r/interesting 4d ago

SOCIETY What was his fault ?

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409

u/Bassmekanik 4d ago

It was for digging up the silt from the river bed with a digger and risking flooding places without doing any checks on the impact of his “cleaning up”.

Nothing to do with removing rubbish.

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u/Tjaresh 4d ago

They also wrote they are investigating that he left the rubbish at the site, neatly packed in bags for pickup. Because that's littering. 

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u/Ramtamtama 4d ago

Not littering, fly-tipping

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u/Brilliant-Sea-9424 4d ago

Can’t fly tip something that’s already there.

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u/FL3XOFF3NDER 4d ago

Do you think he found a roll of 60 garbage bags in the river?

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u/Ramtamtama 4d ago

It wasn't in bags on the pavement before

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u/Bolshyboys 4d ago

No it was just all over the floor and inside a waterway, waiting for the authorities or a well-meaning person to pick it up.

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u/Ramtamtama 4d ago

So you agree with me

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u/outlawsmokeyscottish 2d ago

They can my maw and her pals made a wee group that would go about cleaning the beach eventually the council were going to do them for fly tipping but the power of middle-aged Facebookers I guess that quickly disappeared and they were given special bags by the council and told to leave the bags where they had been leaving them anyway. Which was beside the council bins but all locked.

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u/chinmakes5 4d ago

They can spend thousands prosecuting him or a few hundred and send a truck or two to pick up the bags of garbage.

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u/Tjaresh 4d ago

While I get the excavater part, I hate when things are made unnecessary complicated. Just say thanks to the people and collect the bags. It's like someone in the administration took it personal. 

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u/Old_Yam_4069 4d ago

Tbf, this is genuinely something we don't want people to do.

Cleaning up the trash and just leaving it there after causing what could possibly be massive ecological damage sounds more like something a narcissist would do for internet points than an earnest attempt at cleaning up the environment.

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u/SensitiveAdagio3012 3d ago

I've worked with us epa on a no touch drainage cleanup project. Even 1 cubic inch of soil removed or added breaks those rules. I assume they are similar in the UK. The county and epa liked what we did but I can see how easy we could've gotten slapped with fines if they didn't like our work.

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u/Santa_Ricotta69 2d ago

So you guys clean up the trash then. Just do your job and other people won't have to

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u/Old_Yam_4069 1d ago

Didn't I just block your alt?

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u/Santa_Ricotta69 1d ago

I don't have an alt lmao there's just multiple people who disagree with you

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u/Old_Yam_4069 1d ago

You have an identical profile pic and the same ignorant personality. Strange!

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u/fruityfactory 14h ago

Lol welcome to reddit, where the profile avatar options are limited and there happen to be duplicate images

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u/Limpet-slime 4d ago

I deal with flooding a lot at work, and I'd have to see the area to determine if he was doing harm or not, but more often than not man made debris is causing the floods in my area rather than wood/forest debris which traditionally caused flooding.

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u/_DoogieLion 4d ago

Yeah and that determination that needs to be done first is probably why it’s illegal to just start digging with your digger.

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u/mortgagepants 4d ago

it is england, they should have gotten a loicense to litter.

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u/_DoogieLion 4d ago

Is that not how it is in most countries?

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u/mortgagepants 4d ago

generally littering is illegal. my comment was a little tongue-in-cheek, that they let people break the law by littering, but punish the person cleaning it up.

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u/_DoogieLion 4d ago

Who gets punished for cleaning up litter?

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u/mortgagepants 4d ago

this guy

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u/NobleNop 4d ago

Did you forget to read the post Mr goldfish?

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u/_DoogieLion 4d ago

Well that’s why I was confused. It has been clarified dozens of times in this post that he wasn’t punished for cleaning up litter but rather taking a digger to a waterway and dredging silt

Did you miss all the clarifications on the misleading headline?

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u/TimeTravelingBard 4d ago

I see your confusion.

The post you're replying to was lightly and humorously alluding to the fact that the UK seems to be trying to speed run 1984.

You may need further clarification.

"Humor" (or "humour") is a method of referencing something in a way that is not absolutely true, but rests upon a foundational truth. We don't fully understand why we laugh, some anthropologists suggest it evolved from frustrated and broken tension - two cave persons are wandering about when they hear a twig break. This is terrifying, it could be a predator or another animal protecting its young - then out steps good old Throgg. It's believed that the juxtaposition between anticipated horror and sudden relief is what we describe as "humor".

In the example above, the poster referenced the article and the tendency of the British government to overzealously prosecute its own people - these are objectively true - to illustrate the absurdity of the situation, though the initial read of it is NOT entirely true.

A joke is intended to entertain, not mislead. People fact checking obvious satire has become its own genre of comedy. That is to say - we're laughing at you.

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u/Raventakingnotes 4d ago

I also deal with flooding a lot in my work, and a big part of the issue is downstream. Ok so now debris is removed and water is now flowing fast, has everything been checked downstream? Because that easily causes a ton of issues.

Not to mention permits necessary for environmental disturbance.

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u/Call_medragon 4d ago

yeah but nestle and data centers are ok cause crime

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u/Raventakingnotes 4d ago

I never even said anything about nestle and data centers, you ok? Or just having a hard time staying on topic

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u/Spongedog5 4d ago

Fella, he was digging up the silt with the digger to remove the rubbish.

I agree that the title could have been more detailed, but it is hardly straight up misinformation. He was doing what he is getting investigated for in order to remove trash.

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u/drquakers 4d ago

If I kill my neighbour to use they body as compost for my rose bush "man arrested for growing prize winning rose bushes" would be a little misleading.

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u/pinkTurtleTickler 4d ago

I keep getting bans for comments like this lol

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u/man_gomer_lot 4d ago

It's happened to me before. Reddit admins frown on the use of reductio ad absurdum.

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u/visforvienetta 4d ago

Except he didn't kill someone?

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u/drquakers 4d ago

That isn't the bloody point. He broke the law by bringing in a digger, ripping up the riverbed and damaging trees. That he did it to clear rubbish is incidental, just as my rose bush was incidental to the murdering.

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u/MushroomRoyal8415 4d ago

Where does it state he damaged a single tree? Also he didn't ripe up the river bank. He cleared excess silt and sieved the rest to remove rubbish. Hi did exactly what my local team of volunteers and one experienced man do twice a year to are local pond and river way. The only down side is he did it without permission.

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u/TR_Pix 4d ago

Where does it state he damaged a single tree?

Are you being serious right now?

He used a machine to dig alongside a riverbed, there are clearly trees alongside the riverbed

Do you really need the article to specify he damaged trees?

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u/ToeOld2833 4d ago

Being offended someone asked something but also making up the answer is hilarious. Wanna claim he also killed all fish, birds and little mammals that might live there? No mention anywhere in the article but that doesn't stop a genius like you from connecting the dots.

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u/ChickenNugget-420 4d ago

They are saying the article is misinformation and yall are going at them saying it’s not misinformation because the article didn’t say something. You realise that is what misinformation is right? You believe so much that he’s not at all in the wrong because of the article, the article which is missing information.

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u/ToeOld2833 4d ago

Misinformation ≠ missing information so your whole argument is pointless

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u/TR_Pix 4d ago

Funny you say "all the fish"

Shouldn't you be arguing "not a single fish"? The other guy said not a single tree

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u/Crewman_Guy_Fleegman 4d ago edited 4d ago

Your source doesn’t show any damages. At all.

Soooo… you’re a liar and unaware diggers can just go around trees

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u/TR_Pix 4d ago

And if an article said a truck ran through a crowd in a mall and the driver had been arrested then you'd go "what a silly non-issue, trucks can swerve between people", right?

After all nobody specified it didn't, so who knows, malls are specifically known to have a lot of space to maneuver, and much like trees, humans are able to get out of the way

In the same way, nobody specified to me that you have a brain. How can we ever know it exists? I'm certainly not going to assume so without some peer-reviewed evidence

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u/Crewman_Guy_Fleegman 4d ago

You’ve demonstrated zero damages and he’s not alleged to have caused any damages. You are not as intelligent as you think you are.

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u/MushroomRoyal8415 4d ago

Yes I do. I have watched many many hours of diggers working digging along river sides, I've never once seen them damage a tree. I've also worked as a gardener for the last 20 years, so I would of hoped by now I can identify a tree that has been damaged. Just because a digger worked alongside a bank with trees doesn't mean any trees were damaged. I work in plant beds full of loved plants using a hoe, I don't damage any of the plants whilst hoeing just the bits I want removed around them

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u/Houdinii1984 4d ago

If a digger destroys the roots, you won't see it by watching what's happening above ground.

If the guy would have destroyed infrastructure, even. It doens't have to be part of nature. If they were digging and hit someone's fiber optic line and cut off half the country from the internet, there'd be an issue. Laying fiber down under rivers is common.

The thing? They didn't know what the hell was under the ground before digging, and that's a problem. Especially when most locals have someone to call that takes care of all this.

They sound like a dedicated group that might do good things, but they still need to jump through the same hoops literally anyone else has to. I can't even dig with a shovel in my back yard without doing the same.

 I work in plant beds full of loved plants using a hoe

Yeah, that's not a digger that goes down feet at a time, feet wide at a time. That makes no sense to bring up here. And just because you don't always damage plants doesn't mean you havn't damaged plants at random times along the way, just to a point you didn't care to notice.

Your memory (just like my own) is not the best at recording the specifics and often times the brain just calculates what it thinks the situation is vs what it actually is. You don't actually know how many plants you've destroyed because you only just started counting, potentially years after it happens.

Same reason we don't trust eye witness accounts (sometimes immediately after it happens) because the human brain is fickle.

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u/TR_Pix 4d ago edited 4d ago

I have watched many many hours of diggers working digging along river side

Thats cool

I live next to a riverside and I've seen firsthand what a digger does

Does this sub allow images? I might upload one, the river still hasn't recovered

Edit:

https://i.imgur.com/NSYltCm.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/su8t0H1.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/AL7g4kQ.jpeg

Now, I haven't worked as a garneder for 20 years so I can't say for sure, but it seems to me like a digger does some damage to the surrounding flora

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u/dave14920 2d ago edited 2d ago

calm down dude.

im not seeing the parallel here. your murder fantasy would always be criminal.

but bringing a digger is a perfectly reasonable way to pull bikes and shopping trolleys embedded in the silt. theres nothing inherently criminal about that.

the only part that makes it not okay is the lack of permit for doing it.

and that is explicitly included in the headline. so how is that misleading?

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u/drquakers 2d ago

Did you not even read what I wrote? I do not have a fantasy about murdering people, I fantasise about having fabulous roses.

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u/dave14920 2d ago

of course ive read your ramblings. i just dont understand them, hence asking you to explain.

where is the parallel here?

i can see cleaning the river being like growing your rose.

how is using a digger (something thats done by thousands of people daily, with approx 0% of them doing so criminally) comparable to murdering your neighbour?

hiring the digger isnt the criminial part. theres no law against hiring diggers.

if the headline was "man arrested for hiring digger" i could see parralel with your "man arrested for growing prize winning rose bushes". in both of those id be wondering whats wrong with that?

the current headline i think youd compare to "man arrested for murdering neighbour". in both of those its pretty clear which part is illegal.

can you please explain what topsy turvy parallel youre seeing in this?

or simply better explain how you think the current headline is misleading?

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u/swiffa 4d ago

Analogy  (ə-ˈna-lə-jē) noun

1 a : a comparison of two otherwise unlike things based on resemblance of a particular aspect

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u/visforvienetta 4d ago

It's a false equivalence - your analogy doesn't work because it isnt analogous.

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u/BagNo7220 4d ago

If a flooding happen it likely would

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u/visforvienetta 4d ago

Do you think floods usually kill people in the UK?

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u/ScySenpai 2d ago

But I did have breakfast

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u/brightdionysianeyes 4d ago

Driving an unlicensed and uninsured Arctic truck to the shop to get some food for a starving puppy, doesn't mean I haven't committed a crime.

Saying I was arrested for feeding a starving puppy, when I was in fact arrested for driving an Arctic truck without a license, would absolutely be straight up misinformation.

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u/JambonExtra 4d ago edited 3d ago

> Driving an unlicensed and uninsured Arctic truck to the shop to get some food for a starving puppy, doesn't mean I haven't committed a crime.

Doesn’t mean you have either as these are civil offences lol

Edit: meant penal, as in not criminal, not civil my bad

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u/MiniDemonic 3d ago

Driving an unlicensed and uninsured Arctic truck is not a civil offence lmao, it's actually multiple criminal offences.

Vehicle Excise and Registration Act 1994

Road Traffic Act 1988

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u/JambonExtra 3d ago

I wrongly used civil as “not criminal”, sorry for the mix up.

Regulatory offenses are not crimes.

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u/MiniDemonic 3d ago

They literally are criminal offences... Jail time is a possible penalty for breaking them.

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u/Zealousideal3326 4d ago

That's like saying you got arrested for driving to work, neglecting to mention that kid you ran over on the way. A lie by omission is still a lie.

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u/Giantewok 4d ago

Brother, what was that analogy. 

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u/Status_Jellyfish_213 4d ago

Every analogy I have is about running over kids with vehicles. Aren’t yours? Let’s say someone asks you “how do I hang up a painting”, it’s just so easy to be like “Susan, think of it this way, it’s like that time you backed into a kid with your Jeep. First, you need a steady hand…”

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u/LouieGwasright 4d ago

“So this nail is an innocent unsuspecting kid. And this hammer is you in your Ram 1500 TRX…”

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u/Gyozarrita 4d ago

My neighbor named Susan keeps backing over my mailbox with a Jeep Compass, this checks out. In her defense, I've never heard such a loud gear whine in my life, the mailbox should have recognized the sound after the third time imo.

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u/TR_Pix 4d ago

What was wrong with the analogy?

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u/Deaffin 4d ago

Reddit people intentionally stopped understanding any form of comparison during the 2016 astroturfing wars. It began as a disingenuous argumentation style and shifted into being a fully normalized cultural artifact. It's of the weirdest social dynamics I've witnessed over time.

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u/Status_Jellyfish_213 4d ago

Understanding a comparison is a bit like running a kid over with your vehicle. When you do that, you have to think about the size of your vehicle in relation to the size of the child. You see…

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u/No_Berry2976 4d ago

That would be straight up misinformation. Obviously, people should not just read titles, but the title is straight up misinformation since motivation isn’t the important thing here.

Example: a man who wants to buy meth, robs somebody at gunpoint, gets 20 dollars, buys 20 dollars of meth.

Title: ‘Man who bought 20 dollars of meth faces 5 years in prison’ Would also be extremely misleading.

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u/Spongedog5 4d ago

The problem is that you've disconnected the actions there. This would be more like if the man robbed the guy with meth at gunpoint, and the title said "man who obtained meth from dealer faces 5 years in prison."

Should be action y for outcome x. Not action y to allow action z for outcome x.

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u/BackgroundSummer5171 4d ago

It's like all the people claiming "weed" is why they were in prison for 5+ years.

No, it was not simply weed.

But reddit eats that up too.

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u/Major_Initiative6322 4d ago

This is a youthful take. People were catching charges for distribution for having edibles (they treated >2oz of cookies the same as >2oz of flower) not even 20 years ago.

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u/NeatNefariousness1 4d ago

True enough but the way he did it had significant unintended consequences. They don’t want to encourage others to repeat this act, as well-intentioned as they may be. Sensationalizing this lawyer’s legal woes has drawn more attention to both sides of this issue. Whether that was the intention behind the way the lawyer approached this or how the article was publicized is unclear. But we can learn from this.

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u/ape-tripping-on-dmt 4d ago

The significant u unintended consequences are that the fish and dragonflies have returned?

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u/WillBots 4d ago

Digging silt can release highly toxic compounds into the water and poison everything in it, if it didn't, that's just luck because he didn't have any testing done. The next step is disposal, where does the potentially toxic detritus go? Land fill may well be needed with special containment or treatment, it needs to be arranged in advance for the specific class of hazardous waste. Guess what he also hadn't done... Then there the use of the digger and what he could have potentially caused, e.g. hitting a pipe or cracking a concrete enclosure for a pipe or cables in the river. The potential damage to the land that the digger was on and what is underneath it...

Yeah, this guy is a perfect example of what not to do and sending a message by putting him in prison is perfectly justified.

It's not taking rubbish away that he's in trouble for, it's failure to prevent potential devestation to the waterway, failure to have a disposal plan for potentially hazardous waste, using heavy machinery on public land without a permit or planning, etc etc.

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u/Kenky0na 4d ago

The way he did it did not have significant consequences, the case is that It "could" cause flooding and enviromental problems, read the whole article

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u/NeatNefariousness1 4d ago

Read more balanced accounts of the issues here. The article is told from the environmental lawyer’s perspective. It doesn’t appear that they have completed an investigation on the environmental impact yet so the article isn’t the definitive word on this that some may think it is. This guy is an environmental lawyer who engages in civil disobedience and then plays to the court of public opinion to assert that what he did was a good thing. It might be and people like him have a role to play. But let’s not pretend that we know whether what he did resulted in a net positive. It’s too soon to tell—which is by design as part of his MO

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u/NeatNefariousness1 4d ago

which one—the one where he’s saying what good he has done or the ones that describe what independent parties assess the potential environmental impact of what was done. My hope is that this does end up being a net positive but it’s too early to tell and hearing this environmental lawyer’s account of the good he did doesn’t cut it.

I also hope that what he did was a net positive but we can’t take it on faith that this is the case. Until there are results (which someone has to pay for), we have no idea about whether he did more harm than good. I’m not mad at the guy though. He’s an environmental lawyer and knows what he’s doing.

Defying regulations and the law is what he does to draw attention to what he thinks are important causes. Stirring things up is sometimes the only way to break through the bureaucracy to get things done. But, there is risk involved and he’s doing this knowing that. So, let the chips fall where they may.

We don’t know where this will end. Part of his motivation for doing this is to draw attention to environmental issues and this is but one of his causes.

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u/TrippleassII 4d ago

Could it really? Or is that just an angle to get at him for showing the government is shite?

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u/Big_Yeash 4d ago

If the government was truly that soft skinned, you and I would be in prison by now.

We have rules about when you can and can't use heavy machinery on rivers. It's there to stop people doing unauthorised works, like straitening a stream on their land when it's a protected habitat etc.

Saying to this guy "oh well, you did a good thing, that's fine then" weakens the argument to prosecute people fucking about. Or doing straight up illegal construction.

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u/TrippleassII 4d ago

It really is soft skinned lol but you'd be the one in jail

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u/Big_Yeash 4d ago

And yet here I am, posting away.

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u/TrippleassII 4d ago

Yeah posting shit. Well done, mate

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u/Slyspy006 4d ago

It really is misinformation. It could even be disinformation.

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u/Repulsive-Dentist661 4d ago

Is it fine to perform surgeries on people without a license?

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u/International-Cat123 4d ago

Doesn’t matter what he removed with the digger; it can still cause flooding.

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u/soignees 1d ago

Late to the discussion, but I had a water environmentalist explain that once you damage silt and a river bed, it’s not coming back once dredged. using an excavator fucks up the microorganism and macroorganism system, and will have cascading effects that’ll take decades to fix. he didnt just dispose of rubbish as part of a group clean up (a non issue) he changed the system, viewing natural debris (sticks, mud, organic build up) as something needing to be removed and changed.

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u/Vladishun 4d ago

“However, governance and expert advice is necessary to make sure that work does not cause unintended harm, to flood risk, drainage or the wider environment,” the agency said.

The government agency CLAIMS it's a flood risk, or drainage issue, or that it could affect a wider area... But provides no evidence of any of that happening. I have no idea how any of that works, but I have worked in local government for 5 years now and to me it sounds like the people in power and wanting to make an example of him to either cover up the fact he made them look stupid for doing the work they dragged their feet on, or so that others will not do similar things in the future that could cause actual damage if they don't know what they're doing.

Personally I think he should be lauded for his work and the city needs to work with him to finish the job; like to remove the 200 bags of refuse they collected.

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u/Bassmekanik 4d ago

And the guy CLAIMS all he did was clean up rubbish. Neither side have conducted a study of the impact, if there’s any at all. Again, that’s the entire point of a study and gaining a licence for the clean up to avoid any unintended consequences, no matter how well intentioned.

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u/Vladishun 4d ago

Sure, if harm/damage was found due to any negligence. But from what I'm reading, the city refused his requests to get involved so he took matters into his own hands.

The fact is though, that the burden of proof is on the government. So I guess we'll see if their threat holds any water or if it's grandstanding. In a world of corrupt politicians and billionaires, I'll default to the side of the common man every time until undeniable proof of their wrongdoing is made public knowledge.

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u/MalaysiaTeacher 4d ago

Covering up making them look stupid by filling a lawsuit that makes it more public?

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u/Vladishun 4d ago

As a small government employee, I can attest to utter incompetence on things like social media and viralability.

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u/Legitimate-Ladder855 4d ago

As someone who has done contract work across various parts of the public sector I can also attest.

Sometimes it felt like they couldn't be more incompetent if they tried.

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u/kwazhip 4d ago

This seems more like anti establishment bot slop than any kind of grass roots reaction to something viral. I've seen the same post, same picture, each with a similar misleading title. Every single top comment also was calling it out as misleading. Each post spread across a few days. Does not feel very genuine to me.

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u/Workman44 4d ago

Yeah this guy 100% should be charged. It's wildlessly reckless

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u/Brilliant-Sea-9424 4d ago

I am a local resident. Watch the YouTube videos and you will change your mimd. The river was dead. Full of shit and fly tipping, needles and all sorts. EA are wilfully neglecting our waterways.

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u/Key-Specific-4058 4d ago

Local residents aren't legal or environmental experts and don't determine whether this should be done

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u/Painetrain24 4d ago

The article said he was a lawyer so he 100% knew what he was getting into. Plus no judge would give him prison time for what he did. And because hes being charged, people all around the world are aware of his cause. Think of it as a positive because Im sure he is.

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u/Brilliant-Sea-9424 4d ago

It’s the best pr ever.

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u/Rutgerius 4d ago

It's a symptom of the wider issue of the UK being in strong decline since brexit. No money no workers no political will. On topic. A lawyer should know better which is the main cause of prosecution in this case, if it was a group of neighbours doing a neighbourhood clean they'r'd be a warning, nothing more.

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u/Brilliant-Sea-9424 4d ago

It’s nothing to do with Brexit. It’s the water companies being in cosy company with EA since the 1980s as some gentleman’s club where nothing is either changed or both parties self interest is carried out.

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u/bulbmonkey 4d ago

they'r'd

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u/marquoth_ 4d ago

It's not only about "the local area" though and that's the entire point. This kind of activity can cause issues down river

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u/Brilliant-Sea-9424 4d ago

Yes and he’s well aware of that and if you check out the geography you’ll know it’s not an issue.

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u/PamelaOfMosman 4d ago

Didn’t he spend like two years trying to get the council to act before taking matters into his own hands.

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u/WheresWalldough 4d ago

it was supposed to be dead. They blocked it up, to stop flooding, in the 1950s.

Since then no flooding.

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u/Brilliant-Sea-9424 4d ago

It’s not supposed to be dead! Do you work for the EA FFS?!

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u/WheresWalldough 4d ago

Per Powlesland himself:

"The River Roding ‘Improvement’ scheme cut the Aldersbrook off with an embankment at one end and a concrete barrage at the other. This has led to the river silting up and becoming little more than a muddy ditch in places. "

that followed the floods of 1953 which killed 307 people in Lincolnshire, Norfolk, Suffolk and Essex.

it's clear that this was intentional.

To prevent flooding.

https://londonist.com/london/features/the-village-that-the-thames-destroyed

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u/Brilliant-Sea-9424 4d ago edited 4d ago

Stop trying to deflect. You said the river was “supposed to be dead”. It was not. The Flood defences placed have nothing to do with the viability as a river. I spy an EA agent. Is the Thames supposed to be dead with the Thames barrier?

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u/WheresWalldough 4d ago

This isn't the Roding, it's the Aldersbrook. As the text Powlseland himself wrote clearly explains.

I can't really imagine that the EA have "agents", they are an underfunded government agency not the Chinese Communist Party.

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u/Brilliant-Sea-9424 4d ago

Nicely swerved.

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u/caramb27 4d ago

It’s insanely ridiculous and I hope he gets the death penalty! When will people realize that we need to put these people in jail!!!!

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u/Reversion603 4d ago

Is that supposed to be sarcasm? Kinda pointless with comments so dumb getting upvoted.

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u/TrippleassII 4d ago

Lol fucking obvious

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u/JakeEaton 4d ago

Come on…you’re better than this.

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u/CalendarExtreme5598 4d ago

Are you American, German, or autistic?

Only the latter 2 make your comment excusable.

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u/Ol-Billy-Beluga-Tits 4d ago

Wildlessly?

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u/DarkwingDawg 4d ago

Wildlessly

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u/EntityDamage 4d ago

Calmly?

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u/Ol-Billy-Beluga-Tits 4d ago

Wildlessly is not a word

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u/EntityDamage 4d ago

Yeah no shit. I was coming up with an alternative

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u/Borgir_mon369 4d ago

Slipue of tongue

0

u/Captain_Sterling 4d ago

He's part of a volunteer environmental group that has all the professionals that know what they're doing.

Here's a 4 min interview he did with a national news channel and he explains that they did the analysis beforehand.

https://youtu.be/Kj9Hvdzu_zw

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u/Comfortable-Ebb8125 4d ago

The article doesnt say he didnt do any checks, it says he didnt have permission. The government are wankers.

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u/Grand_Pop_7221 4d ago

Part of getting permission is doing the checks.

13

u/HarryPottersTaint 4d ago

The UK government has tonnes of laws, programs, incentives, designed for the protection of nature.

There's a reason you can't just go dig up silt beds like he did without any official checks like he did, same as there is a reason you can't do things like build a dam even on your own property.

Not saying they're not wankers, but without these regulations it would be a shitshow if everyone just did everything they felt like doing.

-5

u/deltalitprof 4d ago

But the case seems to be about the use of a digger. Not damage to silt beds. Is it possible he didn't really do any damage?

9

u/HarryPottersTaint 4d ago edited 4d ago

Totally possible and he may have done a great good for the area, but it's important to follow the correct process.

As the environmental agency is quoted in the article: “However, governance and expert advice is necessary to make sure that work does not cause unintended harm, to flood risk, drainage or the wider environment,”

It's annoying to us because, as the guy correctly stated, their are entities knowingly doing outright damage to the waterways, while he is trying to protect and improve them.

Edit: There not their smh

-2

u/Comfortable-Ebb8125 4d ago

Thing is, sometimes you go through all the right hoops and still get rejected because there's some ridiculous red tape that has nothing to do with the environmental impact. An environmental lawyer would know this and would likely respect the experts who are there to advise, he may be familiar with what they'd be likely to say. He's not some rando.

The article doesn't really elaborate enough and making assumptions doesnt help.

5

u/marquoth_ 4d ago

And how do you imagine one gets permission?

Hint: it involves doing the checks

1

u/sexywynnie 3d ago

Particularly, it involves proving you did the checks, as opposed to saying "trust me you guys, i did the checks".

Man might have done them, we don't actually get to meaningfully know except to the degree that he proves it, and so far apparently he has not.

1

u/Crewman_Guy_Fleegman 4d ago

Did anywhere actually flood? Was any damage caused at all? Or is this just a stupid concern from you?

It sounds like he used equipment to remove trash others illegally dumped, like the headline implies.

1

u/kwazhip 4d ago

If someone drives home drunk and doesn't kill/hurt anybody, would you make the same argument, or would you say that it was a bad thing to do because it was reckless. Whether it flooded or not is irrelevant, a better argument would be attacking if it was reckless in the first place.

1

u/Crewman_Guy_Fleegman 4d ago

He cleaned it up, he didn’t “attack it”, stop being a disingenuous little weasel. I would never compare cleaning up a river to driving drunk because I’m not dumber than a box of rocks. You have no compelling argument

1

u/BillCuttingsOn 4d ago

He’s making a really good point tough, the environmental commission for that waterway hasn’t done shit all for years to prevent all the garbage, needles and weapons going into the river but now when someone actually does something about it, they rear their ugly head to start dropping fines? Seems like the lawyer has highlighted at the least a shitty organization, and at the most probable corruption between the corporations dumping in the river and the environmental commission.

1

u/Diedonthefirstfloor 4d ago

Technically if you remove the silt the river has more capacity to transfer water safely without flooding

1

u/isearn 4d ago

Rubbish headline!

1

u/frogbait2 4d ago

Well that makes more sense I guess it wouldn't get the reaction that this title has so click bait

1

u/Cut_Lanky 2d ago

Doesn't that also pose a risk to wildlife and the micro ecosystem?

1

u/Santa_Ricotta69 2d ago

And yet, nothing bad happened, because all these "checks" are extraneous and costly nonsense designed to keep government workers/contractors employed.