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Topic Other Boards / Foo / Is there any evidence...
- By Carla Date 08.08.07 11:43 UTC
that an online petition has ever changed anything?
- By Lily Mc [gb] Date 08.08.07 11:47 UTC
I strongly suspect not ... :D

M.
- By Jeangenie [gb] Date 08.08.07 11:49 UTC
If it generates publicity it might - thinking particularly of the Ashtead Nimbys! ;)
- By Carla Date 08.08.07 11:52 UTC
I was thinking of petitions that aim at the government...?

the Ashtead Nimby's is more a "protest register" than a petition IMO?
- By Daisy [gb] Date 08.08.07 11:53 UTC
It's just another very good example of 'spin' IMO :) :) :)

Daisy
- By Jeangenie [gb] Date 08.08.07 11:54 UTC
Most petitions are a protest against something that is happening or something that's not happening.
- By Carla Date 08.08.07 11:57 UTC
Yes, I agree...but is there any evidence that an online petition has ever changed the governments mind on anything?
- By Daisy [gb] Date 08.08.07 12:05 UTC
Another problem is that a lot of the things on the petition site are not directly in the government's jurisdiction :( BUT it looks good - the people having 'direct access' to the government - doesn't it ? :rolleyes::rolleyes:

Daisy
- By Jeangenie [gb] Date 08.08.07 12:06 UTC
I don't think there's evidence that any petition, whether online or paper, has changed a Government's mind if they're set on some course of action. :( It makes people feel they've registered a protest though.
- By Carla Date 08.08.07 12:42 UTC
I suspect they are now becoming victims of their own non-success - in that there are SO many petitions now that they are losing their importance.

Shame really - but I suspect individual letters of protest have more impact?
- By Jeangenie [gb] Date 08.08.07 13:08 UTC
I would imagine the best course of action is to contact your local MP at one of his/her surgeries and put your point, and ask him to put it forward to the relevent Minister or even to the House as a whole. The personal touch works better than any amount of faceless signatures.
- By Isabel Date 08.08.07 14:13 UTC
Yes, the change is the Government now has the email addresses, at least, of all their trouble makers :)
- By Jeangenie [gb] Date 08.08.07 14:15 UTC
And postal addresses.
- By calmstorm Date 09.08.07 08:15 UTC
Bit lost as to why someone who feels strongly enough about something to protest is labeled a trouble maker? Or have I read it wrong? if not for the suffragets (SP) we would not, as ladies, have had the vote or be respected as people, not a mans chattel. I do agree with JG though, whilst online petitions are good, the personal touch of actually sending a letter, and talking to your MP, may have more clout. But do the goven (whichever one it is in power) actually listen to us once they are elected :rolleyes:
- By Isabel Date 09.08.07 14:40 UTC

>Or have I read it wrong?


You have :)
- By calmstorm Date 10.08.07 08:57 UTC
Yes, the change is the Government now has the email addresses, at least, of all their trouble makers

So what does this comment mean?
- By Isabel Date 10.08.07 14:38 UTC
It certainly isn't a comment on whether their troublemakers are justified or not, so no need to tell me about the injustice of the Suffragette movement :) 
All it says is, if the Government considers signees troublemakers they have their details that is all.  Do with that thought as you please :)
- By calmstorm Date 11.08.07 06:28 UTC
So you are suggesting that anyone who disagrees with the goven, or anything else then they are troublemakers. Oh well..........:rolleyes:
- By Isabel Date 11.08.07 07:34 UTC
Trying reading the first section of the first sentence again :)
Topic Other Boards / Foo / Is there any evidence...

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