sjw617
Panoramist
The reason a bicyclist is of interest, is that there have been a couple of other bombings in NYC by bicyclists. The Mexican and British consulates were the past targets.
Steve
Steve
Al Patterson said:Yes. I used to be a liberal when I was younger, but then I grew up.
Exactly. Liberals scream the loudest when innocents are killed due to lack of vigilance. Just as long as you pull as many old ladies with white hair named Smith as you do guys named Achmed at airports, then their conscience is clear it seems.Al Patterson said:And when the Liberals are in charge, all will be sweetness and light?
Bullsh*t...
Whoever is in power will use fear and the media to get their agenda across.
Dear Al,Al Patterson said:Yes. I used to be a liberal when I was younger, but then I grew up.
Dear Bill,bmattock said:Dancing and squirming and pounce-trifling do, however.
Very good. Your compatriots have stated in so many words that people who are not trained observers should stifle themselves and not make such reports. I gave them a real-life scenario that happened today and involved a real bombing and away they dance, twirl, and avoid actually answering the question. Because not one of them is willing to actually say 'Yes, I believe the witness should not have reported the suspicious bicyclist, because he is not a trained observer.'
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JoeV said:I'll revert back to my previous post: real terrorists don't need to go out in public and "act suspicious" in order to plan a future attack; they use Google Earth. Coincidentally, I just saw this news article on Yahoo, about the Pentagon not allowing Google to video the roads inside military installations:
That's one interpretation. The other is that it's scare-mongering. An external enemy is always a useful way to make people rally behind their government, regardless of their opinion of that government.Ade-oh said:. . . the campaign is simply to raise public awareness that terrorists might be carrying out reconnaissance in public . . . in reality it's reminding the public of their duty as citizens.
Nick De Marco said:As I said on the Leica users thread we should be organising a protest about this. A mass photography session outside parliament or something. We could get all the press photographers to join in and get some good coverage, and photos. Anyone know who to contact to try and pull this off?
BillP said:For those in the UK, this is the most sensible and recent statement of rights that I have seen, incorporating as it does consideration of recent anti-terrorism legislation:
http://fourthirds-user.com/forum/showpost.php?p=11964&postcount=7
Regards,
Bill
I proposed a more capitalist (and therefore probably more efficacious) solution in my 'Matter of Opinion' column in Amateur Photographer magazine in the UK in (as far as I recall) October 2005. I have recapitulated it in a new 'Philosophy of Photography' thread called 'encouraging street photography' (initially mistyped as 'atreet photography').cosmonot said:Why don't they tell EVERYONE to carry cameras, and instruct EVERYONE to photograph EVERYTHING that is suspicous? Wouldn't that be better? Photo classes in elementary and junior and high schools could be underwritten by the Department of Homeland Security, or whatever the British equivalent is. Wouldn't that be GREAT?
Who wants to live in a world where only criminals have cameras?