Foxtrot26 wrote:
Not fancy coming over to Glasgow and upsetting our licensing berks Jasbar?
Interesting. Fact is, I consider that licensing was designed to control standards in order to protect the public. I just can't see it being Parliament's intent that it should be used to control markets.
And particularly where councils, like Edin burgh's, operates transport services in direct competition to other transport interests it is restricting?
Which other commercial enterprise gets to control its own competition in this way?
Do you honestly think this was Parliament's intent?
Perhaps the disappointing aspect is that the Scottish Parliament's first role should have been to rein in the power of councils, and return real accountability to the public to them.
But, not only has Salmond failed to pick up the baton to protect us from authoritarian councils, one of his first acts on assuming power was to sign a concordat assuring COSLA that they would not do as such.
Salmond is not on OUR side. He is an establishment man, who throws a few scraps to the minions to attract votes. But free passage on the Forth Road Bridge is not sufficient reason to trust the man. He is not to be trusted.
What should be the case is a single licensing system, with freedom of vehicle choice and the right to work enshrined.
Else taxi trade workers are little more than slaves, to be exploited and subjugated.
And those who support restriction of licences, opportunity and common decency? Well they are those who would be the slave masters.
And what kind of a person denies others the right to prosper?
