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15
Comments
1035
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • They are where I'm from because it's perfectly legal and regulated. Do we perhaps mean they rarely pay tax?

  • Is income not taxed where you're from?

    There are some countries

  • Out of curiousity, which one is this?

    And whether you look under the rug, is that true in all texts of the religion?

  • Funnily enough, this is my even more preferred solution haha

    I am for public transport centric cities, where you can safely walk across streets, and cities are designed for people, not cars.

    I am 100% for everything you've said, including socialism.

    It's just I'm also living in the world as it currently is, and if we're gonna have car-centric hell holes, I at least want to make breaking the rules have consequences, so car centrism is A BIT safer. Income based fines to boot.

    Most certainly is a band-aid, though. Do agree.

    But I just get pissed when dickheads think speeding isn't a bit deal, or red-light cameras are just for revenue raising, as if driving a massive hunk of metal is a serious responsibility, not to be taken lightly.

  • Yeah, love this guy's videos

  • Hence my carve out. I don't support the privacy nightmare the US has.

    I do support road safety cameras in general, if managed properly.

    People don't have the right to have no consequences for their dangerous behaviour.

  • Sounds like a police/privacy problem, not the idea of having cameras at all.

    Police should need a warrant to access the videos.

    The software should not log licence plates of every single car that comes past.

    The software should be open source and developed by the public sector.

    I agree what's in place in the US is a privacy nightmare, but the idea of having cameras in general isn't fundamentally bad.

    Skill issue USA, git gud.

  • I don't want the government or private companies tracking my every move

    This is an issue with how the cameras are operated. I'm taking issue with people complaining that these cameras exist at all.

    People claiming no system could ever be privacy-preserving aren't being very imaginative.

    I agree the surveillance state is bad, but taking a picture of someone running a red light and sending them a fine is a good thing, sorry.

    What's bad is allowing cameras to passively record every single licence plate at all times and store that information. A speed or red light camera should only take a photo/video when it detects someone speeding/running a red light, and no other information should be stored.

  • So, we agree. This is specifically a US police problem.

    But many people argue against speed cameras and red light cameras in general, as if they have the right to endanger people's lives.

    Pit maneuvers are insane, and aren't done in most other civilised countries.

  • Gonna be downvoted, because apparently this is car brain central, but the amount of mental gymnastics people will do to make red light camera enforcement "bad" is crazy.

    The US' private company control over these cameras notwithstanding.

    Fuck me, so many people die on on roads, and especially at intersections.

  • The people who downvoted are stupid, thanks for sharing :)

  • I’m so sick and tired of reading ‘oh, New York City busses are the slowest,'” slammed Stacey Rauch, a Murray Hill resident who takes the bus every day and argues the problem is the lack of busses – not the fact they’re slowed down by cars.

    (Emphasis mine)

    This may be the dumbest quote in the whole dumb article.

  • Personally I'd make an exception to my moral stance that work as punishment is slavery, and would prefer to keep him around forcing him to work 70 hours a week, in addition to doing all the other chores required so that he can live - in prison - for the rest of his life.

    Maybe we'll make it 84 hours a week just for good measure, can't be giving him a day off.

    Seems more poetic

  • idk

    Jump
  • Applying selection bias to the reply

    Insert inception bwwwwaoww

  • Ooooh, many thanks haha

  • This is the first useful example of fahrenheit I've ever heard.

    Doesn't really beat 0°C being freezing (great for weather), in my opinion, but still nice!

    Thanks

  • Care to explain?

    I thought you might mean -40°C = -40°F