Re: heavy speeding fine
uselessness, on host 207.203.212.2
Wednesday, February 11, 2004, at 20:57:29
heavy speeing fine posted by Howard on Wednesday, February 11, 2004, at 18:24:41:
I heard about this in the news too. Very interesting.
> I'm sure that Finland has very honest traffic cops, but I can almost hear some of them thinking, "Hmmmm. There goes a Mercedes-Benz. I wonder how much a ticket would cost him."
This raises a very good point, and it's got some scary implications... if the police benefit (directly OR indirectly) from funds collected from wealthy speeders, they will naturally be less likely to pull over the poorer speeders. Or at any rate, in the event of two cars speeding alongside each other down the road, a nice one and a junky one, most likely the nice one will get preference. In my book, that's discrimination. Even if it IS only in theory. The system's set up to lean in that direction.
So what are rich people to do? Drive junky cars. What are poor people to do? Continue to speed, just in front of nicer cars than whatever they're driving. It's rigged, I tell you.
I'm in favor of the American (and presumably the rest of the world's) system of equal-opportunity speeding tickets. The traffic cops should have no special motivation favoring certain motorists over others. You can argue that in reality, relative fines aren't really an issue to cops, but I think that any time large amounts of money are involved in situations like this, the balance will be skewed. If not, there'd be no such thing as bribery. More money to the city means a richer police department, which means more money available to pay cops. Maybe raises and promotions, maybe even some sort of unofficial "comission" for the cops who bag the biggest "trophies," though I doubt they've gone that far. Heck, even if the cops don't get ANY benefit from the money at all, there's a certain cruel satisfaction that comes from causing some aristocratic bloke to part with more money than you'll ever see in your lifetime. A rush for those cops, undoubtedly, and that's the motivation in itself. Such is human nature.
Discrimination, I still say.
Though I've got to admit, hefty $200,000 fines probably make a good deal of impact on the ultra-rich and celebrities who think they're somehow above the law, and that's a humbling thing they could certainly use. They're no different or better than any of us, and some of them tend to forget that, I think.
If there was a way to keep the playing field level, with no traffic-cop bias, yet still keep the millionaires, who can "afford" to make those minor infractions, in check, I'd vote for that.
-useless"never had a speeding ticket"ness
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