Salanis wrote:
So, your tail light is busted or you're going 45 in a 35 zone. Cop pulls you over... You shouldn't have to produce your license? He should have to prove that you don't have one?
oldsaw wrote:
You're driving a vehicle, doing something illegal and then get pulled over. Without a license, why would you expect anyone to believe you're the lawful owner/operator instead of a thief, drug runner, or maybe even an illegal alien?
You guys are assuming I did something illegal. People get pulled over every day witout having done anything wrong. It's only happend to me once, and before that I'd have probably said it doesn't really happen. But it does. And I would think especially so if you're a minority.
To your point, I agree it isn't practical. But think about this- have you ever run out to the store and realized you forgot your wallet? I have. I've never been pulled over in that situation, but it certainly is possible I could be. Now, again, I understand we have to draw a line somewhere between ideal and practical. In a practical world, yes, we probably have to put up with the law that says you have to have your license with you. But we should put up with it, aware of the fact that it is an infringement on our liberty. It may be an infringement we're all willing to live with, but we shouldn't lose sight of the fact that it is an infringement. Not to repeat a cliche, but it is supposed to be innocent until proven guilty.
Here's what I don't like. Government is supposed to govern because we have given them authority to govern in was we've agreed are best for all of us. Does anyone feel like that's how it's done? When a officer pulls you over, you should feel like everything is okay, not wonder what you're going to be hit with.
So, back to our scenario above. I run to the store and realize I forgot my wallet. On the way home to get it, I get pulled over. The officer asks for my license, registration and insurance card. I give him the registration and insurance card and explain that I left my wallet at home. We're a half mile from the house. Wouldn't you like to live in a world where an officer looks at the insurnace card, the registration and the report he got back from the plate, sees that they're all in the same name and I live nearby and simply asks my name? I give the right answer and he says "don't forget your wallet next time". Isn't that how it should be?
Or, back to reality - the incident that actually happened to me. I wasn't doing anything illegal. Got pulled over, produced my license, registration and a computer print out of my insurance confirmation. Shouldn't that be enough? Are we happy about our country being in a state where I have to take time from work and go to the courthouse to prove what the officer allready knew? When you buy a car and insure it, do you leave it parked until the card arrives in the mail? I'm pretty sure I didn't do anything that practically 100% of car owners have done at some point - something that officer himslef has almost certainly done.
In my opinion, we're giving our government a lot of power to legally harrass us. I didn't go to jail or have to pay a fine. But I was still treated as if I had done something wrong when I hadn't. I just hit the wrong cop on the wrong day. He didn't like the look of the car, or something. Or the last guy he pulled over said something that ticked him off. Who knows? But I don't much like how it worked out.
And - back to the subject at hand - I am not in favor of anything that gives them any more power to do so. And what really bothers me is it's not the people who have the power who are clammoring to do it, it's regular people saying "yes, I want to compromise more of my liberty". Now that's really a shame. At the very least, I would hope people would say "I'm not crazy about this, but I think it needs to be done". I could understand that opinion. I have a very hard time understanding people who think it's no big deal.
The one that bothered me even more was when I got pulled over in the Celica because the damn dealer didn't send me a title. I had a bill of sale, insurance card, and my license and still had to put up with an officer telling me I was lucky he didn't take my car. Really? The car that I just showed you the bill of sale for? The property I own and paid for? I'm LUCKY that you allow me to keep it?
Think about it. I went to the DMV and told them the situation. I couldn't register the car. I tried, but wasn't allowed to. Yes, it's my problem. But shoudn't my government be able to help me with that problem, rather than being the problem? Why do we pay them to do that? When I asked the woman at the DMV what she thought I shoud do, she looked at me like I had two heads. "I don't know. You have to have a title". Thanks a lot. How hard would it be to have someone who can look at my bill of sale, maybe make a call to the dealership in CA I bought it from, run a stolen vehicle report, conclude that I own the car and get me a CO title? Why is it unreasonable to expect my government that I give authority to and pay taxes to support to have some ability to help me with a simple problem?
I bought a car. I paid for it. I had proof I paid for it. I tried to register it. And that's what I get? That's what we've built? This is the land of the free? I'm lucky they didn't take my car?
Wow. You guys can be content with that America. I'm not. And there is ZERO chance I'm giving them any more means of harrassing people.