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#71
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#72
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#73
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#76
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#77
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In article ,
[email protected] says... Oh come on, you can still see almost everything on a 14inch screen, you need a magnifying glass to see some of the screens on these mobiles. That doesn't alter the content being provided, your choice of platform is immaterial. It is not everyones choice of platform is it. I could not very well stick a 28 inch T.v where I was living at the time and I could not afford to even if I wanted to. I must admit, that when I had my 14 inch T.v, I did not pay a licence fee. So as well as being stupid you are also a thief. *plonk* I do not know why I am replying to this, since you will not see it. But I see you have lerned how to use the filter on your news reader then. I am sure that most people in this group have copied a record, tape, or recorded of the radio or even the T.v and kept it. How many people in this news group got software running on their computer that have been copied. These are all theft. As for me not paying for a license fee, I was away from the flat 95% of my time, and there was not way I was going to pay for a license fee for something that was used about a hour a month. Like it all lump it, I do not care. |
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#78
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"Kennedy McEwen" wrote in message
... In article , Arfur Million writes But, so what? That's just the way money works - the important thing is that if I wasn't happy with the purchase I wouldn't have made it. So its OK to take the view "that's the way money works" when it comes to advertising supporting the media, but not OK to take the view "that's the way money works" when it comes to taxation. You seem to have a number of standards, exceeding one, to suit any particular circumstance. Ho hum. On the contrary, I am being entirely consistent. When I buy a packet of breakfast cereal I am happy with that purchase. When I watch C4 I pay the BBC £125 and I am not happy with that "purchase". I am, for example, quite happy to buy BBC publications (books or DVD, whatever) when I think that I am getting value for money for that deal. Suppose someone feels this way about the BBC? Why should they have to forego watching television in order to make such a boycott? Why should I have to forego buying products on the British market simply because I do not watch ITV? Clearly you don't. Nice use of snipping BTW. Now perhaps you can answer the question about why someone with a moral or political reason to boycott the BBC should also forego watching TV? That same swords cuts in many different ways and just because you don't like the license fee doesn't make it any less justified. And just because you like the BBC's programmes doesn't make it any more justified, but it is becoming apparent that this is the basis for your argument. From the BBC's annual review. Their expenditure in 2004 financial year was a tad over £4 billion. In contrast, C4's was £770 million (taking Adrian's figures posted elsewhere in this thread). I would certainly swap the BBC for 5 C4's! You might, I wouldn't. I rarely watch much C4 output, perhaps an hour or so per week - in fact I can't think of a single C4 programme I would go out of my way to watch or even watched in the past week. C4 (& C5 Thought so ... for that matter) are still very minority channels whose own management openly admit they can barely support their operating costs and are incapable of expanding into the new medium of digital broadcasting without license fee support. So they are hardly comparable with the organisation that has been obliged to step and rescue DVBT - all out of the funding it receives from money raised by the license fee! Without the BBC (and the license fee!) there would be no DVBT today at all, following the OnDodgy fiasco. DVBT is clearly more important to you than it is to me - perhaps this is only to be expected in a digital-tv newsgroup. Maybe if there weren't such a dominant dinosaur as the BBC in the market, better technologies would have been developed sooner. Whatever you feel about the content of Sky's packages (and I'd probably agree with you there - it seems to me that the technology of TV is more interesting that what's broadcast over it) it must be said that Sky extended the possibilities in a way that the BBC never would have in that timeframe. To obtain countless channels of sh!t on Sky I would not only pay a subscription fee which is vastly more expensive than the TV license *and* the advertising levy on all of the products and companies that feature at regular intervals throughout their broadcasts. *And* the TV licence! No, the comparison was expense of the BBC versus Sky. Absolutely, in order to obtain the countless channels of dark matter you would have to pay a subscription fee *plus* the Licence fee. Your argument has been that the BBC should pack up and the license fee be abolished because the BBC is far too expensive for what it provides - abolishing the license fee would not make Sky's subscription any less. No! My argument is that the Licence fee should not have to be paid by people who do not use the BBC. For *me*, the BBC is far too expensive for what it provides and I do not wish to pay for it. If *you* like its products and are willing to share its costs (with the others who like it) then long may the BBC prosper and provide a service that its customers enjoy. I am not promoting abolition of the BBC. In addition to a subscription much greater than the license fee, Sky are also funded by advertising - shafting its users at both ends. Yet so many people still subscribe to it, despite *also* paying for the BBC. You may find this incomprehensible, and I have said that I wouldn't subscribe to them either, but that's the way it is. I can't say I've been particularly attracted to the Sky package either, but for the life of me I can't see why people who want Sky's channels (and not the BBC ones) should have to contribute to the BBC - whether it's out of general taxation or not. Because it isn't a BBC fund - it is a tax on operating a TV receiver. It's a tax used to fund the BBC (which is also supported by general taxation). I don't see why I should pay for a state education system, whether in general taxation or not, since I don't make any use of it or a state health service when I pay my own private medical insurance, Education and health are essential services, do you really want to apply the same rules to these as for light entertainment? I don't make use of the state education system either and I too have private medical insurance - but I can see that a healthy and well-educated society is a benefit to everyone. I do not see the benefit to me of the chap next door watching Eastenders. Of course how health and education are funded is highly debatable and different people have different ideas according to their politics - but at least there is an intended benefit for all people from providing these things. but I don't have a choice in either of them, if I earn an income in this country then I have to pay for things I don't want or use - didn't someone just say "that's the way money works"! But you can argue against the way public money is spent, and try to win the political argument. You could also draw a distinction between the way private individuals spend their money and the way governments spend *your* money - but then you would run the risk of being accused of having mutliple standards. Regards, Arfur |
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#79
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In article , Ad wrote:
I am sure that most people in this group have copied a record, tape, or recorded of the radio or even the T.v and kept it. I regularly record TV programmes, but I have always paid the licence fee for the right to receive them, after which it makes no financial difference to anybody when I choose to watch. I have also made copies of CDs for use in the car (because I would never dream of risking the originals), but again, if they are my own CDs that I have paid for, the CD companies have not been deprived of their money for my use of their product. I've only got one pair of ears and can think of no justification for paying twice for the same thing. I think you were talking about receiving TV broadcasts for which you are obliged to pay and not paying at all, which is a slightly different situation. Rod. |
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#80
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In article , Ad wrote:
I do not want to get rid of the BBc, I just think we should have a choice if we want to pay for it. Why can't the BBc do advertising? Because it wouldn't be the "BBC" if it did. BBC stands for British Broadcasting Corporation, which means it's not a commercial company. It's a public service which is paid for out of public money, meaning money that is not directly dependent on the sale of anything, and so the programme makers are not subject to the same pressures as those that apply to commercial programme makers. The way the money is collected by means of a licence is extremely labour intensive, and I cannot help thinking there must be a better way, but it is definitely not advertising. That wouldn't be collecting the money by a different method, it would be different money. Rod. |
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