basingwerk wrote:
bogush wrote:
mutual interest doesn't mean shared curiosity or common fascination in the subject matter ... "Speeding" is a victimless crime. Neither you, nor anyone else, has an "interest" in what speed I pass a speed camera at.
If it pisses
me off, it is not victimless. I have to say it's not just the danger speeders cause either - it's the disturbance the cretins make as they zoom through the village.
If your comment pisses
me off, it is not victimless. I have to say it's the disturbance you make as you roar through this thread with your rant.
Does that give me the right to criminalise you?
Oh, according to you: it does!
BY the way:
For how long have you been campaigning for a by-pass?
Or the upgrading of alternative routes?
basingwerk wrote:
bogush wrote:
It is not the purpose of the law to give legal status to the opinions of one group over another. And that is nothing to do with democracy either.
I am starting to think that this site is a nest of libertarians posing as safe speed advocates! I have nothing against libertarians principles
per se, but we don’t have a libertarian system in the UK, and never have had. The law gives legal status to
behaviour that one groups does and another group censures.
No, it doesn't.
I don't recall the BBC producer being charged with a criminal offense for screening the Springer Opera.
Nor the director for putting on the Sikh play in Birmingham.
basingwerk wrote:
Law and democracy solve disputes between people.
No, they don't.
Criminal law punishes people who harm social order and society.
Civil law resolves disputes between individuals or parties to an explicit or implied personal contract and tries to redress loss.
So, if you think we've made some kind of deal that I won't use part of the national transport network in a way that pisses you off:
Feel free to sue me for the "damage" you've suffered.
I will counterclaim for, not only for being equally, if not more, pissed off, but the financial loss suffered directly and indirectly from you strangling the nation's infrastructure.
Is there anything I've missed?