Chris you said
"or ask your employers to provide the cover you need"
- interesting comment - this the basis of the dispute between the firefighters and Somerset, or indeed the rest of us and the government. I take it you will now fully support our campaign?
I wholeheartedly agree with your pints about the real risks. Funny though, sin't it, that although firefighters have never been killed on mainland Britain by terrorist actions their personal life policies will be voided should they be so, BECAUSE those wonderful, profit making, insurance companies have decided that the risks of being killed by terrorists are too high. Die by any of the other means you suggest and your estate receives the payout. So it seems to me, that despite the societal responsibility, it is the insurance companies who are to blame. I wasn't really thinking this way until you pointed out just how low the risk is, especially in comparison to those larger ones mentioned, so they are just using this as an excuse to avoid costs to themselves after any such incident. Typical?
As to 'the government who took over responsibility' you do rather make it appear that those poor insurance companies, having spent so much time and effort to protect society, had their responsibilities taken away. As a result they no longer have any responsibility and 'have taken their bat and ball home' Rather a one-sided and spun view of history. May I correct this, with some historical fact?
Insurance companies began to employ fire brigades to serve their customers and protect their interests, such brigades being only available to fight fires occurring in premises holding policies with them. The purpose was to reduce losses. They did not help the general society. As a result of society's development town/city governance began to employ fire brigades for the public good, the costs being met by some reallocation of funds from insurance companies (as they no longer had to directly employ their own) and local taxations. Society began to expect such service and the brigades grew in number and size. As a result of problems found in mutual aid, in the preparations for the Second World War the government nationalised the Fire Service. After the war the government (national) made the running of local fire brigades the responsibility of local government (the county, or borough council).
So in short the insurance companies ran brigades to improve their profit margins and customer take up, towns/cities ran brigades to offer the service to all and then the government began running the fire service due to a war. Insurance companies now pay nothing directly toward the emergency services, and no more than any other business. Yet they have these services to thank for keeping down some of their losses. Approaches to them for assistance, financial, or for their lobbying power, fail to achieve much as that precious profit line is all they think of. Perhaps if they invested some of their great wealth in assisting us to reduce the risks themselves (and supported us when we support their customers - the public) they could show a return?
Always been a capitalist but your arguments about the insurance companies are changing my opinions, fast.