What is the wage above which tabards become legit funny fodder? Mrs Overall asks.
I'm sure if allowed they would have quite happily cleaned up afterwards - the point of their protests isn't that theyHadn't realised the poo/soup/paint throwers would be cleaning their own mess up, like the gamekeeper.
Hadn't realised the poo/soup/paint throwers would be cleaning their own mess up, like the gamekeeper.
I did. My belated kudos to the milk chuckers who stayed on at Waitrose to mop up afterwards. I missed the coverage of that, but truly these are the unseen heroes we all need to remember.
I did. My belated kudos to the milk chuckers who stayed on at Waitrose to mop up afterwards. I missed the coverage of that, but truly these are the unseen heroes we all need to remember.
I thought you'd be pleased we're all finally on the same page.Hey @AuroraSaab
One of your repeated complaints about this place is the allegedly unbearable levels of snark..
Have to say, and of course I may be reading it wrong ... But this comes across just a tad snarky..
Fair enough, it's not very nice to dump on the cleaners in these situations, but this is the future of humanity and the planet we're talking about. They're not protesting how long the queue for the gallery is; or the quality of their school lunches.
If you're just going to ban any protest because someone on minimum wage will get slightly dumped on ... well, how about an approval committee for protests?
'Stunts' such as soup throwing, and people gluing themselves to things, do get in the papers though.
It raises awareness, starts conversations.
More than happy to protest against poverty wages, zero hours contracts.Yup, credit to them. [EDIT: when I saw "unseen heroes", I thought you meant the cleaners! But anyway: credit to the chuckers that cleaned. AND the professional cleaners! ]
But: the soup chuckers probably didn't enjoy being arrested much. (have they been tried yet? Dunno, but even if they dodge community service, this will cost them a heck of a lot of hassle, minimum). Fair enough, it's not very nice to dump on the cleaners in these situations, but this is the future of humanity and the planet we're talking about. They're not protesting how long the queue for the gallery is; or the quality of their school lunches.
If you're just going to ban any protest because someone on minimum wage will get slightly dumped on ... well, how about an approval committee for protests?
What sort of conversations?
I believe there is a phrase "there is no such thing as bad publicity", but I have never been convinced of this since Gerald Ratner many years ago.
The MSM show the protests a lot but often in a negative light, and devote a lot of time to the disruption caused to "the innocent public" or the "hardworking public" or the emergency services by a relatively small number of protesters.
I am not normally concerned about such publicity seeking protests, admire the tenacity and sticking to their principles of those involved, but still have my doubts about their effectiveness.