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2nd September 10: Forced adoption, a national disgrace ...
1st September 10: Stop all taxpayer funding for the Arts immediately!
31st August 10: Look on His image; abandon hope, ye mortals, and despair.
28th August 10: Watch out, animal lovers, the RSPCA stormtroopers are on the march again!
28th August 10: What's this? An MEP talking sense? Wonders will never cease!
20th August 10: Give 'em a title and a big desk and they think they've got the right to bully the rest of us ...
20th August 10: Being fair to Britain's excellent motorists ...
14th August 10: An ex-government minister on the state of British freedom ...
2nd August 10: An American take on Political Correctness ...
30th July 10: This is, or ought to be, the real reason our troops are in Afghanistan ...
30th July 10: How to sort out the problem of our prisons ...
27th July 10: What do we pay our council tax for? We just want our bloody bins emptied, that's all ...
26th July 10: Special Relationship my arse!
26th July 10: All I wanted was a tin of red paint ...!
26th July 10: Essential reading, we think ...
29th June 10: The smoking ban hasn't done what it said on the tin, then ...
28th June 10: The BBC up to its old tricks, telling us what to think instead of reporting the facts ...
25th June 10: Who will save us from toxic children? Not teachers, that's for sure ...
25th June 10: The old witch not quite as black as she's painted?
16th June 10: Motorists aren't idiots. They're bloody saints!
14th June 10: Why don't we just throw our toys out and go home?
24th May 10: Warmists really are a malign and spleen-filled bunch ...
23rd May 10: I used to love him, but now I hate him ...
18th May 10: Just when we thought it was safe to come out ...
7th May 10: What we need is a government that will LEAVE US ALONE!

 

 
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This calm, lucid article by Josie Appleton from Spiked gets right to the heart of the problem ...
 

 
Twenty years ago, who would have thought that the state would seek to regulate mums helping out at their children’s nursery? Under the UK Safeguarding Vulnerable Groups Act – all nursery helpers must have their criminal records checked before being given the all-clear to watch over toddlers’ face-painting and Play-Doh sessions.
 
Who would have thought that police officers would force tourists to delete their photos of the architecturally interesting but otherwise unimportant Vauxhall bus station in London, in the name of preventing terrorism? Who’d have guessed that under the Counter-Terrorism Act, it would become an offence to take pictures of police officers?
 
In previous times, the formidable powers of the state might have been used to crush demonstrations or dismantle threatening organisations. Now officials are focusing their fire on the pub darts contest, the local nursery, the amateur photographer, the drink in the park.
 
In 2009, if you are sharing a summers’ drink in the park, a police officer has the power to tip your bottle of wine down the drain, without any justification - and it is a criminal offence for you to refuse. Virtually every activity in pubs - from dancing, singalongs, music, to darts and chess – now requires a specific council licence. A Cambridge pub had to cancel a poetry reading recently, because it didn’t have a ‘spoken word licence’.
 
These are the areas of society that were previously the most autonomous – the places where people came together, to share a drink, or organise competitions and games - without using the language or methods of bureaucracy. Unlike the world of work, these were places where no forms were signed and no contracts made. This was civil society – a space that was neither the market nor the state – where people collaborated informally and freely with one another.
 
Yet it is precisely these most informal spheres that are becoming the most regulated. It is now almost the case that there are more rules and regulations in pubs than in the workplace; more in the nursery than in the bank.
 
These informal spheres are absolutely fundamental to social life. It is in these spaces that people form relationships that are not coerced, and not based on hostile contracting interests. These are the spaces where people work on getting things done together, in the interests and for the enjoyment of all. In civil society, things work differently – a list of volunteers is scribbled in the team book, not on a form; arrangements are made by phone or in the street, rather than by contract.
 
State intervention into these spheres of everyday life has happened quietly; it is not, generally, the subject of political discussion or protest. These issues are rarely discussed on the floor of the House of Commons, or even by many civil liberties organisations.
 
This summer, the Manifesto Club has organised "Freedom Summer" to raise awareness about the hyperregulation of everyday life, and raise a shout of protest against it. On Thursday, at a pub in central London, we’re launching our campaign with a discussion among fellow libertarians, including Anthony Barnett from the Convention on Modern Liberty, Phil Booth from No2ID, and columnist Suzanne Moore. Over the next few months, events include: a salon in Huddersfield on the regulation of drinking; a sports day against vetting; a protest picnic on Brighton beach against booze bans; a cabaret against new visa controls for visiting artists and academics; and the launch of a new photo-book against ludicrous safety signs in public spaces.
 
It is important that Freedom Summer is a DIY political space – where people can propose their own initiatives, taking up the freedom issues that they are passionate about in their local areas. We hope this will become a festival of political experimentation, to work out together how we can make the hyperregulation of everyday life a political issue.
 
Summer is generally the time when police forces launch their Operation Public Drinking, Operation Public Dancing, or Operation Public Photography. Summer should also be the time when we start to organise a resistance to the hyperregulation our nurseries, pubs and parks.
 

 

 
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