Signs of stupidity Print
Written by Dr Eamonn Butler   
Monday, 29 October 2007
"Verbal and physical abuse of staff will not be tolerated," shouted the sign in the Post Office – which then went on to list the dire penalties that would be imposed on transgressors. I'm glad the Post Office does not allow its employees to be assaulted with impunity. But the sign makes me glum for three reasons.

First, it indicates that liberal ideas haven't penetrated very far. In a liberal society, people should just know that they've no right to inflict violence on others – just as others have no right to inflict violence on them. But then we have a state that allows majorities to bully minorities and actually celebrates the fact by calling it 'democracy'. It denies bars the right to let customers smoke, it outlaws drugs that do no harm to anyone but the user, it demands we separate out our rubbish even though we know recycling is a waste of our time – and if you don't comply, you’re judicially kidnapped and held in jail. No wonder people in such a state think that violence is not just tolerable, but perfectly normal.

Second, I'm glum that officialdom thinks we must be constantly reminded of what is legal and acceptable. The Church of England was rightly outraged by the regulation that it had to disfigure the walls of its ancient buildings with no smoking signs. People know that they’re not supposed to smoke in church, nor to pocket the contents of the collection plate, nor to shout loudly into their mobile phones during prayers. They don't need a sign to tell them so. But of course our bullying officials need a sign – so that they can smile smugly, as they pass St.Mary's, that their latest assault on the minority is actually hitting its target.

Third, I'm glum because I know why people are driven to violence in post offices and other public-service buildings. Because these organizations are state monopolies, to whom customers are a necessary inconvenience. Customer service is unnecessary because people have nowhere else to go: and when customers get frustrated, they quite naturally get a bit intemperate. The sign tells them that this is their fault, not the fault of the monopolist. Another smug smile as the shutter comes down and the argument is terminated. Properly competitive public services would be so keen to stay on the right side of their clients that there would be fewer fizzing customers in the first place. Then, perhaps, these dispiriting signs could be binned.
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