After many years of being hounded by the BBC TV licence mob the hero of YouTube wins his court case. The story will probably be in the national press soon but you can read a shortened version here.
what annoys me is their bully boy and legally incorrect attitude. When I moved in here, I removed my TV and anything valuable from the house I owned and left it empty for 4 months pending us making the final decision to "commit". After I had been back to the house to collect my mail to find officious "we are going to prosecute you" letters and called them several...
My brother who lives on his own does not own a TV or is remotely interested in any programme. He has a busy social life in a village and helps out in the Community so is hardly ever in at home. I dread the thought that he could be hounded like this poor man in the article. Can't they understand some people do not watch TV?
Hi- I mentioned before that my children who have left home don't have TV's (they just use a laptop and watch programmes later occasionally on BBC i player etc).
One told me he was sent a letter and says he ticked a box (to say he didn't have a TV/watch programmes I think)
I'm sure some people are hounded unfairly but I don't know of anyone who has been. I also am sure some people deliberately evade payment.
Even though I don't agree with it, I can kind of see an argument for reversing the burden of proof, in the interests of public safety, but to do so in relation to a TV Licence is, quite frankly, overkill in the extreme.
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