- Wed Oct 20, 2021 10:36 am
#12257
I'm currently reading the Secret Barrister's new book, Fake Law. It's a good - and occasionally scary - read.
To understand what the government thinks of you, they suggest you take a look at the "com-pen-say-shun" industry (as the tabloids call it). Aside from overlooking the complexity of cases, couching things in emotive and inaccurate terms ("bumper payout" etc) and so on, there is a reason why the common message in the media is one of stupid payments for silly reasons, lack of personal responsibility and the nanny state - the government are softening the public up.
For instance, under the Cameron, May and Johnson governments, the upper limit of amounts claimable via the Small Claims track (nb there is no small claims court) has steadily increased. So? Well, people generally represent themselves on the SCT, but you can bet your arse that councils and companies don't. So more claims get denied, many doctors refuse to support personal litigants, and the onus is on you - Joe Public - to master the relevant law.
Why does this work? Because we've been conditioned via stories of people taking companies to the cleaners for what we're told are spurious reasons to think of them as "you lucky bastard" rather than "there but for the grace of God go I". And that selfishness does have effects.
The Civil Liability Act of 2018 (which increased the SCT upper threshold to £5,000) was passed by the May government following consultation with the car manufacturing industry, the major insurance companies, and that was it. In return for making it harder to claim for whiplash injuries (in fact, all injuries), the government got a promise from the insurance industry that premiums would be reduced and that this would not be enforceable by law. The much parroted amount that the average car insurance bill would be cut by?
£35.00
Now, car drivers here, have you seen any reduction to your insurance bills in the last 3 years?
That's how much the government/the state values you - about the cost of 3 packets of cigarettes. Less if you're not paying income tax. We've been sold this under a wrapping of "take personal responsibility", but it actually means "you're on your own, kid". And we buy it because we're conditioned into thinking that the bad shit could never happen to us, and if it does, we somehow deserve it.
As the actress said to the bishop, rabbi, imam and priest
"My eyes have seen the glory, I'm a born again Atheist!"