I know that a) this is a cheat post and b)I'm supposed to be on holiday, not working my tiny butt off trying to get articles down for big online magazines, but here it is: on differences in attitudes to migration in London and New York, for the Huffington Post.
Any contributions to the debate, here or at the HuffPo, would be greatly appreciated. If I get lots of comments they might let me write for them again...
Showing posts with label injustice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label injustice. Show all posts
Friday, 19 June 2009
Thursday, 12 June 2008
Scenes from Turnpike Lane station...
An hour ago, on emerging from the bowels of the Picadilly line as is my wont at half six on a Thursday, I was dismayed to see a wall of armoured police surrounding a pair of electronic weapons-detecting barriers through which the good residents of Wood Green were being made to walk. So I took it upon myself to engage a couple of members of Her Majesty's Constabulary in conversation.
'Why are the scanners up again?'
'It's a deterrent. You know, knife crime. You watch the news, don't you?'
'So what are they for?'
'Well, to see if anyone's carrying a knife.'
'Is it against the law to refuse to go through, then? Say, what would happen if I just walked right round the edge?'
'Well, you're not exactly carrying a knife, are you?!' Sner sner, oi lads look at the sweet little white girl in her cardie trying to be clever.
I tried a different tack. 'So, how do these barriers tell if you're carrying a knife rather than just, say, any old metal?'
'They don't. They're quite neanderthal really. They just flash red when someone's got metal.'
'But hang on. The lights are flashing red for every other person. Why aren't you stopping all those people?'
'Well...' indulgent little police-officer smile turns into get-rid-of-this-member-of-the-public grin 'look, we just use our judgement - say, if someone like your good self set off the buzzers, well,' looks me up and down 'you're clearly not the sort of person to be carrying a knife, are you?'
'So what sort of people would you stop and search, then?'
'Well, you watch the news.'
'Of course I watch the news. What sort of people would you stop?'
'You know, the sort of people who commit crimes. You watch the news.'
'You haven't answered my question.'
'Are you a journalist?'
'Absolutely.'
'My colleagues and I aren't trained for this. Bugger off and call the press office and go through those barriers while you're about it.'
Stunned, I marched through the ancient plastic barriers, the metal buckles on my boots winking.
And the lights flashed red.
And nobody stopped me.
'Why are the scanners up again?'
'It's a deterrent. You know, knife crime. You watch the news, don't you?'
'So what are they for?'
'Well, to see if anyone's carrying a knife.'
'Is it against the law to refuse to go through, then? Say, what would happen if I just walked right round the edge?'
'Well, you're not exactly carrying a knife, are you?!' Sner sner, oi lads look at the sweet little white girl in her cardie trying to be clever.
I tried a different tack. 'So, how do these barriers tell if you're carrying a knife rather than just, say, any old metal?'
'They don't. They're quite neanderthal really. They just flash red when someone's got metal.'
'But hang on. The lights are flashing red for every other person. Why aren't you stopping all those people?'
'Well...' indulgent little police-officer smile turns into get-rid-of-this-member-of-the-public grin 'look, we just use our judgement - say, if someone like your good self set off the buzzers, well,' looks me up and down 'you're clearly not the sort of person to be carrying a knife, are you?'
'So what sort of people would you stop and search, then?'
'Well, you watch the news.'
'Of course I watch the news. What sort of people would you stop?'
'You know, the sort of people who commit crimes. You watch the news.'
'You haven't answered my question.'
'Are you a journalist?'
'Absolutely.'
'My colleagues and I aren't trained for this. Bugger off and call the press office and go through those barriers while you're about it.'
Stunned, I marched through the ancient plastic barriers, the metal buckles on my boots winking.
And the lights flashed red.
And nobody stopped me.
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