bluescrn 8 hours ago

For those who don't like the source, also reported here by the BBC: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cy7vdvrnnvzo

  • cbeach 5 hours ago

    The BBC is currently embroiled in an election interference scandal after it doctored a video of the President to fit the BBC's chosen political narrative.

    And it turns out this was just one of a series of political interventions made by the BBC.

    This comes after a string of child sexual abuse scandals and cover-ups perpetrated by senior members of the BBC.

    The BBC is an alternative news source we'd do well to avoid

    • vablings 29 minutes ago

      Hardly an election interference of a fairly crap panorama special that wasn't even available to watch in the USA. We can all fairly easily agree GBNEWS is the bottom of the barrel

rich_sasha 7 hours ago

I always found the idea of jury trials terrifying.

We make legal education very hard, very thorough, we teach prospective lawyers about subtle nuances of law, guilt, evidence, bias, epistemology even. We make them do mootings.

Then we say lawyers are the very people who cannot sit in juries, and instead random people are to judge. Actually worse than random - people who have better things to do try to get out of it, or are resentful that they couldn't.

It's a bit like having highly educated doctors explain symptoms, possible diseases, as well as a crash course in biology, immunology and statistics to a panel of randos, who then vote on the best treatment for the patient.

Its only slightly worse than judges and prosecutors under reelection pressure though...

  • tzs 3 hours ago

    I don't know about the UK, but in the US lawyers can be jurors.

    The main point of a jury from the "arrive at the legally correct solution to the issue before the court" point of view is to settle questions that are questions of fact rather than questions of law.

    Generally in a legal dispute you have two parties who disagree over the underlying facts. For example I say your drone broke my window and I want you to pay for a new window. You say your drone was not flying at the time my window broke. Whether or not your drone broke my windows is a question of fact, not a question of law.

    Once it is decided whether or not your drone broke me window, then applying the law is straightforward. The difficulty is determining whether or not your drone broke my window.

    Once the jury has decided on all the questions of fact they have to apply the law tp them, but for that the court will have given them instructions. Generally that is in the form of a form they can fill out that's basically a decision tree. They just have to fill in what they decided are the facts, follow the branches, and they end up with the correct legal result for those facts.

    • rich_sasha 2 hours ago

      Sure. But "fact" in a court of law means "facts subject to a legally-sanctioned epistemology". Every now and then you read about a judge instructing the jury to disregard some evidence, because it turns out to be inadmissible. Are random people really capable of doing this? And, likewise, leaving their biases at the courtroom doorstep? I have my doubts.

      And yes, I believe trained lawyers are excluded from jury duty in the UK. But even if not, the average juror will not have had any training in discerning bias, weighing evidence, statistics etc.

poplarsol 8 hours ago

The UK is best understood as a "managed democracy" where there are nominally elections, but the government decides who will constitute its voting population, what they are allowed to say, and now whether they will be allowed to acquit people the government decides it would prefer to punish.

  • Molitor5901 6 hours ago

    Agreed, and I am reminded that Putin once called Russia a "managed democracy." I may not always agree, but I am very glad America has the first, fifth, sixth, and seventh amendments, among others. This tactic by the British government is absurd and offensive to freedom. What I find more baffling, but perhaps I am narrowly thinking about it, is how much the British people are letting it happen. I am not political, but if anyone tried to take our rights under the Bill of Rights, or declared an emergency to cancel elections, I will be in the streets with, I hope, literally every one else.

    Some things are just too critical to a free and fair nation, and jury trials are right up there.

    • beAbU 6 hours ago

      There are functioning democracies out there without jury trials. I would not say it's "critical to a free and fair nation'.

      • stogot 5 hours ago

        The Us has small claims courts right?

  • sgt101 8 hours ago

    Nonsense.

    - voting population? What are you on about? It's everyone older than 18.

    - you are not allowed to say "let's go and kill xxxyyy" or "burn hotel xxxyyy" but more or less you can say anything else. You might get sued if you say "Kier Starmer is an XXXYYY" but possibly not.

    - this is using a system such as the one that operates in many countries - like France. But note: Germany ditched jury trials in 1924...

  • spzb 5 hours ago

    Tell me you know nothing about the UK without telling me you know nothing about the UK.

a24j 3 hours ago

What's the demographics of the people who will replace juries? How does the fate of Underrepresented minorities fare in light of this?

ccppurcell 8 hours ago

GB news!? More sober sources describe it as "considering scrapping" rather than "intends to scrap".

piperswe 8 hours ago

This site obnoxiously tries to instantly give me an "anonymised.io" pop-up, which Fennec thankfully decides to ask me whether I want to visit. Apparently they're some sort of AI-powered marketing thing, whatever that means? Surprisingly wasn't instantly blocked by uBlock Origin.

TheOtherHobbes 8 hours ago

Flagged for the source, which is not reliable.

  • cbeach 5 hours ago

    Unreliable according to whom? Those who find GB News stories politically inconvenient maybe?

dmitrygr 8 hours ago

On one hand, Lee Kuan Yew's memoirs are clear on why jury trials work poorly in multicultural societies. On the other hand, UK judges do not exactly have the best reputation recently, especially on matters of ... criticizing the UK. So ... yeah ... no good options here

  • graemep 8 hours ago

    The UK is a very different society from Singapore.

    Are his objections to jury trials correct in the first place? If they are, then do they apply to the UK? I find it very hard to imagine why multiculturalism should be a problem so can you explain what he thinks they work poorly/.

    the good option is to keep trial by jury.

    • sgt101 8 hours ago

      Unfortunately the system has basically been collapsed by industrial scale theft and fraud, and the impact of covid...

  • sgt101 8 hours ago

    What matters of criticizing the UK? Let's have the specifics to discuss?

a24j 8 hours ago

Wait what?

reify 8 hours ago

[flagged]

  • hackeraccount 5 hours ago

    "NHS, housing, water, gas, electricy" aren't a core part of the government. Justice is.