This crazy story about a university claiming that posters in a window “break the law” is a good example of how chaotic and inconsistent law-making can lead to a denial of liberty. Quick thread. 1/n
I’ve been doing some reading on the ‘chilling effect’ recently. It’s usually used with regards to freedom of expression, but it’s a term imported from US legal thought, and can be applied to any kind of liberty or lawful activity. 2/n
Supreme Court Justice William Brennan warned of how a ‘chill’ can be “generated by vagueness, overbreadth and unbridled discretion” of laws/state powers used to curb speech. (Dissent in Walker v City of Birmingham, 388 US 307 in 1967)
3/n
Imprecision in the law can lead to a loss of rights in two ways.

The first is that in many countries, the vagueness can be used to directly suppress freedoms. Look how the nebulous ‘insulting Turkishness’ restrictions are deployed to prosecute people in Turkey, for e.g. 4/n
Or (same country) “propagandising for the enemy” defined so broadly as to include an oil painting critical of the army pen-international.org/news/zehra-dog… 5/n
The other way in which vagueness can curb freedom is that people become uncertain about what is legal. So they err on the side of caution and self-censor or otherwise self-regulate their behaviour more than they should. 6/n
In anti-democratic regimes, those in power *deliberately* keep laws vague in order to a) reserve the possibility of trumping up a prosecution for someone who challenges them; and b) as a way of keeping the rest of the population in check. 7/n
One hallmark of an open, democratic society where the rule of law is respected is that laws are precise. A citizen know where the legal line is in advance, and can regulate their behaviour if they need to. 8/n
Now, despite Boris Johnson’s obvious duplicity and bullying tactics on many issues, I don’t think he’s being deliberately authoritarian with regards to coronavirus regulations... 9/n
I’m happy for people to argue with me on that point, but I think Occam’s Razor says that the Conservative Party’s chaotic legislation is simply because Boris and his ministers are just not very good. 10/n
Regardless, the outcomes are similar to authoritarian regimes. The U.K. government’s frantic, unscrutinised, seat-of-the-pants law-making via statutory instrument has created a patchwork of overlapping, sometimes contradictory and sometimes absurd rules. 11/n
Top-Of-Their-Game lawyers like @AdamWagner1 and @davidallengreen are doing sterling work trying to make sense of it all. But even they admit to being baffled. 12/n
And when the law is obscure, that’s when people who aren’t necessarily lawyers, like the Student Services Team at a Manchester university, step in to interpret the law: Badly, and illiberally. And yet, just... JUST, plausibly enough. 13/n
So when those of a libertarian tendency moan about this slapstick lawmaking-at-pace, it’s not because they’re being contrarian or want to slow down the Covid response. It’s that these kind of laws are making things worse. 14/n
I was glad to hear on the news that some Tory MPs are complaining about this and want to restore proper parliamentary scrutiny to law-making. The rules that are issued might not come at the same *pace* as Matt Hancock’s fag packet Statutory Instruments... 15/n
But the laws that do come via a full debate will likely be more precise, easier to follow and easier not to break. In the long term, that’s what will make them more effective. 16/16.
@threadreaderapp Look I know that no-one retweeted or even liked this thread built can you unroll it anyway so I can put it on my blog so people can not read it there as well? Thanks.

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More from @robertsharp59

Dec 8, 2020
The replies to this tweet/op-ed are full of people reminding David Lammy about the shocking abuse of the Bengalis by Churchill, and reminding us of some of his greatest, racist quotes. This prompts a quick thought... 1/n
Perhaps we tolerate obvious rights-abusers like Churchill in our national story because, regardless of the bad things they did, they set us on a trajectory that we nevertheless approve of (at least in the context that Lammy is talking about in the article). 2/n
We celebrate Churchill’s promotion of human rights and overlook his violations because (done right) they lead inexorably towards a situation where Churchill’s own abuse of colonised people would be prevented or punished. 3/n
Read 11 tweets
Dec 8, 2020
Gah. I just managed to pocket dial someone, and then unwittingly left a 6 minute voicemail of various domestic conversations. I’m absolutely mortified.
I say ‘pocket dial’ but what I actually did was press the button on my Bluetooth headphones to try and switch off the podcast I was listening to. I think Siri must have activated, and interpreted whatever I said as a request to call someone. 2/n
This is an entirely 21st Century embarrassment, made possible only through the invention of at least three major technologies (mobile phones, Bluetooth, voice recognition), with my bright red face at their confluence. 3/n
Read 9 tweets
Sep 24, 2020
My first thought when reading this was to think of a solution. What barristers had some kind of badge? Or what if barrister wigs and gowns were reinstated in Magistrates Courts?

This was the wrong thought. Because...
We shouldn’t need freakin’ badges to stop people making racist assumptions.

If I had the emoji keyboard installed then between every word in that sentence would be a clap icon.
ASIDE: The other day I experienced the opposite of this. I had to go to hospital for a thing, and I turn up in my generic work clothes - smart shoes, trousers, shirt, no tie - with my office lanyard around my neck.
Read 5 tweets
Sep 23, 2020
Right so I know this is probably a first world problem but I’m going to indulge myself with a moan about... plastic bags from @Ocado 1/6
During the spring lockdown, we were pretty conscientious about avoiding the shops and doing more online deliveries.

At about the same time, @Ocado stopped its programme of recycling plastic bags, because that could obviously be a source of virus transmission. 2/6
The problem with this is that every time we have a delivery, we get about a dozen plastic bags. In the before times, I would just hand bags from the previous shop back to the delivery driver and get a 5p rebate. But recently they’ve been piling up in the garage. 3/6
Read 6 tweets
Sep 12, 2020
One thing I think about a lot is what headlines and political messaging would look like if liberals/progressive adopted some of the tabloidy, accuracy-stretching tactics we see deployed by the Johnson right. This news story might be a good case study.
‘Johnson set your opt out of human rights laws’ reads the headline. Now, if you read the article, you’ll see that he wants to opt out of very specific human rights measures, on immigration and when soliders can be prosecuted for acts committed while on operations.
However, one can argue that to derogate from some provisions in the human rights laws and treaties is to undermine the entire framework. And if that’s true, then attacking one human right is to attack them all.
Read 5 tweets
Sep 11, 2020
Who remembers Abu Qatada? He was accused of terrorism and seems a security risk, but Theresa May had a torrid time trying to deport him to Jordan because she couldn’t guarantee he wouldn’t be tortured. 1/4
How did we get rid of Abu Qatada eventually? Oh yes... A TREATY! Mrs May was able to satisfy the courts that he wouldn’t be subjected to torture, because we could rely on Jordan to abide by the terms of the treaty. 2/4
If Jordan had announced it was prepared to break treaties in a “specific and limited way” then the protections against torture for Abu Qatada would have been deemed not worth the paper they were written on. And he would still be here. 3/4
Read 4 tweets

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