Re: The Video Shop
The Video Recordings Act 1984 was found to be illegal under EU law because it contravened free trade in goods. It was the sort of knee-jerk legislation that the Westminster government could get away with back in the early 1980s but after 1992 it became unlawful. The person responsible for passing the Video Recordings Act 1984 was Graham Bright, the former Conservative MP for Luton South, who later banned raves under Sections 63 to 67 The Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 "music with repetitive beats" and is now the Police and Crime Commissioner for Cambridgeshire.
The Video Recordings Act 1984 was found to be illegal under EU law because it contravened free trade in goods. It was the sort of knee-jerk legislation that the Westminster government could get away with back in the early 1980s but after 1992 it became unlawful. The person responsible for passing the Video Recordings Act 1984 was Graham Bright, the former Conservative MP for Luton South, who later banned raves under Sections 63 to 67 The Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 "music with repetitive beats" and is now the Police and Crime Commissioner for Cambridgeshire.
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