I think that any statement that begins with "In these [modern, dangerous, unusual] times, we need to..." is itself a dangerous statement, and it immediately gets my hackles up. Governments, contrary to popular opinion, and the perception of Hollywood, traditionally don't just strip rights away one sunny day. They normally eat them away slowly, and usually by seeking buy-in from the populace - making such moves seem "reasonable" and "neccessary" and "for our own good." I see it for what it is, and I want to throw up.
It is my opinion that there are too many people who are far too willing to trade away traditional liberties and freedoms in exchange for what they see or have been told is increased safety. Unfortunately, they never trade away their own rights - they trade away mine. I have a teeny little problem with that.
Are there dangerous people out there? Yes.
Do many of them have cameras? Yes.
Are some 'street photographers' actually nothing but perverts? Yes.
Are there more people who seem to think they are entitled to privacy when they wish it, regardless of whether or not they are in public? Yes.
And the solution to this is to change how we (street photographers) go about what we do?
Does that work? Do pedophiles stop being pedophiles? Oh, please.
I'm sorry that the person who posted on PN thought that the photographer he saw was 'creepy' and he wanted to confront him and/or punch him out. Maybe the guy was a pedophile. Maybe not. I wasn't there, and I doubt I'd be able to tell what the guy's intent was by watching him.
But that's the point. If I subject myself to the 'rules' of 'not creeping people out' then I am subject to YOUR interpretation of what 'creepy' is. By YOURS, of course, I mean anyone in the vicinity. Now I'm supposed to be a mind-reader?
Maybe I'm just a creepy looking guy. Maybe I just look 'suspicious' even though I have no malicious intent. So I can't do street photography because of the way I look?
You know, like when a black (hispanic, middle-eastern) guy walks around in a 'white' neighborhood. I think we'd better put a stop to that, shouldn't we? I mean, he just looks suspicious. Maybe we'd better confront him, ask him what he's doing in the neighborhood. Maybe we'll punch him out. There's no telling if he might be a burglar, and he sure looks suspicious to me. Better if we just pass a law, keep all the black guys out of here. Or maybe the black guys should just accept the fact that in these dangerous times, everybody needs to keep more in their place. I mean, hey, sorry about that, black guy. I'm not racist, I have nothing against black guys, but I think that in these dangerous times, it would be best if everyone just avoided getting anyone's suspicions up. It's just for the duration, then everything will be fine. Right?
I'm sorry - I know I'm in the minority here. I realize that we're all worried about what are very real dangers. But I will not change my methods - I can't do it. For the sake of my art, for the sake of my freedom.
And if it means getting confronted, punched, or even arrested - I will not stop doing what I do. I will take your picture if I want to, and I won't ask your permission.
I know that many of you don't do street photography, or you ask permission, etc. I don't have a problem with that. I understand that some of you feel uncomfortable having a camera pointed at you by a stranger, and you think that people need to be more considerate of others' privacy rights even in public. I'm ok with that, too. But I have a problem with those who would then impress those desires on me - by changing laws, by encouraging police to hassle street photographers, by 'confronting' photographers and demanding to know what they're photographing and what they intend to do with their photographs. I mean no offense - but such a demand of me is likely to meet with a response you don't care for.
A society that can't stand to have a light shined on it is not a society - it is a regime.
Best Regards,
Bill Mattocks