SilentCallsVictim wrote on May 4
th, 2009 at 10:43pm:
I must confess that my sense of injustice and anger is more likely to be engaged by more important issues. My personality type does cause a highly emotional reaction to some public issues, but not telephone numbers.
Then what on earth are you doing wasting so many hours of your time on what you now say you see as being this petty matter only involving the cost of calls to a few telephone numbers?
I can assure you that most other long term activists in this campaign do have a very strong emotional reaction indeed against the abusive mentality towards the public that lies behind using these hidden revenue share numbers. If you do not share that reaction then I cannot imagine precisely what persuades you to devote so many hours of your free time to patiently writing and sending briefing notes on this subject to your large circulation lists.
Also my emotion is not directed toward the telephone number but to the fact that the organisations purveying them feel they can impose a secret charge for accessing their services that is deliberately hidden from the users of the service and hence this distorts competetive consumer choices.
So far as this notion of something called "consumerism" is concerned this seems to be primarily an SCV invented word. I never see it used by almost anyone else but clearly it appeals to your semantic sensibilities. There is no consistency at all to Ofcom's policy positions as in the broadcasting sphere they spend most of their time obstructing the free market by preventing children from seeing adverts for the high calories foods they would much prefer to eat and they also devote great levels of resource to fining broadcasters for inadvertently transmitting unencrypted freeview periods of hard core pornography on dedicated erotic movie channels late at night when the same material is already available without any let or hindrance at all on the internet. But then New Labour's prurient feminist strand objects to all forms of pornography as being a form of degradation of women, even though it does not object at all to the merciless exploitation of UK telecoms consumers (presumably on the basis that the level of exploitation of men and women that is involved is considered to be equal and not biased against one sex or the other).
According to
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consumerism Quote:In economics, consumerism refers to economic policies placing emphasis on consumption. In an abstract sense, it is the belief that the free choice of consumers should dictate the economic structure of a society (cf. Producerism, especially in the British sense of the term)
Forgive me if I have missed something but Consumerism sounds to me more like Thatcherism than New Labourism and I cannot see how any free choice by consumers is involved in being forced to call covert premium rate numbers that the majority of consumers are not even aware that they are paying a premium rate to call at the time they are making the calls?