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Attention: Low Crime Area

June 16, 2009 by wroolie 4 Comments

I’ve been seeing signs all over the place lately by Thames Valley Police which say “This is a Low Crime Area.  Help us keep it that way.”  On the other side of the sign it tells you to lock stuff in your car and take valuables with you etc.2009 230

It strikes me as funny because very rarely are you told that you don’t need to be vigilant.  The sign in the picture was posted in a park.  I walked into the park with my usual level of caution (don’t talk to strangers, etc), but then saw the sign and realised I could take my wallet out and start counting my money right there on the street.  There are no signs like this posted outside the park, so I assume this must be some kind of sanctuary against crime!  Once I leave the park, I need to be careful again.

I wonder how much this sign campaign cost.  I’ll bet it is a ridiculous amount– in the tens of thousands of pounds county-wide.  I wonder how much crime it actually stops.  Someone must have said “Let’s put signs up everywhere where there is little crime, just in case.”  How will they know it works?  If it is still a low crime area six months from now, does that mean the sign campaign was successful? 

Or . . . is it merely a CV point for an public official to say they are “doing something about crime”?

This sign is posted in Oxfordshire in England, but you get the same kind of stuff in the States. 

Growing up in San Diego, there were always public service signs and posters up everywhere–most of the time, no one paid any attention to them.  In school, the hallway walls were plastered with posters of Rob Lowe and Brooke Shields that had giant slogans telling you to stay away from drugs, smoking, sex, etc.  No one ever stopped to look at these posters– they were always just there.  Someone somewhere spent a ton of taxpayer money to produce them, but no one cared.

California is broke.  Republicans in the state refuse to raise taxes any further and the voters agreed with them in a recent election.  I think these kinds of ineffective programs are the reason why.  While the Democrats want to make out that Republicans are against paying teachers and firemen, the reality is that Republicans are against wasteful spending more than anything else.

Sure, putting up signs everywhere to reduce crime sounds like a good idea–but it also sounds like an expensive idea.  The problem is there is no way to measure how effective they are.  Our governments are so far in debt, that these kind of luxuries need to be looked at. 

I didn’t mean for this post to be a rant– just a picture of a funny sign.  I’ll try to post a picture of this sign in a few weeks– after it has been vandalised.

Filed Under: Living in the UK, Miscellaneous Rants

Conan O’Brien on the Tonight Show

June 6, 2009 by wroolie 3 Comments

I used to watch the tonight show every night. I missed a lot of school from oversleeping. At the NBC studios in Burbank, I saw Jay Leno a few times while he was guest hosting for Carson. When O’Brien took over for Letterman, I thought he was awful– but six months later, he had his own style and was funnier than Letterman.

I miss the late night TV while living in England. This week, Conan took over for Leno as host of the Tonight Show. This is the opening for the first show. Looks like it will be very good.

Maybe we will be able to watch the show from the UK one day.

Filed Under: Growing Up, Living in the UK

Morning has broken

May 18, 2009 by wroolie Leave a Comment

My 11-year anniversary as a British resident passed this weekend.  11 years ago, I came to the UK without a job and without a plan of what I was going to do.

As I write this, it is Monday morning.  I am heading into London very early because I have to make time in my schedule for a meeting with the Chinese British Business Council.  It is 5:45am.  The sun is already in the sky and it is a beautiful morning.  I’m always surprised with how early the sun rises here in the summer time.  I know summer days are longer, but Summer days in San Diego are nowhere near as long as they are in London.

11 years ago, at this time of year, I remember going to bed in a very jet lagged state with a single plan – I was going to get up early, get dressed, and try to find a job.  I woke up in the morning with the sun shining through the curtains.  I went to the bathroom, took a shower, and got dressed.  I looked a the clock and was shocked to find that it wasn’t even 5 o’clock yet.  No one would wake up for a few more hours.  The streets were quiet, but the sun was shining.  Outside, it looked like the type of day where you could have a picnic. 

Today, on driving to the station (I didn’t take the bike because I’m in suit-mode), the Radio 1 DJ commented “No one is awake at this time of morning because they want to be.”  But, again, the sun is shining, the streets are empty.  I don’t know why no one would be awake at this time.  Is there really a reason to ignore a beautiful morning because of what the clock says?

The English Summer is here.  We get long days.  We get optimism—but still peppered with English pragmatism (venturing on pessimism) — “Yeah, but it will probably rain this weekend.”  We get beer gardens at the pub.  We get daylight until 10pm.

Filed Under: Living in the UK

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