![Shocked :shock:](./images/smilies/icon_eek.gif)
OOHH so much to say............
nasaroc wrote:I met a neighbour in Sydenham Road yesterday morning and amongst other things we were talking about the high street and the need to make it a comfortable place for people to walk around as well as shop. When I asked her about her attitude to drunks outside the post office she told me that she never went across to that side of the street when the drunks were sitting there and certainly not with her young daughter.
Now many may dismiss this as over nervousness on her part (although she certainly isn't a "fussy", timid or "stand-offish" person). But I don't think her attitude is very much different to many other locals. Many of my neighbours hold the same attitude. If they have children they'd much rather pile them into a car and travel to the Savacentre or some other supermarket where they feel it is "safer".
The simple fact of the matter here is that savacentre - and its surrounding car park - is private property. It is up to savacentre to decide who they want and who they dont want on their premesis; they can remove who they like. The bench outside the post office is on a public highway, it is a shared communal place where no one group or another owns it. It can not, should not and must not have the lawful activities of any group be curtailed by any other group.Whether we like it or not, our high street is in direct competition with places like the Savacentre for its bread and butter. Can you imagine that Sainburys would put up with something like this for longer than a nanosecond if groups of drunks congregated around the doors of the Savacentre?
Probably not, but I might not want children outside the shop, or black people, or ginger people, or catholics or ugly people.... but if I choose to open a shop on a public highway then I acccept that anyone can stad outside. If I didn't like it that much then I'd go and live in a gated community cut off from teh rest of the world.If you were running a business would you want to have a huddle of permanent drunks outside your premises? Of course not.
I want those things too. However, seeing things that I don't like (people drinking) does not amount to something being unsafe and for me feeling the need to have people forcibly removed. I fail to see how these people outside the post office are stopping me going about my business or how they are making the place unsafe. - If they are being intimidating (sitting there with a can of special brew is not intimidating) then they police can be called.I want one thing: a comfortable, safe environment on our high street so that people want to spend time there and shop. Anything that stands in the way of this - and that includes a crowd of permanent drunks huddled in a central area - should be discouraged and if possible removed.
How is that insane? they aren't breaking the law... so they should be left alone. I thought we had quite a free society in this country of live and let live...not a society where we criminalise, marginalise and curtain twitch our way into a police-state.Or that we can do nothing about this since "they aren't breaking the law".
This is insanity.
That's being a bit harsh on Nasaroc - I'm sure he's a lovely looking fella...Imagine if I started a thread arguing that my beauty parlour was suffereing business because the people that stood around nearby were ugly.... you'd tell me where to go!
funnily enough I'm broadly not really a liberal.....libertarianism is a different thing entirelycastiron73 wrote:I'm heartily fed up of nit-picking over points of law and uber-liberals telling me it's fine to sit in public like that pissed.
well, if you don't want to nitpick how are LBL, or anyone else, going to make it illegal? One needs to find a point of law to facilitate it old boy....its the nitpickers who should find it no?Any regeneration must include plans to make it illegal. I'd force anoraks to stay in gated communities while I was at it.
Wow Besnonby. Even my most provocative post has never resulted in that result...what's your secret?castiron73 wrote:**** OFF
You have made this forum unbearable
Goodbye
I'm not sure if you've misunderstood Admin but this is actally castiron73 vs. Bensonby. It does make a refreshing change from Greg vs [insert anonymous coward here] though but I hadn't noticed any previous between these two.admin wrote:I'd rather it was in the Town Pub to help keep Greg company
Admin
A very sensible and well worded opinion Thomas. If the drunks were removed though where are they going to go? I would hazzard Alexandria Rec Ground, Mayow Park or one of the local residential streets. I would consider them more of a nuisance there.Thomas wrote:Overall, the drinkers on the bench do not cause too many actual problems relating to crime, certainly in my experience - does anyone have any different experiences? However, they are a real nuisance. For a start, they do monopolise the bench - there are a number of infirm elderly people in the area who might well have good need to sit down whilst out shopping but would not want, for good reason, to sit with them. They can also be intimidatory - not a problem if you're young male and fit but if I was a small child they would scare the life out of me and if I was the parent or guardian of a small child I would hesitate to walk past them. I do have sympathy with a libertarian "live and let live" attitude to life, but it’s a lot easier to adopt that attitude if you're young, strong and without dependents. I think that the alcohol excluzion zone powers offer the right levels of proportionality and discretion to the relevant authorities so that we avoid regulatory overkill whilst hopefully ensuring that people are not intimidated away from the high street.