dreilly
Chillin' in Geneva
- Local time
- 7:24 PM
- Joined
- Dec 25, 2004
- Messages
- 1,045
When I don't want my photograph to be taken, I just stop reflecting photons. Why don't people use this approach more often?
doug
doug
I was in a bar, with a bunch of people who had just gotten laid off from my company, and I was waiting for someone to move so I could get my shot. Two women and a guy where way in the background and they motioned for me to come over. I walked over and they said "Who are you shooting for?" I said I was just shooting some friends from work and if it looked like I was photographing them I'm sorry I wasn't. At some point one of the women said give me your camera and let me see. I said I'm sorry I can't do that, at which point I motioned to get up and the woman dug her long finger nails into my arm and the guy motioned as if he was going to start a fight. I walked away, with some scratches. On their way out they said "if those ****ing pictures end up on the internet you are ****ing dead!" Anyway this kind of thing just pisses me off and gets my adrenaline flowing, I didn't reply but its hard to be accused of something you haven't done. Its hard for me to be threatened by people because they were in the corner of my frame or far off in the distance, or in this case not.
My point is, I feel for you Jack.
Hmmm... do you really think that was a legitimate concern?My friend over there is very, very paranoid about having his picture taken and he has a good reason for that."
I promptly deleted the picture. He thanked me and walked away. I saw him nod to his friends.
So, sometimes, people may really have a legitimate concern about having their picture taken in public.
hey you can take my picture anytime,just leave the .50 pointing somewhere else please🙄The most memorable time this happened was when I was in Fallujah, Iraq (yeah, another Iraq story) patrolling down a street parallel to one of the main supply routes. I was shooting overall compositions of the rubble that our engineers were removing from the street in a before-after kind of way.
Possibly 30 meters beyond a large pile of twisted metal was a group of 4 soldiers and one of them yelled at me "Hey! No photographs of this unit!" but I kept shooting and he aggressively approached me telling me that I couldn't take any photographs do to his "mission" (which was looting, by the way). I answered him respectfully and said that I couldn't delete them as they were documentary for the work that our combat engineers were doing and I was responsible for the archive and delivering it to my commanding officer. Then I pulled out my laminated copy of OPNAVINST 3104.1 which basically gave me carte blanche to shoot whatever I pleased while in the theater regarding the execution of my duties. He insisted and I refused then I had the .50 gunner in my squad watch what was going on as I said no and walked away.
Phil Forrest
Last saturday I got into trouble for taking this picture....
Women comes up and asks if these were my children and wanted me to delete this shot....
2011-12-11-41 by Rogier Diver, on Flickr
So, did you delete it?
Marty is it the guy who plays in china-town from time to time? Not far from where A LUG meets now.