bekdik
Honorary Master
Maybe Woolworths should place a free portion of pork in all customer's bags.
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Why did they involve minors? The parents should be arrested for child abuse.
Yeah because the only reason people lie down on the ground is to become fecal matter or rubbish. And they're offensive when they do so. Even if peacefully. Even if they get punished for it. Nice.
RE - fecal matter???
Can't two guys just joke around a bit? OK, thanks for your advice.![]()
as a flaming homo, many straight people have asked a similar question of me.Dude, so it's like you can give it but you can't take it?![]()
It's a protest action, like the protest strike at the Post Office. What the these people want to do is increase public awareness for their cause through making things inconvenient. Does it work, I don't know. But at least some people know something is happening. if they did not make some form of inconvenience for people it would not be much of a protest. People would just ignore it.
Freedom of Expression would apply in both instances and labour disputes have no greater right of protest than political ones.
There are really two issues at play here:
[1] The right to protest as regulated by various statutory provisions (the RGA being one, although it is entirely not applicable in this instance) and common law principles and rules which balance freedom of expression and political activity as against nuisance and violence.
[2] Trespass and the right of an occupant to expel persons off the property which they occupy (most stores are occupants without being the landowner).
In my view (and IANAL) the charges are unsustainable in criminal proceedings due to the de minimis doctrine. Woolworths should obtain a judicial interdict from the High Court as against the individuals that make up the leadership of the BDSI, and the ANCYL as against further entry into their stores with the intent to cause injury or harm to Woolworths. At this juncture Woolworths would be able to charge such leadership with contempt of court - and should in my view adopt an attitude of civil committal to gaol. The sustainability of public disturbance charges on a blanket basis against protesters raises far to many problems for the State in a private property context and the moment a riot ensues would have a whole heap of problems which makes treating protests in stores in a similar vain to outdoor gatherings a bad idea operationally.
Terrorism Light?
They move into a Jewish area and wanna make It another fordsburg.. Get arrested and disappear please
You are assuming a conviction can follow. I very much doubt the State will do anything other than the three postponements and withdrawal of charges routineOne retarded thing about all this hate towards these protesters, who are protesting illegally, but peacefully (heck as anti apartheid protesters protested, as freaking anti-Communist protesters protested - those were also illegal protests because according to the laws of various peoples' republics) is that treating these people with such disdain one is discouraging peaceful protests and sending a message that violent protests are the only effective way. And that's morally wrong.
Illegal is illegal but these people did get arrested. They will face justice. They protested and paid for it with criminal records which is not a fun thing to have. But at least they did not leave rubbish behind, smash windows, and definitely did not assault anyone.
Maybe legal protests are better and maybe encouraging people to do that rather is good. That also sends a positive message to angry youths.
Well, as soon as they entered the shop to protest they deserved to be arrested. Protesting outside while not obstructing the entrances would have been fine
You are assuming a conviction can follow. I very much doubt the State will do anything other than the three postponements and withdrawal of charges routine
It assumes an omnibus character and would have to specifically (as does Woolworths) say sorry you can't do that here rather than simply claim after the fact "well we didn't like what they were doing so it was trespassing" - I am sure you've seen signs outside malls saying "no soliciting" ...Nope.
Killarney Mall is not public property, I'm pretty sure that by protesting outside Woolies they would still have been breaking the rules and conditions pertaining to the shopping mall, so they would have been trespassing even while standing outside Woolies.
It assumes an omnibus character and would have to specifically (as does Woolworths) say sorry you can't do that here rather than simply claim after the fact "well we didn't like what they were doing so it was trespassing" - I am sure you've seen signs outside malls saying "no soliciting" ...
It assumes an omnibus character and would have to specifically (as does Woolworths) say sorry you can't do that here rather than simply claim after the fact "well we didn't like what they were doing so it was trespassing" - I am sure you've seen signs outside malls saying "no soliciting" ...
I don't know. I am not a lawyer, but it's up to the state to prosecute or not, and it's not as if these people got off scott free. If someone wants to blame their lack of conviction (in the legal sense and not the efforts they put in this protest) they have to blame the constitution, common law and various acts you cited, as well as the prosecutor and magistrate involved. But that's out of control of these protesters themselves even if they get expensive lawyers.
Understandably there will be protests we all won't always agree with. That's part of living in a diverse society. We're vibrant and have to just get to live with each other peacefully.
I am not a lawyer either
This is a subject but the point is that the law relating to protest in this country (on which there is very little written) in my research (to write part of the very little that is written) makes any prospect of a conviction on public disturbance such a remote possibility that the wisdom of arrests should be questioned. Assisting in the removal of persons is one thing but the arrests are an unwelcomed escalation of force by the police.
Wouldn't a sign "NO PICKETING" even if printed on a cheap printer and stuck on with prestik at the entrance not be valid for this?![]()