|
View unanswered posts | View active topics
| Author |
Message |
|
Antony
|
Post subject: Posted: Thu, 04 Oct 2007 20:49:34 +0000 |
|
 |
| E-List |
 |
Joined: Mon, 12 Mar 2007 23:22:40 +0000 Posts: 111
|
Antony wrote: ... it's about how much you value privacy' ...
Sorry, that should have read '...it's about how much you value YOUR privacy'...
|
|
| Top |
|
 |
|
capnbob
|
Post subject: Posted: Fri, 05 Oct 2007 07:55:01 +0000 |
|
 |
| A-List |
 |
Joined: Fri, 04 Aug 2006 12:05:45 +0000 Posts: 1654 Location: Shrewsbury
|
|
Thanks, Carpe Noctum and Antony - all added.
I partially agree with Antony's point that this isn't just wordplay. It is certainly important. But I think it is partly wordplay because NTH/NTF is partly wordplay; it's a blurt which conceals a lot underneath. If we can find a response that strips the blurt of its power without having to laboriously address everything underneath then we will have done well. In a few days I'll review the list we are coming up with and see if there are patterns there.
In the meantime, more suggestions please: what's the first thing you say if someone says "if you've nothing to hide, you've nothing to fear"?
|
|
| Top |
|
 |
|
Baron von Lotsov.
|
Post subject: Posted: Fri, 05 Oct 2007 10:36:54 +0000 |
|
 |
| A-List |
 |
Joined: Mon, 10 Apr 2006 15:34:02 +0000 Posts: 2283 Location: Back in the USSR
|
|
OK maybe something like. "Did you think of that yourself?"
It's a simple question; it really is very simple indeed but could be at the same time very problematic to answer for some people, especially the ones who use the nothing to hide remark. If they answer "no but I agree with it" then ask them why. You will find the typical response after that starting to dig a hole for them because they can't just leave these questions unanswered, as it makes them feel stupid.
The attack is on their own willingness to believe anything they hear, so you need to get them to question this. I always try and go to the core of the problem rather than argue about something that is easy for them, like something that they can say, "well that's just your opinion". Oh how I hate that response, I guess they get taught that one as well at brainwashing school.
Actually I get this kind of thing a lot with officials and I simply don't stand for their tricks anymore. A lot of people are trained to deal with people who are trying to raise an issue using professional brush-off techniques. When these are used against me my response is usually to start getting extremely angry with them in that I take such a brush off as a personal insult and force them to retract it. Usually the force of rebuttal scares them into submission as I play their boss for them. You see their brainwashing is also about respecting authority so never play the part of their punter and always use the kind of body language which makes them listen to you. Seriously with a big enough shock you can wake these people up but you can't wake someone up by whispering to them, you have to be a bit more forceful psychologically. Like clearing a blockage in a drain. Once clear the drain will function quite ok for a good long while.
_________________ "It's easy to win forgiveness for being wrong; being right is what gets you into real trouble."
Bjarne Stroustrup
|
|
| Top |
|
 |
|
Guest
|
Post subject: Re: question - an anti nothing to hide political party Posted: Fri, 05 Oct 2007 15:45:00 +0000 |
|
|
|
Crazed Loon wrote: Start up a political party with a short single purpose manifesto. Quote:
|
|
| Top |
|
 |
|
Andrew Watson
|
Post subject: Posted: Sat, 06 Oct 2007 01:23:42 +0000 |
|
 |
| Site Admin |
 |
Joined: Sun, 09 Jan 2005 18:23:13 +0000 Posts: 9900 Location: Cambridge
|
capnbob wrote: In the meantime, more suggestions please: what's the first thing you say if someone says "if you've nothing to hide, you've nothing to fear"?
Well, it isn't as snappy as some of the suggestions so far, but at the moment I'm road-testing variations on this response:
"You're an honest person, and of course you have nothing to hide from other honest people - but what about the dishonest ones? What about career criminals intent on theft and fraud - are you happy for them to know all about you? Where you live? Where you work? Which bank you use? Your medical history? Where your children go to school?"
Results so far have been promising ...
_________________ Andrew Watson
|
|
| Top |
|
 |
|
Barry
|
Post subject: Posted: Sat, 06 Oct 2007 14:04:45 +0000 |
|
 |
| E-List |
 |
Joined: Sun, 23 Jan 2005 15:37:35 +0000 Posts: 120 Location: London
|
|
Nice one Andrew! That's just about the best short response I have heard. As many of my acquaintances tend to have even shorter attention spans I shall adapt it and try something like this:
'Nothing to hide, nothing to fear from the bad guys? Sucker!'
- But only with friends. With 'pub-people' I might try:
'Nothing to hide, nothing to fear? That what every con merchant and bent politician in the world wants decent people to say. It plays right into their hands.'
If they bite, I give the Andrew response.
Thanks!
_________________ [color=#0000FF]http://www.amazon.co.uk/Indentity-Cards-Barry-Tighe/dp/0956302807/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1254129276&sr=1-3[/color]
|
|
| Top |
|
 |
|
Tez Burke
|
Post subject: Posted: Sat, 06 Oct 2007 15:05:36 +0000 |
|
Joined: Wed, 14 Dec 2005 06:03:45 +0000 Posts: 55
|
John Welford wrote: A variant to a parent might be:
"So you wouldn't mind someone from the council routinely coming to inspect your children's rooms and their personal belongings?"
Nice one John!
"NTHNTF" x "Thinkofthechildrunnn" = overload. Should shut the sheeple up while they get their limited brain capacities around that little conundrum.
|
|
| Top |
|
 |
|
capnbob
|
Post subject: Posted: Sat, 06 Oct 2007 16:01:28 +0000 |
|
 |
| A-List |
 |
Joined: Fri, 04 Aug 2006 12:05:45 +0000 Posts: 1654 Location: Shrewsbury
|
Andrew Watson wrote: "You're an honest person, and of course you have nothing to hide from other honest people - but what about the dishonest ones? What about career criminals intent on theft and fraud - are you happy for them to know all about you? Where you live? Where you work? Which bank you use? Your medical history? Where your children go to school?"
Yes, that would work well in a speech too. Do a show of hands to identify the nothing-to-hiders, get a volunteer, and then ask them questions until they get so uncomfortable they stop answering: name, address, date of birth, mother's maiden name, credit card number, security code, PIN...
|
|
| Top |
|
 |
|
Doctor_Wibble
|
Post subject: Posted: Mon, 08 Oct 2007 06:51:53 +0000 |
|
 |
| Moderator |
Joined: Tue, 11 Apr 2006 13:02:46 +0000 Posts: 2850
|
capnbob wrote: ...get a volunteer, and then ask them questions until they get so uncomfortable they stop answering: name, address, date of birth, mother's maiden name, credit card number, security code, PIN...
I think for this you'd need to have a list of things that are perhaps private, but not *secret* - name, place and date of birth (NB don't call it "birthday"), their employer (not "who you work for") and job title might fit here. The wording is important to give the difference between simply asking a question and gathering information but this approach gives them the opportunity to say "why should I tell you" and as an individual (not an official form) you can't justify that. Of course if they've stood up in a meeting and made their declaration then they have put themselves on the spot.
If they seem to lean towards the 'protecting identity' side, perhaps also suggest that all those 'nothing to hide' people (e.g. on those 'look at me me me' social sites) are half the reason that identity theft is on the increase, what with them being the easiest targets for it.
|
|
|
| Top |
|
 |
|
Baron von Lotsov.
|
Post subject: Posted: Mon, 08 Oct 2007 10:47:58 +0000 |
|
 |
| A-List |
 |
Joined: Mon, 10 Apr 2006 15:34:02 +0000 Posts: 2283 Location: Back in the USSR
|
|
OK, this one might cause their brains to hang in one of those infinite loops.
"Who inspects the inspectors?"
_________________ "It's easy to win forgiveness for being wrong; being right is what gets you into real trouble."
Bjarne Stroustrup
|
|
| Top |
|
 |
|
John Welford
|
Post subject: Posted: Mon, 08 Oct 2007 12:18:00 +0000 |
|
 |
| C-List |
 |
Joined: Fri, 07 Oct 2005 08:30:46 +0000 Posts: 799 Location: Edinburgh
|
|
There's always the powerful:
"Innocence is no protection ..."
followed by - take your pick:
"... just ask the surviving relatives of those who were murdered in the gas chambers of Auschwitz and Dachau."
"... just ask the young Buddhist monks who are being punished for their democracy protests in Burma."
etc.
_________________ John
http://www.jwelford.demon.co.uk/
|
|
| Top |
|
 |
|
MrsRobinson
|
Post subject: Posted: Mon, 08 Oct 2007 17:54:25 +0000 |
|
Joined: Mon, 01 Oct 2007 19:35:08 +0000 Posts: 13
|
capnbob wrote: "if you've nothing to hide, you've nothing to fear"?
Quote Hitler ' What luck for rulers that men don't think.'
|
|
| Top |
|
 |
|
Guest
|
Post subject: Posted: Thu, 11 Oct 2007 11:32:36 +0000 |
|
|
|
|
Nothing to hide
Nothing to fear
My familys privacy
Isn't so dear
|
|
| Top |
|
 |
|
Devilled Advocat
|
Post subject: Posted: Thu, 11 Oct 2007 12:47:30 +0000 |
|
 |
| E-List |
 |
Joined: Fri, 17 Aug 2007 19:21:35 +0000 Posts: 96
|
capnbob wrote: Yes, it is an aggravating and ignorant catchphrase. But we still hear it over and over and over. It was used repeatedly in the Panorama programme, and the DNA debate on You and Yours, to take but two examples. We may yet throw our hands up in despair. But in the meantime it is surely worth trying harder to come up with a catchphrase of our own that is just as positive, broad, and appealing as NTH/NTF. So far we have collectively produced some good jokes, some defensive-sounding replies, and some long explanations. None of them will catch on. A single good phrase can swing a whole argument, and at the moment the nothing-to-hiders have the advantage.
"Would you give someone you don't know your birth certificate or driving licence (or relevant document) to look after?"
Whether answer is yes or no (its usually no),
"Would you be happy to ask that someone for permission to use your driving licence every time you have to prove who you are?"
|
|
| Top |
|
 |
|
Doctor_Wibble
|
Post subject: Posted: Sun, 14 Oct 2007 23:53:49 +0000 |
|
 |
| Moderator |
Joined: Tue, 11 Apr 2006 13:02:46 +0000 Posts: 2850
|
|
Not wanting to divert on to other issues, something that struck me today - three weeks ago, a seventeen-year-old smoker had nothing to hide. It's another one that rather depends on the audience though, but may be enough (and sufficiently short) to make the point that "nothing" today can so easily be "something" tomorrow.
Hence my preferred responses of "how do you mean?", "nothing in what sense?" etc etc
|
|
| Top |
|
 |
|
Swifty
|
Post subject: Things to hide and who to hide them from Posted: Tue, 16 Oct 2007 13:54:06 +0000 |
|
|
|
|
I'd like to hide my daughters details from Paedophiles because I fear for her
I'd like to hide my bank details from thieves
I'd like to hide my medical records from you for fear they may embarrass me
I'd like to hide whatever I like from the untrustworthy or corrupt
Much like government I would like to hide sensitive information for security.
|
|
| Top |
|
 |
|
capnbob
|
Post subject: Posted: Mon, 22 Oct 2007 20:10:23 +0000 |
|
 |
| A-List |
 |
Joined: Fri, 04 Aug 2006 12:05:45 +0000 Posts: 1654 Location: Shrewsbury
|
OK, I promised to collect and digest the responses, so here goes. Apologies if I haven't done the groupings quite the way you might have done, it's all just to help the debate move forward.
I thought the comebacks grouped quite well under the following headings:
Jolt their complacency Everybody has something to hide Dangers of being too trusting Right to privacy Political implications
Here is the full list. Ignore all the annoying "wrote"s added by the forum software...
(Jolt their complacency) wrote: Precisely, that's why I object to ID Cards.
Do you really believe that?
Isn't that a bit selfish?
Good god, even the government have stopped using that spin. Did you think of that yourself?
How do you mean? "Nothing" in what sense? (Everybody has something to hide) wrote: Well, the government always has plenty to hide.
Everybody has something to hide.
So you wouldn't mind the police installing surveillance cameras in every room of your house?
So you wouldn't mind someone from the council routinely coming to inspect your children's rooms and their personal belongings?
Then why do you have curtains?
Why do you not send all of your personal mail correspondence on the back of postcards?
Much like government I would like to hide sensitive information for security.
Your family's privacy isn't important then?
Have you never been asked to keep a confidence? (Dangers of being too trusting) wrote: You may have nothing to hide from honest people. But what about dishonest people?
I'd like to hide my daughters details from Paedophiles because I fear for her
I'd like to hide my bank details from thieves
I'd like to hide my medical records from you for fear they may embarrass me
I'd like to hide whatever I like from the untrustworthy or corrupt
Would you give someone you don't know your birth certificate or driving licence (or relevant document) to look after? Would you be happy to ask that someone for permission to use your driving licence every time you have to prove who you are? (Right to privacy) wrote: Then you've no need to be identified, keep that for the criminals.
Everyone has the right to a private life.
It's not about whether you have something to hide, it's about how much you value your privacy. (Political implications) wrote: That what every con merchant and bent politician in the world wants decent people to say. It plays right into their hands.
Hitler ' What luck for rulers that men don't think.'
Innocence is no protection: just ask the surviving relatives of those who were murdered in the gas chambers of Auschwitz and Dachau.
Innocence is no protection: just ask the young Buddhist monks who are being punished for their democracy protests in Burma.
This is nothing to do with criminality. It's about having a private life. The first thing to unravel when a democracy slides into totalitarianism is privacy.
If there is a single heading that might cover the entire list, I think it's " Dangers of being too trusting". The fact that not everybody has our interests at heart is why we all have something to hide, and fear. Perhaps that goes to the root of it.
|
|
|
| Top |
|
 |
|
C.Boylan
|
Post subject: Posted: Wed, 24 Oct 2007 12:38:33 +0000 |
|
Joined: Tue, 23 Oct 2007 16:15:47 +0000 Posts: 8 Location: Coventry
|
|
In my experience, a lot of people who use the phrase 'Nothing to Hide, Nothing to Fear' phrase, also use the word 'crime'/'criminal' at some point in their pro-argument.
A possible way to counter this is to give some examples of law changes that would make a lot of people criminals,
e.g.
making a joke about the PM or government
or
meeting in groups of more than three.
Maybe look up some [harsh] laws that people in other countries have been executed for breaking, freedoms that we take for granted while others on the same planet can't afford to.
It's kind of the diplomatic 'ok, you may trust this government, but what about the next, and the one after that...' line of thought [i know a lot of pro-Labour people, so it pays to be diplomatic]
|
|
| Top |
|
 |
|
Guy Herbert
|
Post subject: Posted: Wed, 24 Oct 2007 18:16:46 +0000 |
|
 |
| Moderator |
Joined: Wed, 29 Dec 2004 12:34:03 +0000 Posts: 2532 Location: London
|
C.Boylan wrote: meeting in groups of more than three.
Actually, doing that (in fact groups of more than one!) and failing to disperse and leave the area when ordered by a constable who deems them threatening is already illegal in most police divisions of central London, all of the ones I know in the West End having already been declared to be Dispersal Zones under the Anti-Social Behaviour Act 2003.
People who haven't been paying attention in the last 10 years are likely to get some nasty shocks some time.
_________________ Guy Herbert
General Secretary, NO2ID
general.secretary@no2id.net
(to contact me directly email. Don't use the forum messaging service.)
|
|
| Top |
|
 |
|
Baron von Lotsov.
|
Post subject: Posted: Thu, 25 Oct 2007 01:07:25 +0000 |
|
 |
| A-List |
 |
Joined: Mon, 10 Apr 2006 15:34:02 +0000 Posts: 2283 Location: Back in the USSR
|
|
Yes and notice another thing. All these new laws are brought in and they sit on the statute books doing not a lot. Of course they don't want to overuse all of these new laws right now or it might cause alarm, instead they want to keep piling them on that book as fast as possible, even when some new laws seem to be unnecessary due to existing laws. One day they will have what they call a zero tolerance policy and that is when people will notice.
_________________ "It's easy to win forgiveness for being wrong; being right is what gets you into real trouble."
Bjarne Stroustrup
|
|
| Top |
|
 |
|
imatt
|
Post subject: Posted: Fri, 26 Oct 2007 11:50:15 +0000 |
|
Joined: Tue, 14 Feb 2006 16:05:47 +0000 Posts: 49
|
Nothing to hide, nothing to fear....
"Then remind me never to tell YOU anything in confidence..." See how the like that one.
When I hear poeple use that lazy, throw away line, I say that they must trust the gov't so much that they should never ever again criticise this or any future administration with regards to trustworthiness.
|
|
| Top |
|
 |
|
C.Boylan
|
Post subject: Posted: Wed, 07 Nov 2007 14:12:43 +0000 |
|
Joined: Tue, 23 Oct 2007 16:15:47 +0000 Posts: 8 Location: Coventry
|
Guy Herbert wrote: Actually, doing that (in fact groups of more than one!) and failing to disperse and leave the area when ordered by a constable who deems them threatening is already illegal in most police divisions of central London, all of the ones I know in the West End having already been declared to be Dispersal Zones under the Anti-Social Behaviour Act 2003.
People who haven't been paying attention in the last 10 years are likely to get some nasty shocks some time.
Ahhh...see, I thought it was a loitering law that hadn't been changed since 18th century (or similar). It's even more worrying to know that it's a very recent Act.
Cheers Guy.
|
|
| Top |
|
 |
|
richie
|
Post subject: privacy Posted: Wed, 07 Nov 2007 18:44:49 +0000 |
|
|
|
|
I'm new. I've joined because my DNA, fingerprints and retinas etc are exactly that, mine, and no one elses damn business. When the day comes that they want me to give samples I'm leaving and never coming back this place wont be home anymore.
|
|
| Top |
|
 |
|
MrBester
|
Post subject: Posted: Fri, 09 Nov 2007 19:35:50 +0000 |
|
 |
| C-List |
 |
Joined: Fri, 01 Jul 2005 17:00:41 +0000 Posts: 894 Location: The Glorious Plutocratic ConDem Syndicate (Australo-Oriens locality)
|
C.Boylan wrote: Ahhh...see, I thought it was a loitering law that hadn't been changed since 18th century (or similar). It's even more worrying to know that it's a very recent Act.
Yup, if you gather in a group of more than one then the 2003 act applies. If you're on your own then the loitering law applies. Good here innit?
_________________ Be seeing you...
|
|
| Top |
|
 |
|
luke13
|
Post subject: RE Nowt to Hide... Posted: Fri, 16 Nov 2007 21:10:53 +0000 |
|
Joined: Mon, 03 Sep 2007 18:15:10 +0000 Posts: 64
|
|
| Top |
|
 |
Who is online |
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest |
|
You can post new topics in this forum You can reply to topics in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot post attachments in this forum
|
|
|