Difference between revisions of "2008 Counter-Terrorism advertising campaign"

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*"A bomb won't go off here becuase years before George Bush invaded Iraq"
 
*"A bomb won't go off here becuase years before George Bush invaded Iraq"
 
*"Last week a man idly wondered: are these cameras really protecting my liberty, or infringing it? He's dead now."
 
*"Last week a man idly wondered: are these cameras really protecting my liberty, or infringing it? He's dead now."
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Revision as of 12:04, 23 November 2009

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This article is part of the Counter-Terrorism Portal project of Spinwatch.

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In 2008, the Metropolitan Police and the police forces of Greater Manchester, West Yorkshire and the West Midlands launched a five-week poster and radio campaign to get members of the public to report any “suspicious behaviour” they may have encountered in their daily lives to the Anti-Terrorist hotline. The slogans of the campaign were – “if you suspect it, report it” and “Terrorists won’t succeed if someone reports suspicious activity – you are that somebody”.[1]

The campaign became known for its poster campaign, which had simplistic and wide-sweeping slogans such as:[2]

  • “Thousands of people have mobiles. What if someone with several seems suspicious?”
  • “You see hundreds of houses every day. What if one has unusual activity and seems suspicious?”
  • “Thousands of people take pictures every day. What if one of them seems odd?”

Criticisms

The anti-terror campaign has led to some serious criticism for the police services, who, it has been argued, were through their adverts, exaggerating the threat and encouraging people in their everyday lives to spy on their neighbours and fellow citizens without any justifiable reason.

Critics have also argued that the entire campaign is aimed at the wrong people and that “raising awareness of the threat will only increase the fear and stress of the daily commute. If we must have an advertising campaign, maybe it is time to bring back the "Keep calm and carry on" posters from retirement."[3]

In response to the poster campaign, many people have manipulated the posters to show their wide-sweeping remit and ambiguity. Notable examples include slogans such as:[4]

  • "A bomb won't go off here becuase years before George Bush invaded Iraq"
  • "Last week a man idly wondered: are these cameras really protecting my liberty, or infringing it? He's dead now."







Notes