t8hants":3l8a2he4 said:
They work on the assumption that you must have a set, and if they have no record of you obtaining a licence then they assume you are dodging the fee.
Or that everyone has to pay, but there is an exemption if you can prove that you do not have a TV. That would make life easier for all concerned would it not? (hammer)
t8hants":3l8a2he4 said:
It is all done to frighten you into obtaining a licence.
That is the bit that annoys me. What they are doing is bullying - plain and simple. It verges on 'extracting money with menaces'. One letter said that 'One of our enforcement officers will be round to interview you'. My wife used to manage a sheltered housing block, and had to deal with elderly residents who had been confused and frightened by such letters. This letter implies (incorrectly, which is close to lying) that I am already destined for court, and that the only way to prevent this is to either cough up some money which I am not obliged to pay, or to perform an action that I am not obliged to perform. Does that not seem a teensy-weensy bit immoral if not illegal?
And there
are people that fall for this. Sane, rational, adult people who have been conditioned to believe such tosh, just as some people believe that they are obliged to declare their TV free status (And even beligerent me had to check the facts at that point
).
t8hants":3l8a2he4 said:
The dodgy ground is reached should you be summoned to court because they will I suspect lean on the assumption that any reasonable person would wish to inform the authorities of your perceived exemption. You may win but incur costs. The old detector vans were only to frighten people into buying a licence, they could detect an operating set with a much smaller device so I was told.
My little industrial unit would get letters every three months, they never gave up.
Gareth
That would be an interesting fight.......
Take me to court for not having a licence, and when they could not prove I needed one claim that it was my fault for not telling them I did not have a TV. Bring it on. I would lean heavily on the legally supported position that I am innocent until proven guilty. And that means totally innocent, not just 'mostly innocent', which would be the implication of 'fining' me costs for defending my position.
Mostly I ignore the letters, but this one seems to have escalated the level of bullying into realms that seem entirely innappropriate for a national institution. It seems, though that many of the responders disagree. That is fine - I posted this to gauge reaction, and thank those that have taken the trouble to respond whatever their opinions.
(I reckon that I am heading for today's 'Victor Meldrew' award.....)