Here at Big Brother Watch we try to be even-handed. We praised Wycombe District Council several times for at least offering residents an opportunity to give their views on the area's (extensive) CCTV network, but were saddened by their apparent lack of interest in views the residents have expressed. Our most recent contact with the authorities there generated some heat as one of our volunteers stickered an omnibanning pole in the area as part of our Naming and Shaming campaign. Strangely and foolishly, "someone" from the Council gave a comment to the Bucks Free Press threatening us with prosecution, a threat that has yet to have any basis in reality - despite the pole being promptly re-stickered the next day.
In response, Steve Baker, the Conservative PPC for Wycombe, got in touch with Big Brother Watch with an article he's written about the issue. The article is below.
If you'd like to write a guest post for us, get in touch. Particularly, as we've given a Tory a free kick here (in response to us kicking the Tory Council), any comment from any other party in Wycombe would be looked at with interest.
In the last few days, we have had a round of guerrilla stickering in Wycombe. There was the sticker of the week. Then there was talk of prosecution at the Bucks Free Press. Finally, the sticker returned.
Now, it is a good photograph. As a totem for the surveillance society, it is superb. Perhaps some even find it superficially funny to see all-round "CCTV in operation" signs, a draconian alcohol prohibition, an exhortation not to urinate or defecate in the street and, as if in some final act of absurdity, a restriction on feeding the birds.
But why? Why was it thought necessary to watch, to prohibit and to spell out a requirement of common decency?
I have learned that this area of the town, Frogmoor, once accommodated an outreach to those with drinking problems and related issues. As a result, people from a wide area came to Frogmoor to drink rowdily. Intoxicated people terrorised the area and, as you might expect from the sign, urinated and defecated in the street. Feeding the large flock of pigeons surely finished off the job horribly.
If you actually had to live with that, it wouldn't be funny.
So imagine then, that the councillors are faced with this problem. Their beloved town has a foul no-go area in its centre. Personal responsibility and simple human dignity have broken down, causing tangible misery to local residents. Routine law enforcement is found ineffective. The people involved suffer addictions, mental health issues, homelessness, worklessness, poor education and lack of family support. Right across the board, a range of government interventions and overly bureaucratic public services have fallen short.
So here is one end of the spectrum of debate: a justifiable resort to what technology and authority are available in an attempt to compensate for significant social problems and to deliver a decent town.
At the other end of the spectrum is a reasonable demand for the dignity of going about one's lawful business privately and an awareness of a growing surveillance society in which our liberties are undermined.
When an ex-head of MI5 warns of a growing police state, is there perhaps cause for concern? Ought we to be mindful when a conference is held by the UK's leading civil liberties organisations at which the following is declared?
Laws that fundamentally challenged our traditions of rights and liberty and flew in the face of the Human Rights Act were passed with relatively little debate. Few grasped the impact they would have on our society and Ministers were able to brush aside protests with assurances that their desire to protect us was equal to their respect for civil liberties.
Moreover, maybe we should pay attention when one of the country's senior opposition politicians responds to a challenge about the relative importance of civil liberties in the face of economic difficulty by asking, "When was the last time liberty collapsed in Europe?" He refers to the 1930s.
That was a serious remark by a serious politician but it is an unfortunate fact of human history that even hysterical opposition to surveillance technology finds support in the past. Consider the testimony of a man named Albert Speer:
This testimony was of course given at Nuremberg.The nightmare shared by many people that some day the nations of the world may be dominated by technology--that nightmare was very nearly made a reality under [that] authoritarian system. Every country in the world today faces the danger of being terrorized by technology; but in a modern dictatorship this seems to me to be unavoidable. Therefore, the more technological the world becomes, the more essential will be the demand for individual freedom and the self-awareness of the individual human being as a counterpoise to the technology.
I well understand the concerns of Big Brother Watch, but here is our dilemma. On the one hand, failure of government public policy for those most in need. We find human beings living not in liberty, for liberty rests on personal responsibility and self-control, but in libertine misery, generating misery for those around them. On the other, justifiable concerns for reasonable privacy and dignity in what must remain a free society.
When I see this particular photograph, I am mindful of the difficult position of local councillors - responsible people I know and admire - coping with a broken segment of society in the context of the failure of a range of public services. Ultimately, public services and the shape of our society are guided in this country by Parliament and central government. Like all sound Conservatives, I have not the slightest difficulty in laying the blame for both our broken society and our collapsing liberties firmly at the door of this government and its ineffective and obsessive interventionism.
If we want to live in a free society then, away from mere stickers, we must complement increased personal responsibility with more effective services. If we want individual freedom to thrive then we must heed David Cameron's core message. Today, more than ever, we have to replace the dangerous politics of big government with the practical solutions of a big society.
It will be noted of course that Steve Baker writes here on his own behalf and does not represent the views of Big Brother Watch.
Do those councillors actually believe that human filth acting in such a manner would magically change their ways in response to some signs on a pole?
Posted by: W.Morris | 23/03/2010 at 04:43 PM
@W. Morris
If the councillors didn't think it would be effective, why did they do it? Stupidity, perhaps. Being out of touch, perhaps. I think they decided to waste money on this pole for the sake of appearing to be doing something, however ineffectual. Facade politics, another type of spin.
Posted by: Jimbo | 23/03/2010 at 05:08 PM
All politics is a facade
Posted by: Purlieu | 23/03/2010 at 06:15 PM
So the councillors saw that there was a problem in the Frogmoor area and felt that they had to "do something" because the residents didn't like what was going on. So they decided that CCTV and a few signs would be the solution. Except it never is. Unless CCTV has megapixel resolution its hard to fully identify people. CCTV is always "after the fact" in that it doesn't stop the offence from happening. Only that if you're lucky and the person is identifiable can you then make a prosecution. But what does that prosecution do except change some statistics. It doesn't change the person who is now a criminal into not urinating, defecating or being drunk in public. The only way of solving that is spending money on helping the person solve their underlying problems, not attacking them. Carrot and stick comes to mind. One method would be to ensure that such people aren't in public - but not in a prison either. Sometimes its hard to solve a problem, sometimes its impossible, sometimes tough decisions need to be made that are unpopular.
Posted by: SadButMadLad | 23/03/2010 at 08:41 PM
+ "the council felt they had to do something because the residents didnt like what was going on"
+ "local law inforcement was ineffective"
surely the residents should get off their lazy arses and do something about it themselves? its their 'society', its their neighbourhood. if they do nothing then the council / government will feel they have to do something = stupid signs, cctv and lots of wasted tax dollars.
if the neighbourhood was a dumping group for people with specific health issues, then before allocating them to the area (in social housing etc) then the local government / council should have provided suitable facilities and care / support that these people needed, that it what our tax dollars should be paying for?
Posted by: mrmovie | 24/03/2010 at 08:27 AM
mrmovie said "surely the residents should get off their lazy arses and do something about it ... if they do nothing then the council / government will feel they have to do something"
And this is where the more the public let the state make the decisions for them, the more the state thinks that the public can't run their own lives and take even more responsibility away from them. A vicious circle. The point is that when you take responsibility away from people, the worse they act. Look at badly behaved teenagers who don't take any responsibility for their actions.
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