Charles Moore's reflections on the week
Another reader, Mr L, tells me that he recently bought a television from Peter Jones and three days later received a letter from TV Licensing telling him to go out and get a licence for it. It turns out that retailers of televisions have a legal obligation to inform TV Licensing of the address of each purchaser, though only, so far, of televisions, not of computers. Mr L thinks that this breaches article 8 (concerning privacy) of the European Convention on Human Rights. It would be good to test this.
One of the running jokes in Private Eye used to be a list of benefits from some public service or other which included, inexplicably, ‘grapefruit segments’. Last week, the Labour party emailed me ‘Our 50 top achievements since being elected in 1997’. Achievement no. 50 is ‘Free fruit for most four- to six-year-olds at school’.
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Fraser Nelson reviews the week in politics
In his speech announcing his Pre-Budget Report, Alistair Darling said that he was going to put up the top rate of income tax to 45 per cent from 2011, because he wanted the burden to be borne by ‘those who have done best out of the growth of the past decade’.
Charles Moore's reflections on the week
Charles Moore's reflections on the week
Fraser Nelson reviews the week in politics
Charles Moore's reflections on the week
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AppalledofLondon
February 28th, 2008 10:38amThe way to get round the obligation which firms selling you tv equipment have is to give a completely phony address. My favourite is SW1A 2AA. I hope G Brown enjoys reading the letters from the TV licensing authorities.
Jim Hardman
February 29th, 2008 8:22pmRegulation of Parliament? Yesterday evening, I went to hear the Chief Executive of the Solicitors Regulation Authority explain the role of the SRA. His background, he said, was in.......'regulation'......... of doctors, dentists etc. He was an apparently civilised, intelligent man, whose background is......... regulation. At some point the SRA will be regulated by some statutory body. Who will regulate the super regulator?
Jack Monteltici
March 6th, 2008 10:58pmIn Italy tv shops have been handing over details of buyers of new sets to the state tv (RAI) for decades, and licence evasion is rife. The phoney address ploy mentioned by AppalledOfLondon is excellent and one that is used extensively in Italy. Actually, only part of the licence money will actually end up in the BBC coffers (RAI only cash about 30%), so it's just another stealth tax! Seems to me that the greatest benefit of Britain's EU membership is that continental politicians have been teaching their British counterparts a trick or two: how to fleece us and how never to be honest!