Talking CCTV to Scold Offenders in UK 486
linumax writes "The most monitored nation of the world is getting an interesting new service. According to a BBC News story, "Talking" CCTV cameras that tell off people dropping litter or committing anti-social behaviour are to be extended to 20 areas across England.They are already used in Middlesbrough where people seen misbehaving can be told to stop via a loudspeaker, controlled by control centre staff."
23 years off? (Score:5, Insightful)
A sudden hot sweat had broken out all over Winston's body. His face remained completely inscrutable. Never show dismay! Never show resentment! A single flicker of the eyes could give you away. He stood watching while the instructress raised her arms above her head and -- one could not say gracefully, but with remarkable neatness and efficiency -- bent over and tucked the first joint of her fingers under her toes.
Re:23 years off? (Score:5, Insightful)
You talk about big brother? Talking CCTV cameras are more pointedly "big brother" than any other initiative proposed by this illiberal, dishonest government. After all, what does it mean? Big brother is not someone who stops you congregating in groups for legitimate protest, nor does he lock up foreigners without trial, sentence or judgement. No. This is Big Brother in all his attentive, caring, protective, advising, paternal, loving, Orwellian glory. Why vote anyone else citizen? Why go anywhere else citizen? We love you citizen. Now, stop slacking and get back to work. It's for your own good, you know.
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Criminals, especially the nuisance level ones hanging around on street corners, selling drugs, burgling houses and mugging people have no real fear of the police. Ok so they may get caught and arrested but after that th
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It is not an invasion of privacy to be watched in public.
In just the past ten years or so, there's been a huge increase in the ability of police to monitor you and your movements in public spaces. This results in an increase in power of government over your life. I don't think it's much of a stretch (perhaps another ten or twenty years) to have your every movement in public in most of the UK monitored and evaluated by some sort of AI. Perhaps even stored indefinitely. But before widespread monitoring, p
To the first person... (Score:5, Funny)
Where did the UK go wrong??? (Score:5, Insightful)
Yet, somehow, this has morphed into a seemingly-large group of people believe that this is a GOOD thing. A doubleplus good thing. WTF went wrong??? Don't they realize they have become the EXACT thing that George Orwell was warning about??? What happened to the 60 years of knowledge that this book brought us about what life would be like living in a society like this?
Re:Where did the UK go wrong??? (Score:5, Insightful)
To me the concept of people being free to do whatever they like so long as it doesn't prevent anyone else from doing the same is self evident. Unfortunately, I think the majority of people think the exact opposite: there is a list of things the majority of people believe we should not be allowed to do and there should be perfect enforcement of that list. The absolute tyranny of the majority of the minority is considered by most people to be the best form of government.
As such, the only arguments you'll see the mainstream make against perfect enforcement is the posibility of corruption or misuse.
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In contrast Switzerland is a true tyranny of the majority and there are many many libertarians in this country that like their privacy. And privacy in Switzerland is part of the constitution (Arti
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Oh, you mean like how the camera monitors currently pay extra special attention to pretty girls, blacks, and muslims? Now the cameras can make them feel uncomfortable not just by following them, but can spew forth racial slurs and wolf-whistles.
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progressing to full adulthood where they understand their relationship to other human beings and their real responsibilities
in the world. In this state all reason is by appeal to authority, real or imaginary. It's based on unresolved fear of loss and vulnerability and leads to religious beliefs, superstition and sociopathy. It is possibly a conflicting basis at
Re:Where did the UK go wrong??? (Score:5, Funny)
In America, you scorn the television.
In England, television scorns YOU!
Re:Where did the UK go wrong??? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Shoot me, I don't mind CCTV. In fact I frequently welcome it since it makes places considerably safer. I really don't see the problem with CCTV as it's currently implemented in the UK - it's used in public places and you can see the cameras; 1984 comparisons simply don't work.
Whatever slashdot thinks, CCTV is generally put up due to public pressure for it, not by some shadowy government group executing a long range plan to o
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You may be able to coerce that consent in a country with little democratic heritage or influence, but it simply isn't going to happen to any stable democracy unless the majority wants it at the time.
The only way I can see this happening in Britain, or any other western European country, is in response to a massive crisis - ie where the majority (temporally at least) want the dictator. This is certainly po
Re:Where did the UK go wrong??? (Score:4, Interesting)
Nobody that I've talked to on this issue has been able to answer this question yet, so I'll ask it plain and simple: How is monitoring of public places an invasion of privacy?
Re:Where did the UK go wrong??? (Score:4, Insightful)
For one thing, the police wouldn't be standing around, filming you for 15 minutes, as you got beat/stabbed to death in the street...
For another, human beings don't remember every detail, of everything going on, every second of every day... So actual police aren't going to send out tickets for every trivial little infraction, like jaywalking in the middle of the night... Police aren't going to remember exactly who you were associating with, on every single day, for years.
There's an overwhelming difference between human and electronic surveillance, and I can't understand in the slightly why so many people play dumb, or even worse, actually believe it's remotely the same.
Re:Where did the UK go wrong??? (Score:4, Insightful)
The difference between having a bunch of police doing the same is:
- police are single units and hard to network, and therefore some effort must be made to track a person by a number of individual officers. This means opportunistic tracking of everyone just because you can won't happen.
- police can react to violent crime and stop the crime from occurring, a CCTV camera cannot intevene in a fight to break it up
You can bet that as soon as it's possible to automatically track everyone (and the already installed all pervasive CCTV network makes this easy), they will do it. Incidentally, there is some level of privacy in a public place: privacy of the thoughts in my mind, privacy of where I'm going from and to (random people in public can't tell unless they stalk you), privacy of a conversation with a friend.
Re:Where did the UK go wrong??? (Score:4, Insightful)
The other major difference is that this is a new level of monitoring. A policeman on the beat does not generally follow people or investigate them if they are not doing anything suspicious. CCTV is always recording, and with new technology is now following people all the time. Every car or tube journey in London can be followed easily. A person's movements on foot can easily be tracked. Yet, these are innocent people who in the past would not have been monitored.
If you examine a persons life in close enough detail, everyone looks like a criminal. Why should the government first assume that everyone is by default a ciminal and must be monitored, and why should I then be required to prove my innocence? CCTV is gathering evidence against everyone, all the time.
more like a call to arms (Score:5, Interesting)
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You do realise that our prisons are currently full, don't you? We're not locking as many people up as some people would like because there simply isn't space. As you say, a hardcore minority of people treat ASBOs as some kind of badge of honour; given that they can't be jailed and fining them is a waste of time (as they have no substantial assets or money to speak of) and we c
Looks like they missed one (Score:5, Funny)
2. Talking Camera: "Please fetch your can."
3. Talking Camera: "The bin is behind the phone box."
4. Talking Camera: "Thank you for using the bin."
5. Pedestrian comes back at 2am and beats Talking Camera to death with cricket bat, or other clubbing instrument of choice.
How about this one (Score:3, Interesting)
5. Pedestrian stops complaining about how filthy the beach is and why doesn't the goverment do anything about it.
Your argument sounds a lot like dog owners who complained about fines for letting their dogs crap on the sidewalk BUT also complained about crap on the sidewalk.
Is it really that hard to make sure your dog does NOT take a dump were everyone, including yourselve is walking? Is it that hard to drop your litter in a can?
You see, the problem for me, a middle aged white male, is that I see two choi
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However, with that return money ("Dosenpfand"), there are now enterprising kids that spend their afternoon to pick up litter along highways for a little pocket money.
Result: clean highways, happy kids
So when is the next step when.. (Score:3, Insightful)
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Pedestrian litters.
Camera gives warning.
Pedestrian ignores camera.
-Sound of gattling gun reaching operation speed-
Camera give last warning.
Pedestrian starts to run away, fearing for his life.
Camera shoots net and captures pedestrian.
I can't wait to see the Youtube movies!
Monty Python anyone? (Score:5, Funny)
An old man walks up to a street corner, looks around, sees no-one. Ever so slowly he reaches into his jacket and pulls out a cigarette and lighter. He puts the ciggie in his mouth, holds the light up to it, and:
CAMERA: Oi! You there! Do you really want to do that?
OLD MAN: What?! Who's there?
CAMERA: Look up, and a couple of metres to the right.
OLD MAN looks up and faces the camera.
CAMERA: You know smoking's bad for you right?
OLD MAN: I just wanted one, and I can't have them at home because the wife gives me grief.
CAMERA: Just one??! Just one you say??! You can't have just one, because once you start, you're hooked!
OLD MAN: I know that, I got hooked a long time ago.
CAMERA: Well you can get yourself unhooked right now. I won't have your type stinking up my town.
OLD MAN: I beg your pardon? I live here!
CAMERA: Not if I can help it! Now clear off before I send out the coppers!
OLD MAN makes a rude gesture at the camera.
CAMERA: Right! That's it! You've done it now!
OLD MAN: Done what? I haven't even got to have my smoke yet!
CAMERA: Don't play innocent with me, we've got the whole thing recorded.
Police siren blares.
OLD MAN: You bastard! All I wanted was a smoke and you call the bloody cops?!
Police arrive, old man runs off.
CAMERA: He went that way! After him!
--
Not funny? If only it were just a bad joke.
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You ain't seen nothing yet (Score:2)
demo man (Score:3, Funny)
Why do people in Britain put up with this? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Because they're getting desperate? (Score:5, Insightful)
There is sort of an epidemic -- perceived or actual, I don't know, and it hardly matters -- of obnoxious, petty crime, mostly committed by youths, in many British cities. There's the whole "happy slapping" thing, but that's just really the tip of the iceberg, it's just a lot of vandalism, shoplifting, street crime, etc. It's the kind of thing that just really gets to people, because it directly degrades the quality of life when you walk around.
In some ways, I think it sort of mirrors feelings that people in the U.S. had back around 10-15 years ago, at the height of the violent crime wave in the inner cities, except in Britain it doesn't seem to really be violent crime. (In fact it seems to be the kind of shit that would probably get you shot by one of the more serious criminals here in America -- maybe we have some sort of natural selection in the ghettos here that keeps this stuff to a minimum? Or maybe everyone with the means to in the U.S. abandoned the inner cities so long ago that we just don't notice.)
But at any rate, the people who have influence -- mostly white, middle income and up -- aren't too bothered, because they're looking rather desperately for any way to knock the "yobs," "chavs," and other varieties of scum in line. There's a sort of (and again, this is just based on the people I've talked with) "well, nothing else has worked, so what the hell" attitude.
To be honest I can't really blame them. Here in the U.S., there were a lot of Generally Bad Ideas being tossed around back in the 90s before the crime wave crested and began to recede (and I don't think even now there's a clear consensus on why that happened -- some people, the authors of Freakonomics in particular, argue that it was actually the echo of Roe v. Wade from a generation earlier reducing the number of potential criminals; feel free to posit your own theory). If the tide hadn't turned when it did, we'd probably be looking at things like this all over the place right now.
Clarification (Score:2)
But at any rate, the people who have influence -- mostly white, middle income and up -- aren't too bothered by the cameras and other "innovative" policing techniques...
The way I had it written, made it ambiguous as to whether I was saying that people with influence weren't bothered by the crime or the cameras. I meant the cameras.
The people I know, who are all over-30, middle- or upper-middle-class whites with families, seem a whole lot more annoyed by the speed cameras (whic
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Maybe it's a difference between an armed and unarmed society - a group of 15 year olds is going to think twice about harresing someone who might possibly be carrying a gun.
Re:Because they're getting desperate? (Score:5, Interesting)
So, after installing all those cameras, there is an epidemic of exactly the sort of crime that they are supposed to prevent? And the solution is to install more, and more expensive, cameras? It's working well, isn't it?
It certainly matters whether the epidemic is perceived or actual: no amount of law enforcement is going to reduce crime if the crime is not "actual", but just in the minds of the right-wing press.
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DeoxyriboNucleic Acid profiling: "DNA profiling was developed in 1984 by British geneticist Sir Alec Jeffreys,[107] and first used in forensic science to convi
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Near 2 million people signed a petition on the governments own website opposing per-mile road charging plans (likely enforced by satellite trackers) and the government's response was basically 'you don't understand, we have to do this, s
The root of the problem... (Score:2, Insightful)
Why are there so many people who don't know how to behave on their own? What are mothers teaching these days?
Adording Parents: Everything is their fault (Score:3, Interesting)
Unfortunately it dribbled out of the Slashhot Firehose.
Fortunately you can still read about it elsewhere:
http://www.pbs.org/teachers/learning.now/2007/03/h as_myspace_contributed_to_gen_1.html [pbs.org]
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-esteem27fe b27,0,225486,full.story?coll=la-home-headlines [latimes.com]
http://www.statenews.com/op_article.phtml?pk=40058 [statenews.com]
screaming cameras (Score:2, Funny)
"How can you have any pudding if you don't eat your meat?"
Oh Gawd Blimey, Guvnor! (Score:2)
Will one of those be Buckingham Palace? "Oooi! Prince Harry! Put out that fatty!"
Follow a recent royal tradition "Pardon Guvnor! That lady most certainly is not your wife!"
Or "Horses *must* be housed in the stable! Oh sorry, 'Mam"
Realistically: One of the guards will leave the loudspeaker on:
"Cor Blimey! Check out the norks on that bird. Would love to get me some of that crum
Lasers (Score:2)
Middlesborough? They have these in Cheshire! (Score:3, Interesting)
The only one I've seen so far (at least, the only place I've seen it 'triggered') is in the outdoor centre bit of our local shopping center, where there is a pub and some construction work going on. A few friends and I came out of the pub a bit drunk and saw some "wet floor" type cones lying around... anyway, so yeah, we're messing with these cones in a non-destructive way (just putting them on our heads - hey, look, we were drunk, stfu) and then this booming yet completely intelligible voice starts talking to us telling us to put the cones down!
Over Christmas they had a fake ice rink there and they kept telling people to get off it at night.
We're not sure where the speaker itself is, but pretty much every place in town is covered by cameras. I'm pretty sure that's not the only place they cover with these things. Having read 1984, it's extremely disturbing.
There's a beam in your eye. (Score:2, Interesting)
That's nonsense (Score:3, Interesting)
Yet both those nations are not so nannied and camera infested as the UK - explain?
the only difference I can see straight away is that the police in those places is (a) very available and (b) doesn't take any BS. Oh, and public transport
Well bang goes my hobby... (Score:3, Funny)
OMFG Middlesbrough (Score:4, Funny)
Likely message from the cameras...
"Hey, you...What you doing climbing the camera pole..yes you in the football shirt (half of Middlesbrough turns around thinking it's them)..put down those bolt cutters...this is police property and...hey..what's that sound? Are you cutting my brackets...I'm warning you, there's a car on its way...stop that right now...don't you know these cameras are very hard to resell...we have the serial number&*£(...."
Law of unintended consequences (Score:4, Insightful)
What worries me isn't so much the invasion of privacy by CCTV, or being patronised by being told to pick up litter, but rather that this technology threatens to render CCTV ineffective.
CCTV is pervasive in British cities, but there are too many cameras and too few operatives for every camera to be monitored all the time. Criminals are deterred by the uncertainty of whether they are being watched. However, once CCTV becomes reactive, the absence of a verbal warning could be taken as confirmation that you are not being watched.
Suppose you're a would-be mugger in the centre of Midlesborough. You drop some litter and mess about with traffic cones, and if there's no verbal warning then you know there's a good chance that you're invisible to surveillance for the time being. Knowing you're relatively safe from being caught, you can now select your victim with impunity.
Please hold still while the police come for you (Score:3)
Re:Ready for the Daily Jerks? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Ready for the Daily Jerks? (Score:4, Interesting)
It's one thing to use "hey, it's in public" as an excuse for a lot of things, but it's another thing entirely to use it to justify eavesdropping from a remote location, videotaping people and even remotely telling them how to behave and not to be anti-social.
You might as well justify people getting upskirt material in public. What's the difference? How is it different if you use high tech equipment to listen in on people from eighty feet away and recording everything they do in public versus some crazy perv with mirrors on his shoes and a small video camera?
Why not stick video camers and audio capturing devices and loudspeakers on every lightpole and aim them directly into everyone's homes. After all, the cameras are in public places and if Joe Public could potentially see and listen to something from the road, what's the big deal about a video camera with 14x optical zoom and high quality devices that pick up audio from far away doing the same thing?
I for one love the idea of being monitored, watched and told how to behave by some minimum wage monkey in a remote location every second I am outside of my home. Yay!
Re:Ready for the Daily Jerks? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Just look a bit further (Score:5, Insightful)
In 2015, someone will say: well, but what about the crimes that are committed at homes by cruel parents? What about terrorists making their bombs? Let's have homes monitored!
There will be an outrage. People will gather in the streets, screaming "Give our rights back". The cameras in those streets will tell them in a firm voice, "Stop yelling and go away". People will stop yelling and go away. So will their freedom.
Re:Just look a bit further (Score:5, Insightful)
Various people have been instructed by the voices to not cross the road where they were about to cross it but to walk up to the crossing and cross it there but instead of humbly complying they ignored the voice and crossed anyway. One person says he now crosses at this place every day just to hear the voice shouting at him. These were just innocent people who weren't actually doing anything wrong, they are all perfectly capable of judging for themselves where to cross the road and they don't need some idiot in a control room telling them how to do it.
Law abiding people are the most likely sorts of people to comply with the cameras demands and the people they really want to tackle, e.g. thugs, muggers, car jackers, drunk teenagers are very quickly going to realise that the voice can shout at them all night but with 19 out every 20 British Policemen and Women tied up in the police station reading up on the latest guidelines for dealing sensitively with ethnic minorities no police are ever going to turn up to actually stop them doing whatever it is they were doing.
Re:Just look a bit further (Score:5, Funny)
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If I lived where a voice on high told me what to do I would quickly start a Monty Python style dialogue with the "Controller"
Voice: "Don't cross there"
Me (falling to knees): "Blessed be ! A miracle ! God is speaking to me !"
Voice: "Stop that now, get up and go the crossing"
Me (not moving): "And how shall I go to the crossing oh Lord ?"
Voice: "Stop that now... We'll call the poilce"
Me (now prostrate): "Oh vengeful Lord, smite me not with your mighty polices"
etc. etc.
This sort of thing wou
Re:Just look a bit further (Score:5, Insightful)
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Having actual
Re:Ready for the Daily Jerks? (Score:5, Interesting)
Anyone with any sense got out ages ago.
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Re:Dupe (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Dupe (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Dupe (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:What a lot of Americans don't realize.. (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:What a lot of Americans don't realize.. (Score:5, Interesting)
What's more strange, I found, was that I never got into a fight in all my adult life until I went to the UK. There I got into a bunch of them. One caused by annoying people who wouldn't turn down their music while I was trying to sleep. (I politely asked them to turn down their music, one of them hit me). One caused by men at McDonalds rudely describing a female patron. (I politely asked them to watch their language, one of them hit me). One which I started after listening to a white guy call a guy I knew "niger" a bunch of times. My friend didn't want to get in trouble with the nearby security people.. but where I come from, that kind of talk earns you a broken nose.
Of course, a bunch of you reading this probably think this is terribly uncouth and that I am clearly an anti-social person. Call me Quentin Tarantino if you like, but I think there's a place for violence in our society.. it's a regulating force which every person has the power to exercise. Just look at how impolite some forums without violence can be.
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http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/legis/nsw/consol_act
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That is, assuming you are a man. If not, just consider that a compliment.
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If I am sitting in the row in front of you at the MCG and you start a consensual brawl with the guy next to you I would want you both to be arrested.
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You can do X if it is not a direct threat to me.
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Re:What a lot of Americans don't realize.. (Score:4, Informative)
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Oh wait, no it doesn't, it calls me a "British Citizen".
Your friend could be brought up on charges for damaging the property of the crown.
Actually it would be assault, but if you refused to press charges I really can't see it making it to court - the police are far too busy to piss about with things like that.
(I know slashdot is getting worse all the time, but this is "Insightful"? Please.)
Re:What a lot of Americans don't realize.. (Score:5, Insightful)
You also forget the European constitution on human rights is now UK law; it is effectively a bill of rights. The UK might have a few priorities in law different, such as a few tighter limits on free speech such as libel and hate speech, but we have broadly the same rights as US citizens. We're certainly not all chattels (or slaves) of the Crown!
Out of interest, how has the vaunted US system protected habeas corpus? How much good is freedom of the press when all the presses are owned by a few barons in league with the government? A piece of paper is only as powerful as the will of the people to hold their government accountable to it.
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2. GET A CONSTITUTION.
3. TAKE DOWN THE CAMERAS
Do like the French: Take the shotgun approach (Score:3, Funny)
Way to go!
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2. GET A CONSTITUTION.
Because that's done so well for you in the USA. Oh wait, the USA is only the second most monitored country in the world.
Really: what the hell does the system of government have to do with the existence of fascist CCTV cameras? The scum rises to the top in every system of government I'm aware of, whether democratic or otherwise.
Re:People of the UK: RISE UP!!! (Score:4, Insightful)
1. Get rid of the death penalty. It's long overdue. Join the post-medieval world.
2. GET A CONSTITUTION.
2. Get a constitution, and stick by it. Better yet, get something like the Magna Carta, which the US has no equivalent for but the UK has had for three times as ong as the US has existed
3. TAKE DOWN THE CAMERAS.
3. Get rid of the mandatory phone-tapping in the US. You might not know this, but every single call you make is monitored. While you're at it, you might want to get rid of the semi-trained armed thugs playing at policemen, too.
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A couple of months ago I was with my wife and this obnoxious 16 year old girl had her music on full playing the same song over and over for several hours on the bus. I went up to her and told her to cut that out, which of course she didn't.
I got off the bus and she did as well and punched me from behind. I punched her straight back and made her head bleed. Then some group of her friends came out and tried to give me a beating. I got away, but my wife is no