Frustrating article. Thanks to
@dick bird for posting it. Too bad it provides us with so little...
It stakes an enormous claim, that "...hoteliers were being are forced to comply with 'confusing and disproportionate regulations' that go against other European directives related to data protection and payment systems," and provides no substantiation for this claim. What is the evidence to animate this histrionic characterisation of the new procedures? Instead of providing evidence, it leans into the entitled feelings of vacationers, with this:
"Penelope Bielckus, travel content creator at The Flyaway Girl blog, said the new rules "add
another layer of paperwork that can feel like a chore when all you want is to relax on holiday".
It is odd that in the rhetoric here, we are supposed to feel sorry for vacationers (when there are so many billions who will never enjoy a single vacation) enduring a few minutes of information inputs at registration. It's a "chore" ... I'm sorry... a "chore" is generally a task involving the physical upkeep to prevent domestic or rural life from sliding into squalor. Miss Content Creator needs to stop clutching her pearls, grab some smelling-salts and take a reality-check.
I remember when some news organisations, the BBC being a prime example, could be relied upon to report on policy with facts and explanations of the mechanics and reasoning without fanning flames of indignation based on nothing more than assertion. Journalists used to summarise policy so that we could see the raison-d'etre behind it. Now? Write a headline, find some randoms loosely associated with the periphery of the policy's terrain, and encourage the well-off to *feel* beleaguered.