March in London on the 26th?

It's a civil offence, there's no reason to get the police involved.

This is true, until the muppets started smashing up F&Ms, then it becomes aggravated trespass I think, a criminal offence. Just another reason why groups like Socialist Workers Party and Black Bloc are terribly convenient for the powers that be...
 
Absolutely excellent policing, what is your problem?

Everyone who was in that store was guilty of aggravated trespass, a criminal offence. I find the "legal observers" who were also committing aggravated trespass hilarious; you'd have to be an utter fool to take legal advice from them.

I watched the video. At no point were the protestors told they would not be detained and arrested. The WPC described everything in terms of what she was aware of at the time, said they would be heading into a "safe environment" (police custody is not an unsafe environment). She said "hopefully" in response to the question of whether people would be stopped on the way, but seemed to interpret the question as to whether they would be stopped by the violent thugs outside, not the police.

But all of that is irrelevant, because everyone in that store was ostensibly guilty of a criminal offence. Open and shut case.
 
This is true, until the muppets started smashing up F&Ms, then it becomes aggravated trespass I think, a criminal offence. Just another reason why groups like Socialist Workers Party and Black Bloc are terribly convenient for the powers that be...

None of those in the occupation caused any damage to the shop or the stock, it's the peaceful UK Uncut protesters that were misled into arrest - hence the article.
 
It's a civil offence, there's no reason to get the police involved.
Once again you are wrong. Aggravated trespass is a criminal offence.

I refer you to Section 68 of the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994:

(1)A person commits the offence of aggravated trespass if he trespasses on land and, in relation to any lawful activity which persons are engaging in or are about to engage in on that or adjoining land, does there anything which is intended by him to have the effect—

(a)of intimidating those persons or any of them so as to deter them or any of them from engaging in that activity,

(b)of obstructing that activity, or

(c)of disrupting that activity.
Those protestors were in that store (a business performing a lawful activity) with the expressed intention of obstructing and disrupting the store's lawful activity.
 
oh for goodness sake, now you've lost the plot.

the public sector workers are paid using money that is earned by the private sector, no private sector=no public sector.

Look, I know how it works.

Imagine for pensions the 'private sector' pays in x amount of tax and it is split into three. It takes two thirds back to pay for its pension schemes instead of the business itself doing it after tax, and the remaining third remains with the government for commitment to workers and infrastructure etc who fascilitate government and services.

That segment that has been left for those public workers has been stolen, hacked at and is under a constant smear campaign.

The feedback loop keeping crippled companies on the go is all fine and dandy it would seem however.

Ultimately if you hate the concept of government/state etc, this is acceptable. This is why we have it today.

If you don't, you're a commy swine who understands nothing and some other blah crap.

People and organisations need to pay their way, that includes the private sector and the established politik who renegade from their commitments and promises to the public sector workers..

No public sector = no private sector I may add.


In fact all the net wealth, money, whatever in the nation ultimately comes from the private sector.

It depends on how you define wealth and how distinctly you seperate the interwoven economic areas; the private and public sector.

As for money, then of course significant proportion of it is generated in the private sector.

The public sector is an enabler, and it is under constant attack for vested interests beyond its 'growth'. "50% of the economy is now the public sector" on panorama etc. It is all nonsense.

one caveat, the govt is currently borrowing far more than the private sector is bringing in, this cannot go on.

It is likely to go on and on for ever in all honesty.
 
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About 30% of NI employment is made up in the public sector, thats jsut ridiculous, so that could have haled easily keeping services jsut fine...actually...the TAX office is in such a state the could get rid of about 3/4 of the people.
 
Once again you are wrong. Aggravated trespass is a criminal offence.

I refer you to Section 68 of the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994:

Those protestors were in that store (a business performing a lawful activity) with the expressed intention of obstructing and disrupting the store's lawful activity.

Now what you haven't done is actually watch the video, which gives pretty solid evidence that:

A) It wasn't aggravated trespass, it was perfectly peaceful, no damage was done and those shopping in the store were carrying on.

B) The police accepted this fact and that every single one of the occupiers had been perfectly peaceful and had not committed any crime.
 
Doesn't matter your level of interest, knowledge or exactly why you dissagree - but if you do you are automatically a labourite lefty/socialist who has no grounding in reality?

Unfortunatly the more that the left wing speak on these forums, the more that i have to say YES! Some of the opinions on display beggers belief
 
A) It wasn't aggravated trespass, it was perfectly peaceful, no damage was done and those shopping in the store were carrying on.

Aggravated trepass is trespass with intention to disrupt. The whole intention of UKUnCut was to disrupt, which is why they did it.
 
I had a average-ish looking pension no where near your sort of final payout VS, and they crapped on it. That benefit package looks very good, is it London weighted?

Ah gee, ain't it great when citizens crap on their fellow citizens.

;) :rolleyes:

No London weighting. I work in the north east which has no weighting allowance.

At slam, there are inequalities in the system.
 
Unfortunatly the more that the left wing speak on these forums, the more that i have to say YES! Some of the opinions on display beggers belief

Who are the left wing?

I wouldn't be so quick to judge people I didn't know and generalise with such commitment. Each to their own I suppose.
 
It's a civil offence, there's no reason to get the police involved.

Trespass can be both.


1)A person commits the offence of aggravated trespass if he trespasses on land [F1in the open air] and, in relation to any lawful activity which persons are engaging in or are about to engage in on that or adjoining land, does there anything which is intended by him to have the effect—

(a)of intimidating those persons or any of them so as to deter them or any of them from engaging in that activity,

(b)of obstructing that activity, or

(c)of disrupting that activity.

Anyone who unlawfully occupies a place of business such as a shop and obstructs that business in any way can be charged with aggravated trespass.

There is also this little bit of legislation in the criminal justice and public order act which could apply also:

http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1994/33/section/70

Removing unwanted and obstructive people is a daily occurrence within the business that I work, The Police move on or arrest those who refuse to leave as a matter of course and on occasion they have been charged and convicted with aggravated trespass, even when there has been no violent disorder or criminal damage. (which are crimes in themselves anyway)


Now what you haven't done is actually watch the video, which gives pretty solid evidence that:

A) It wasn't aggravated trespass, it was perfectly peaceful, no damage was done and those shopping in the store were carrying on.

B) The police accepted this fact and that every single one of the occupiers had been perfectly peaceful and had not committed any crime.


Aggravated Trespass doesn't need violence or criminal damage, it only requires that you are obstructing the lawful pursuit of your business, which those protesters were guilty of. It was a criminal offence, not a civil one.
 
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Aggravated Trespass doesn't need violence or criminal damage, it only requires that you are obstructing the lawful pursuit of your business, which those protesters were guilty of. It was a criminal offence, not a civil one.

Business was carrying on as usual in the shop. Just another disgusting technique by the MET here, when it comes to working class struggle they may as well be the army.
 
Business was carrying on as usual in the shop. Just another disgusting technique by the MET here, when it comes to working class struggle they may as well be the army.
You cannot possibly say that business was carrying on as usual in the shop.

Tape was plastered over display cabinets, protestors were chanting slogans loudly, a critical mass of protestors in various locations on the shop floors prevented the movement of customers about the store, and police were forced to prevent additional people from entering the store.

The store presumably lost tens of thousands of pounds in trade during and after the occupation, not to mention the criminal damage committed to the outside of the building.

The entire purpose of the UK Uncut movement is to obstruct and disrupt businesses that it disagrees with. They might as well have "aggravated trespass" as their tagline.
 
Business was carrying on as usual in the shop. Just another disgusting technique by the MET here, when it comes to working class struggle they may as well be the army.

No, you are wrong.

They were clearly a disruption to the operation of a lawful business and as such can be asked to move on and/or arrested if they refuse to do so.

A shop or place of business is not a public right of way, the public only have limited access and rights within the store or business premises or property owned by the store or business and the owners reserve the right to refuse entry to whomever they choose. If they refuse to leave then it becomes a matter for the police and a criminal offence under the public order act.

It is as simple as that.
 
You cannot possibly say that business was carrying on as usual in the shop.

Tape was plastered over display cabinets, protestors were chanting slogans loudly, a critical mass of protestors in various locations on the shop floors prevented the movement of customers about the store, and police were forced to prevent additional people from entering the store.

The store presumably lost tens of thousands of pounds in trade during and after the occupation, not to mention the criminal damage committed to the outside of the building.

The entire purpose of the UK Uncut movement is to obstruct and disrupt businesses that it disagrees with. They might as well have "aggravated trespass" as their tagline.

What's the point in debating with you if you won't even look at the evidence?
 
Business was carrying on as usual in the shop. Just another disgusting technique by the MET here, when it comes to working class struggle they may as well be the army.

Now, now weza - I'm sympathetic so some of your thoughts but you can't just make a blanket statement like that and tar them all with the same brush.

There were many Police officers I spoke to that day that were sympathetic to the cause and there were many off duty officers marching (putting themselves at significant risk of disciplinary action I might add) along with lots of retired police officers.

We also had Ghurkas marching and a contingent of soldiers in wheelchairs (their state assistance is being slashed under the current regime). To insinuate our Army would let themselves be used as a method of civilian oppression is frankly insulting.

Your arguments are losing any credibility they might have had by making it sound like you're just rebelling against authority with no purpose.
 
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