How strict are the anti-ST faction?
Is it just shops - I mean, pretty obvious shops like Tesco and Morrisons - that they don't want to see operating after 16:00 of a Sunday, or does it extend to, let us say, the power-generating people (I know; I've been round a power station, hard hat and all; I was there, man, I was there) who work in power stations to keep the lights and the tellies and the Sky+HD boxes going no matter what day or what time of day it is, Sundays, Easter Sundays, Christmas Days and all. I'd love to know how consistent they are in their position.
Just asking, like. I really am genuinely interested.
OK, Shaker, you start your post asking how consistent the anti-Sunday Trading faction is. Since the issue isn't about whether there should be Sunday Trading or not - and in fact the whole Sunday Trading debate in England & Wales has never, in our life-times, been about that anyway, you seem to be trying to set up a straw man. In your second paragraph you give an example that is nothing to do with commodity trading (after all, have you ever tried to contact your electricity provider on a Sunday, other than in an emergency - when you probably won't contact your provider anyway but a distributor), indicating that you are really determined to get this straw man to appear realistic.
As things stand, our modern society is massively reliant on electricity for survival - be that central heating, the use of TVs and other electronic equipment, cooking, light. I'm not sure that anyone is that reliant on shopping in supermarkets on a Sunday.
Jeremy then makes his even more fatuous comment about police and firefighters (not to mention, of course, nurses, doctors, carers, etc.). As far as I am aware, none of those just listed (or those like them) are providing a service that offers commercial transactions.
Jeremy then makes the comment that "But they offer less choice at higher prices than a supermarket. Why must the public be forced to subsidise high priced poor quality services?" I accept that they may be slightly higher priced, but I can usually buy better quality fresh food from an independent butcher or greengrocer than from any supermarket; however, I can also take you to the same area of our village and point out three independent food retailers whose goods are not only better quality than the stuff available in the Tesco Extra, but are no more expensive than that place now charges. When it first opened, its prices were rock-bottom but as soon as it put its chief competitors out of business, it increased the prices by about 8% (according to a local economist who was brought in to review the impact of their first year's trading).