate were Dave Sherry, a bus driver and cyclist who earlier this year claimed that his footage had resulted in around 50 convictions, and journalist Angela Epstein. A frequent guest on television debates, Epstein was also the ghost writer of The Art of the Loophole: Making the Law Work for You by celebrity lawyer Nick Freeman.

“First of all, I don’t like vigilantism,” she begins, before addressing Sherry directly.

“You say you keep your eyes on the road. I’m sure you try and do that. I don’t see how you can be a law-abiding cyclist and at the same time kind of try and police everybody else. This smacks of kangaroo justice.”

Epstein concedes that there are motorists who do ‘incredibly stupid things’ and points people towards a recent Daily Telegraph article of hers in which she argued that drivers should be obliged to switch off their phones altogether and that even hands-free phone use can be distracting.

However, while she at one point says that ‘not all’ cyclists are ‘horrendous’ on the roads, that sense of perspective seems lacking when she later describes how she had observed the cyclists on London’s roads in the taxi on the way to the studio. “They’re absolutely shocking. They just don’t care,” she says.

Epstein believes that, “one can cycle badly, cause an accident and more often than not it will be the driver that will be at the very least prosecuted.”

She also appears to believe that cyclists are somehow exempt from criminal charges whereas there is “a whole canon of driving law” and questions why there is no cyclists’ equivalent to a driving test.

“They’re not obliged to do the things that we have to do to ensure that we understand road safety. If you want to campaign for something – look at everybody who’s anywhere near the roads. Make there parity there because cyclists can be even worse than motorists.”

In response, Sherry – who drives professionally – repeats a point he has made earlier, that in a collision between a car and cyclist, the cyclist will always come off worse. It is unclear whether the implications of this message are fully understood by those around him.

Alex has written for more cricket publications than the rest of the road.cc team combined. Despite the apparent evidence of this picture, he doesn't especially like cake.

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crikey | 8 years ago
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She done wrong.

Catch her.
Name her.
Shame her.

If you don't, then you are part of the problem.

...and, for goodness sake, she is a dim-witted idiot who is too stupid to understand that eating cereal while driving I s not acceptable in any society.

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John Mitchell | 8 years ago
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We've reached an impasse. You claim to welcome more surveillance, more personal cameras, more naming and shaming in the interest of improving safety. I don't.

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themartincox | 8 years ago
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In New York, Major Guiliani (definitely not spelt correctly) launched zero-tolerance attitude to 'minor infringements', including subway graffiti.

At night, the trains were all cleaned from the day's graffiti, and in the day they were tagged again. Soon enough, the taggers got frustrated with their work being whitewashed over every night and they stopped doing it.

Now you can argue that it's a pointless exercise, but the reasoning behind it was that people felt safer on clean trains, and there were stats to prove it had an effect as well.

Post-crackdown, the trains were cleaner, and both minor AND major crimes were down on the subway.

The point being that minor misdemeanours can (and do) lead to more major ones, by cracking down (filming, naming/shaming etc) on the trifling petty ones (if that's your view) then as a whole the roads become safer.

And yes, people didn't see the point at the start of his crackdown either, there were a LOT of sceptics!

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felixcat | 8 years ago
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Cycling, and especially driving, is not a private activity. It is done on the public highway and can have very severe consequences for others,
Myself, I am quite prepared to have my cycling, and especially my driving, filmed and criticised. I hope that I can always defend my techniques etc. but if I drive badly I will take on board any criticism and try to improve. If I drove as badly as some of those I see around me I would be ashamed and want to do better.
How you drive is not a private matter, and a good driver should be prepared to learn from criticism.

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vonhelmet | 8 years ago
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So long as the police continue to do naff all (feel free to blame the police themselves, or the government for their cuts, I don't care which you choose) vulnerable road users will continue to do what they feel they need to do to feel safer on the roads. That is all there is to it. If you don't want cyclists carrying cameras and filming infractions, get the police back out on the roads and let them deal with them.

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crikey | 8 years ago
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"To post videos of minor infringements is a needless erosion of our society"

No.
Minor infringements are an erosion of our society, not videos. Suggesting that we shouldn't draw attention to 'minor' infringements allows standards of behaviour to slip, it lowers the bar, it changes behaviour for the worse.

The difference between 'minor' incidents and 'major' ones is the consequence, and if people think they can get away with the small stuff, get away with things that 'everyone does' then we end up with a shittier place to live.

Behaviour in a social setting should be of a high standard, behaviour in cars is often not because car drivers see themselves as separate, they think they have their own private space and can therefore act in a way that they would not otherwise.

I hope the public shaming of this woman makes her consider her behaviour and I hope that it will discourage all the other nice, well brought up, affluent and utterly selfish people who think driving a car is an extension of their breakfast table.

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FluffyKittenofT... | 8 years ago
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@John Mitchell

Second-hand smoke in outdoors spaces has neigligble health effects on anyone other than the smoker (even indoors I think the health effect has been over-stated, though I personally just don't like the smell/sensation of being around smoking, so I'm quite happy its banned almost everywhere).

And, more to the point, if you are going there, I could mention the crap drivers pump into the air. That has worse health effects than outdoors second-hand cigarette smoke (killing about 50,000 people a year according to some studies), so I don't think that argument helps your case at all.

I don't give any importance to that 'bad example' stuff - that is really stretching the notion of 'harming others', as its up to those 'others' whether they want to copy someone or not.

The bottom line is that part of the social contract for driving at all, is that you do so while properly paying attention. It seems pretty simple to me - I don't agree to you operating a possibly deadly weapon in a public space unless you give it your full attenion.

If you don't want to abide by those rules, don't bother with the special pleading about how you can drive well even if you are over the alcohol limit or that you were only texting while the traffic was hardly moving - just don't drive.

Drivers kill thousands every year, it seems they aren't erring on the side of being too carefull.

The daft thing is that you keep saying things that make me want to post again to argue with you, even though I don't favour a general policy of putting bad drivers on youtube. I don't think that's really going to solve the problem, but I just don't feel any need to complain about those who, in frustration, decide to do that.

If you want to stop such videos being posted, give us proper cycling infrastructure and better road law enforcement (maybe a better driving test regime) and people will largely lose interest in posting them!

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atgni | 8 years ago
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You'd better sit down before you read this article John.

http://road.cc/content/news/155797-video-jeremy-vine-having-camera-safer...

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paulrbarnard replied to John Mitchell | 8 years ago
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John Mitchell wrote:

We've reached an impasse. You claim to welcome more surveillance, more personal cameras, more naming and shaming in the interest of improving safety. I don't.

I for one hope you are the minority

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John Mitchell replied to felixcat | 8 years ago
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themartincox - I'm not arguing that smaller crimes are insignificant. I don't doubt that a highly monitored road would be safer for users. My point is that we are sacrificing something fairly substantial to get it. When CCTV first came out there was a lot of dislike of them, it seems our society has now become accustomed to, and accepting of, them.

felixcat - I understand your point about the road being a kind of exceptional cirumstance, but I think it would be easy to make a similar case for all sorts of other places and activities. I don't think the road is really a unique case. Whilst I agree that there are way too many sloppy, careless, lazy and reckless road users, I really don't think the way to address it is for other users to film them. It's just such a negative impact on society for us to be always looking to report on others.

fluffykittenoftindalos - I think you are right about Sarah Vine, I didn't find her arguments compelling at all. I think she is being hypocritical. But that doesn't mean we should join her in the hypocrisy. The point is trying to step back from our emotions for a moment. Cycling is something that all of us here are attached to. And as impartially as we can deciding if this is a good direction to take. And knowing that if we condone the naming and shaming of road users then we are condoning it in all of our society too because I don't think you can justify this as a special case.

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John Mitchell replied to FluffyKittenofTindalos | 8 years ago
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"even though I don't favour a general policy of putting bad drivers on youtube."

Then we have nothing to argue about.

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John Mitchell replied to atgni | 8 years ago
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Thanks for the link, I did read it even though just seeing HIS name makes my mouth taste like vomit. Still, it is interesting to hear his view, and particularly what he says about police interest in the footage. I'm not sure it really addresses my concerns though. All along I've said that I am uncomfortable with the idea of submitting footage of minor incidents to the police, and I am uncomfortable with naming and shaming under almost all circumstances. That the police welcome footage doesn't change this. The only part of the article which does address my point is that Vine (ugh) himself promotes their use (though not explicitly about putting footage on YouTube). So there is another voice on the side I disagree with. But that's all really.

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felixcat replied to John Mitchell | 8 years ago
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"felixcat - I understand your point about the road being a kind of exceptional cirumstance, but I think it would be easy to make a similar case for all sorts of other places and activities. I don't think the road is really a unique case. "

In what other situation do citizens kill strangers? If there really were any other case where 2000 people a year were killed randomly by passers by there would be stringent measures to sort it out. Most years in Northern Island during the recent "Troubles" motorists killed twice as many people as terrorists. The result was internment without trial for terrorist suspects.
The road really is a unique case.
If I walked down the street with a gun (a bullet has a deal less kinetic energy than a car) and carelessly discharged it, do you think, that even if I killed no one, I would escape without penalty?
That driving is permitted and carrying a loaded gun is not, only means that drivers need more incentives to avoid injuring others.
Why don't you think that putting dangerous drivers in fear of having their stupidity or aggression pointed out would tend to make them more careful or less aggressive? I think it will.

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John Mitchell replied to felixcat | 8 years ago
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felixcat wrote:

Why don't you think that putting dangerous drivers in fear of having their stupidity or aggression pointed out would tend to make them more careful or less aggressive? I think it will.

I didn't say this, in fact I've said a few times now that I think it would make all road users more careful.

Your loaded gun analogy isn't quite accurate, though I get what you are saying. The difference is that cars are considered useful and people drive them for a purpose, it is accepted that they will do that and it is allowed.

You talk about the number of deaths caused by road users and yes there are a lot. My point what that not everyone will see this as the special case that you do. For example obesity is a huge drain on the NHS and causes a much much larger number of deaths than traffic. Perhaps therefore it is OK to name and shame people who are deemed to be over-eating? Other people may focus on smoking in public, doing drugs in public, over-drinking, contributing to climate change, offending religions etc etc. Road deaths aren't going to be a special case in everybody's eyes. I'd suggest that it is our bias as cyclists that makes it seem like they are.

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vonhelmet replied to John Mitchell | 8 years ago
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John Mitchell wrote:

For example obesity is a huge drain on the NHS and causes a much much larger number of deaths than traffic. Perhaps therefore it is OK to name and shame people who are deemed to be over-eating?

Are you saying that bad driving is a symptom of some underlying illness? Some sort of mental derangement, perhaps?

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atgni replied to John Mitchell | 8 years ago
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John Mitchell wrote:

You talk about the number of deaths caused by road users and yes there are a lot. My point what that not everyone will see this as the special case that you do. For example obesity is a huge drain on the NHS and causes a much much larger number of deaths than traffic. Perhaps therefore it is OK to name and shame people who are deemed to be over-eating? Other people may focus on smoking in public, doing drugs in public, over-drinking, contributing to climate change, offending religions etc etc. Road deaths aren't going to be a special case in everybody's eyes. I'd suggest that it is our bias as cyclists that makes it seem like they are.

A better analogy / comparison would be KSI's in the workplace.

Compare and contrast the establishment reaction to a person being killed by a works vehicle in the workplace and a person being killed by a works vehicle on the road between workplaces. Or even the case of a highway worker killed or seriously injured on a highway by any type of vehicle and indeed any other person killed or seriously injured on the same highway.

So yes, name and shame or sending the footage to the authorities to deal with can be considered a public spirited duty. It would appear that the name and shame part encourages the authorities to do something sometimes.

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John Mitchell replied to atgni | 8 years ago
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Yes, name and shame can be considered a public spirited duty. But I think it's important to notice what we are sacrificing if we endorse this. Now perhaps you think the public good outweighs the increased surveillance, and that's fine, so long as you accept what the loss is. Personally I think it depends on what behaviour is being exposed, we're back to serious vs minor infringements. I think we can all probably agree that Jason Wells (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jpkv3w7-jPM) deserved recrimination because his behaviour was seriously bad. But what if a driver is reading a text whilst waiting at a light? Is that serious enough to justify the name and shame? I'm not saying it's OK to check texts, I'm just asking if it justifies this course of action. You can argue that it is in the public good to film and report it, but then I can argue that it is in the public good to name and shame people for off road bad behaviour. So the question still stands at where do we draw the line? Even accepting that the road is a dangerous place and there are a lot of deaths and people have great responsibility, I can't see that justifying people reporting every infringement, no matter how big or small.

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John Mitchell replied to atgni | 8 years ago
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sorry, double post due to youtube link originally being rejected.

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FluffyKittenofT... replied to John Mitchell | 8 years ago
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John Mitchell wrote:

For example obesity is a huge drain on the NHS and causes a much much larger number of deaths than traffic. Perhaps therefore it is OK to name and shame people who are deemed to be over-eating? Other people may focus on smoking in public, doing drugs in public, over-drinking, contributing to climate change, offending religions etc etc.

In all honestly, I think your argument is getting worse rather than better!

Most of those are easily dispensed with, as they are not remotely comparable - damaging your own health is not the same as injuring or killing others. Its puzzling that you suggest it is.

You mention 'doing drugs in public' - what about _dealing_ drugs in public? That would be a closer analogy (though still not quite the same). Would it be completely wrong for someone to film such activity? Especially if the police were failing to do anything about it.

You mention 'offending religions' - people have been caught on camera racially abusing people in public places. Are you saying people should be allowed to go on abusing more vulnerable groups in secrecy? Surely you aren't condemning the people whose footage has revealed racist behaviour by US cops, for example?

The trouble with your argument, I'm now thinking, is that you are asking for a kind of unilateral disarmament only by the more vulnerable groups who only have the one 'weapon'. Why aren't you demanding shops stop using CCTV against shoplifters, say?

I'm not promoting helmet-cams, I don't think its a magic bullet (heh, that would be infrastructure). But I don't see the point joining in with a one-sided demand that the more vulnerable not try and hold the more powerful to account - especially while those with power are going to carry on filming and monitoring regardless.

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John Mitchell replied to FluffyKittenofTindalos | 8 years ago
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FluffyKittenofTindalos wrote:

In all honestly, I think your argument is getting worse rather than better!

Most of those are easily dispensed with, as they are not remotely comparable - damaging your own health is not the same as injuring or killing others. Its puzzling that you suggest it is.

My point wasn't that I necessarily think they are equivalent, but rather that we shouldn't assign any special cases because whilst we are cyclists and road safety seems paramount to us, other people will have other priorities and create their own exceptions. If that's the route taken then of course there will be no exceptions as all cases will have their defenders.

Dealing drugs is clearly more serious than taking drugs, just as driving with no hands whilst eating and talking on the phone is more serious than checking a text at a light. It still faces the same question, if you record all four instances, which ones do you submit to the police and publish on YouTube? In my opinion the only defensible stances are to send in none, all four, or two (being the more serious offense in each case).

No I am not supporting racism, I think you knew that. You can insult religion without being racist. Some people take it extremely seriously. To them such an act warrants severe (lethal) consequences. Again I used the example to demonstrate that not all people will agree with you about creating a special case for road offenses.

I'm not trying to remove a tool from the most vulnerable. That wasn't ever my point. I am not saying cyclists shouldn't have cameras. I am saying that cyclists should be thoughtful about what footage they decide to make public.

This isn't "us vs them". It's not to do with those with power and those without power as you suggest. I'm not making a one-sided demand because this has nothing to do with police having cameras, or CCTV in shops. That's a whole different debate. This is about what is done with the footage captured.

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FluffyKittenofT... replied to John Mitchell | 8 years ago
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John Mitchell wrote:

My point wasn't that I necessarily think they are equivalent, but rather that we shouldn't assign any special cases because whilst we are cyclists and road safety seems paramount to us, other people will have other priorities and create their own exceptions. If that's the route taken then of course there will be no exceptions as all cases will have their defenders.

Again, you are trying to claim an equivalence between, say, self-harmers cutting themselves and someone who goes round slashing strangers with a knife. Those are not in any possible way similar cases, so why are you insisting on equating them?

Someone might indeed think someone eating too much and risking their own health is a higher priority than someone potentially killing an innocent child via distracted driving, but they would be WRONG to have those priorities, so why do you ascribe so much importance to this point?

I don't agree with it - I disagree fundamentally with the idea that endangering yourself and endangering others are equivalent moral issues to be dealt with the same way - and you haven't explained why you think otherwise.

John Mitchell wrote:

Dealing drugs is clearly more serious than taking drugs, just as driving with no hands whilst eating and talking on the phone is more serious than checking a text at a light.

Again, I didn't get my point across - its not just 'more serious', the point is that it potentially harms _others_. That's a _qualitative_ difference, not a quantitative one. Whereas the examples you give about distracted driving are BOTH about potentially harming others. Not the same distinction at all.

John Mitchell wrote:

I am saying that cyclists should be thoughtful about what footage they decide to make public.

I don't 100% disagree with that - personally I wouldn't go for shaming individuals. But I'm not going to tell others what to do when they witness something that could potentially endanger them, especially if they've personally had experience of the police doing nothing when given evidence of such behaviour.

And it kind-of is 'them and us', to some degree. There are always power struggles between different groups, that's life. On the road those in heavy armoured metal boxes have more power (they also have quite a bit politically speaking as well)

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John Mitchell replied to FluffyKittenofTindalos | 8 years ago
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If I see somebody smoking weed in public then that is potentially damaging my health through second hand smoke. That's also true of seeing someone in public smoking a cigarette. The question is how much it affects my health, how much does it increase my chances of dying? The same argument is true of somebody sat at a red light reading a text message. Somebody doing drugs in public could be seen by children or impressionable adults, it could increase their chance of taking the drugs so it's not just self-harming as you put it.

If that sounds abstract I apologise. I'm not arguing that those cases would necessarily significantly increase the likelihood of death to others but those examples (and I'm sure you can imagine many other ones, probably better than these) are not strictly self-harming. When we talk about a driver sat in traffic eating cereal, yes she is increasing the chances of a cyclist death around her, but by how much? At the lower end of traffic offenses we are talking about very small probability jumps, the same way we're talking about small probability jumps when somebody is smoking a cigarette in public.

To group all traffic offenses together as "potentially killing an innocent child through distracted driving" is massively misleading. Different offenses cause different probability jumps. Some offenses lead to significant jumps and naming and shaming these drivers is justified in my opinion. Other offenses have negligible impact and to name and shame them is totally unnecessary and out of proportion (note that when the footage is also released to the police the action of posting the video to youtube with face and number plate visible is much harder to justify as being a public service).

Not all driving offenses are equal. To post videos of minor infringements is a needless erosion of our society.

FluffyKittenofTindalos wrote:

And it kind-of is 'them and us', to some degree. There are always power struggles between different groups, that's life. On the road those in heavy armoured metal boxes have more power (they also have quite a bit politically speaking as well)

Bringing up the "us vs them" argument clouds the water. It invites biases. And in this case it strays away from the point.

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wycombewheeler replied to John Mitchell | 8 years ago
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John Mitchell wrote:

Perhaps therefore it is OK to name and shame people who are deemed to be over-eating? Other people may focus on smoking in public, doing drugs in public, over-drinking, contributing to climate change, offending religions etc etc. Road deaths aren't going to be a special case in everybody's eyes. I'd suggest that it is our bias as cyclists that makes it seem like they are.

Those over eating are not killing others. Overeating and the drain on nhs is equivalent to driving at all. Not to driving dangerously. Since the health effects on the population and the fact that inactivity (driving rather than active transport) is as important to health as being overweight. But in fact there is more stigma in society for being morbidly obese than for using a phone while driving.

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FluffyKittenofT... replied to John Mitchell | 8 years ago
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John Mitchell wrote:

We've reached an impasse. You claim to welcome more surveillance, more personal cameras, more naming and shaming in the interest of improving safety. I don't.

Its just the hypocritical inconsistency of it though.

You get the likes of Sarah Vine or Nick Ferrari coming on like Cockney gangsters or drug-dealing hoodie youths complaining about "grassing people up" when you just know they'd be the first to complain about a failure to report stuff to the police if it were about the misdeeds of people more plebian or less white than themselves.

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John Mitchell replied to FluffyKittenofTindalos | 8 years ago
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Exactly, you hit the nail on the head and that is my concern too. I've been trying to make the point that some people in here would object to it if they or their friends were filmed and shamed for daily misdeeds, and yet when it comes to car drivers the same people are defending it because it is legal to do so, or because the car driver deserves it, or because it is going to definitely save a life or any other justification. But the problem is that the justifications are being created after the decision is made. I hope that I am not being inconsistent. I don't like the idea of that society and therefore I also don't support the naming and shaming of car drivers for relatively minor offences.

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FluffyKittenofT... replied to John Mitchell | 8 years ago
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@John Mitchell

I do partly get where you are coming from, with regard to the wider issue of getting used to living in the camera-festooned goldfish bowl that is the modern world.

But, for heaven's sake, Sarah Vine writes frequently for the Daily Mail - how often has that publication featured an article attempting to shame someone, whether an obscure nobody or a celeb, for failing to meet the approval of their curtain-twitcher readership? At least half the paper is made up of such stuff!

Vine is _absolutely_ a part of that part of the media, and that general class, who relentlessly tut-tut and attempt to shame others (did her husband ever say anything about the issue of CCTV in the schools he was in charge of, by the way?).

It seems she just thinks it should be a one-way street (with no contraflow cycle lane!).

All these recent complaints about 'cycling vigilantes' seem to fall into that hypocritical category. The wider issue of 'cameras everywhere' is, unfortunately, probably a lost cause, but its not what this is about anyway.

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crikey | 8 years ago
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I'd like people to take the responsibility that comes with the opportunity to drive. I'd like people to assume the responsibility for others safety that comes with being able to drive.

It's not about being a vigilante, it's about not being a dick.

...and above all, it's about not assuming that your breakfast cereal is more important than road safety; get a bacon sandwich and stop being a dick.

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John Mitchell replied to crikey | 8 years ago
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crikey wrote:

It's not about being a vigilante...

crikey wrote:

Catch them.
Shame them.

People have fallen for the idea that they exist and they are therefore entitled to do as they wish unless they are caught at it. Catching, naming and shaming is an antidote to this.

What you said here IS about being a vigilante. Nobody here is defending the woman for eating cereal, this isn't about defending her. It's about whether "catching, naming and shaming" is the right thing to do.

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crikey | 8 years ago
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'The true measure of a man is what he would do if he knew he would never be caught'

Lord Kelvin.

Catch them.
Shame them.

People have fallen for the idea that they exist and they are therefore entitled to do as they wish unless they are caught at it. Catching, naming and shaming is an antidote to this.

The converse is a society where we are all free to do as we please and sod the rest unless there happens to be a policeman nearby.

Moral fibre, morals in general seem to be an anachronism and if people cannot police their own behaviour, we must do so.

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John Mitchell replied to crikey | 8 years ago
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Earlier on people were criticising the linked TV programme for using the term "vigilante", but I certainly think it applies to the ethos conveyed in some of these later comments. I guess we fundamentally disagree on that, I would hate to live in one, it seems some people here welcome it.

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