I've just returned from a month in Europe. It's been about fifteen years since I spent such a long period away from my adopted country and I mention it for two reasons. Firstly it gave me a brief opportunity to experience firsthand what is happening there and secondly it afforded me a more dispassionate view of what is going on in South Africa. There are some uncomfortable similarities.
The first thing you notice when you visit London are the cameras. The place has become positively Orwellian. There are cameras on street lights, on railway stations, in railway carriages, in restaurants, banks, shops and on the sides of most buildings. There was even a camera in the gents toilet at Bank underground station but it was a rather cold day and I'm not expecting a call from Brett Murray.
The official reason for the cameras is to catch criminals but one can't help feeling that there are other, more sinister, reasons for cameras to be so widespread. Maybe the Leveson inquiry into media phone hacking has made me cynical but all those cameras make it very easy to invade someone's privacy and even fabricate evidence against a political or business enemy with a bit of skilful editing.
Political correctness was first identified back in the early 1990's in the UK. In those days it was seen as a joke and The Politically Correct Handbook sold well and way back then defined a "racist" as someone who disagrees with your point of view. In 2012 political correctness has got out of hand with the police terrified to arrest non white criminals for fear of being labelled racist by the media. The word "coloured" is now racist with black being the preferred term.
It has become very dangerous to even make a joke in public because anything that could be deemed offensive and insulting to someone could constitute an offence under section 5 of The Public Order Act 1986. An Oxford undergraduate was thrown into a police cell for a night for saying to a mounted policeman "Excuse me, but do you know that your horse is gay".
I'm not sure whether it was the horse or the police officer that was offended in this case but it does demonstrate a massive sense of humour failure on the part of the constabulary. Or worse, an opportunity for a policeman to show who is in charge by abusing a stupid law. There is currently a lobby to amend section 5 of the act which reads thus: