And yes, one of the things that make me LOVE the UK is, that nothing feels sterile... I feel alive!
The point is that Zuerich generally doesn't need CCTV cameras everywhere. It's not crime-free but there is much less crime and hardly any anti-social behaviour compared to a British city.
Plus, in Switzerland people aren't yet so brainwashed by the media as to think that being under constant surveillance is a good thing...
Sounds like a small nit-picky thing but if it's the sort of thing that bothers you it can really get to you in the long term. To me, it felt like living in a real world 'Stepford Wives' environment. On the other hand, it's great for a holiday or short-term visit and I'd guess that if I had a family that concern would be far outweighed by the benefits.
I haven't seen ANY articles in UK newspapers or on telly that would suggest constant surveillance being a good thing. Most people do complain about England becoming a Big-Brother-State... So I'm not quite sure where you get your information from...
Apart from that I couldn't really be bothered about me being under 'surveillance'... Why should I be, when I haven't got anything to hide?
In Downtown Zurich? Yes
Really? Yes
Good for you to have never felt uncomfortable... I've had quite a few dodgy or scary encounters in Switzerland, whereas in England I couldn't have counted one...
Bottom line, being in trouble won't ever be positive, with or without cameras, but thinking that there might be somebody seeing what's going on, alarming the police, might just make me feel that little bit safer walking through town (NOT DURING THE ATTACK!), even if it isn't true.
Just to repeat what someone else commented on... How many people's lives have been saved through CCTV? I wouldn't know as the positive news hardly ever break through in the media, or do they?
Would you care to elaborate on your scary encounters or would that be prying?
One incident included four blokes chasing me and a friend through Aarau around 1am... We were just sitting in the middle of the town centre when those guys came up... We didn't feel very comfortable and decided to walk away, trying to get rid of them... They didn't have none of it and closed in on us... Then we started to run round the corner... At the end we found a young couple walking home and we told them we're being followed and if it'd be alright to walk with them... They were ok with that and we even passed those guys again who were obviously still looking for us...
Other story was another incident of me and another friend being followed by a really dodgy man, nobody else around, so we ended up running home as quickly as we could...
My best friend has been attacked and escaped rape and that wasn't even in the middle of Zurich but in Muri AG...
Luckily I've never actually been attacked and I really do hope you don't expect me to tell you a gruesome story about rape or GBH for you to understand that I have felt less safe in Switzerland than in the UK (where nothing like this or worse has ever happened to me!)...
What makes Switzerland more scary for me is the fact that many towns can look like Ghosttowns after 10pm, whereas in the UK you have a balanced mixture of normal people and lunatics even late at night and more shops that stay open, where you could go to if you felt unsafe...
Hope this makes sense to you... xx
So Switzerland is great... but not for everyone and not for the same reason.
And as it shows I'm not the only one who didn't feel safe in Switzerland/Zurich...
But there you go, that's why this topic is called a 'general rant'... We won't find common grounds...
And just on that note (sweeping under the carpet) how come that BBC2 (who normally does do their homework!) said that Switzerland's supposed to have the happiest citizens in the world, whereas they are on rank 16 with the highest suicide rate in the world, but you never hear about it? Family members, Friends and Neighbours have been dropping like flies due to suicide... But anyway, that's a whole other kettle of fish!
I believe that BBC2 have done their homework, though in Bahrain, where doctors aren't allowed to look at a woman's vagina directly, house parties result in sink plugs being pulled when the police turn up (hence "pull the plug") and husbands are decided, the rate is 5 times lower. Based on that, I'm not sure what to say with respect to members of an internet forum. Things are surely different for us discussing this here and the people considering their lives.