“Public liability — a f?te worse than death”

Britain: the need for liability insurance is “the hidden, insidious enemy of variety in communal life”, choking off all manner of neighborhood get-togethers and local fun. Goodbye to a football barbecue: “In order to cover against someone contracting a stomach ailment and then deciding to sue, it would have cost the football club more than […]

Britain: the need for liability insurance is “the hidden, insidious enemy of variety in communal life”, choking off all manner of neighborhood get-togethers and local fun. Goodbye to a football barbecue: “In order to cover against someone contracting a stomach ailment and then deciding to sue, it would have cost the football club more than ?250 for one afternoon to run the barbecue”. Goodbye also to the local annual tradition of “pole-walking” on a greased telegraph pole in a seaside Welsh village, deemed uninsurable though no one had actually hurt themselves seriously doing it. And “no one dares go ahead without cover. It is happening everywhere: f?tes and fund-raising events shredded of anything that might carry potential for injury, and thus potential for fun.” (Jim White, Daily Telegraph (U.K.), Jul. 5).

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