ReverendDexter wrote:
93celicaGT2 wrote:
My point is that these tickets are NOT equal treatment under the law.
How not?
A $200 speeding ticket for a college kid may mean the difference between eating or not this week.
A $200 ticket for me means I don't get to have my panhard bar installed this month.
A $200 ticket for Bill Gates means absolutely nothing beyond the hassle of having to remind his personal assitant to remind his account to write the check.
Which of us are actually hurt by the penalty? Which of us are actually deterred from speeding?
Well, going by the original article, the fine was so large because the subject was a repeat offender. The CORRECT thing to do would have been to issue a penalty that directly affects whether or not they can drive. Suspension, jail time, impound, etc.
What they've done here is simply raise this man's taxes. It seems to be a well agreed upon fact on these boards that the highway patrolmen as simply tax collectors, and that traffic violations are a matter of revenue and nothing more. So, they've let him loose because he just paid for a new gym in the city hall, and hope that he'll do it again so they can collect even more money.
If they're REALLY about stopping it, and giving a penalty that will effectively deter future offenses, and can apply to everyone, suspension. Jail time. Impound. Etc.
Because what this comes down to is whether or not the government gets to tell you if you're rich or not. For instance, i certainly don't want the government telling me if i'm rich or not, because i make more by myself than the average median HOUSEHOLD in this state. Some months, i'm still lucky to be able to pay the electricity bill. If i get a ticket based on my yearly salary compared to someone of the poverty level (we'll base the normal indiana $150 speeding ticket for poverty level, since you know they won't LOWER the fine), i'd be paying probably a good $600 for going 10 over.
Well, i make more, so shouldn't i have to pay more? That $600 will likely mean that i will either have to sell a car, or be homeless.
I'm not arguing that the offender in the original article is hurt by a $290k fine if he's that rich. It's not the point. They aren't doing it to deter anyone from doing anything. They're doing it to make a E36 M3load of money off of one man's indiscretions, while some deadbeat could do the same thing and get off with a $250 fine.
Trust me. I see the point you're all making, and it DOES make sense, philosophically. But as a true deterrent, this is not the best way to go.