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Submission + - $56,000 Speeding Ticket Issued Under Finland's System of Fines Based on Income

HughPickens.com writes: Joe Pinsker writes at The Atlantic that Finish businessman Reima Kuisla was recently caught going 65 miles per hour in a 50 zone in his home country and ended up paying a fine of $56,000. The fine was so extreme because in Finland, some traffic fines, as well as fines for shoplifting and violating securities-exchange laws, are assessed based on earnings—and Kuisla's declared income was €6.5 million per year. Several years ago another executive was fined the equivalent of $103,000 for going 45 in a 30 zone on his motorcycle. Finland’s system for calculating fines is relatively simple: It starts with an estimate of the amount of spending money a Finn has for one day, and then divides that by two—the resulting number is considered a reasonable amount of spending money to deprive the offender of. Then, based on the severity of the crime, the system has rules for how many days the offender must go without that money. Going about 15 mph over the speed limit gets you a multiplier of 12 days, and going 25 mph over carries a 22-day multiplier. Sweden, Denmark, Germany, Austria, France, and Switzerland also have some sliding-scale fines, or “day-fines,” in place, but in America, flat-rate fines are the norm. Since the late 80s, when day-fines were first seriously tested in the U.S., they have remained unusual and even exotic.

Should such a system be used in the United States? After all, wealthier people have been shown to drive more recklessly than those who make less money. For example Steve Jobs was known to park in handicapped spots and drive around without license plates. But more importantly, day-fines could introduce some fairness to a legal system that many have convincingly shown to be biased against the poor. Last week, the Department of Justice released a comprehensive report on how fines have been doled out in Ferguson, Missouri. "Ferguson’s law enforcement practices are shaped by the City’s focus on revenue rather than by public safety needs," it concluded. The first day-fine ever in the U.S. was given in 1988, and about 70 percent of Staten Island’s fines in the following year were day-fines. A similar program was started in Milwaukee, and a few other cities implemented the day-fine idea and according to Judith Greene, who founded Justice Strategies, a nonprofit research organization, all of these initiatives were effective in making the justice system fairer for poor people. “When considering a proportion of their income,people are at least constantly risk-averse. This means that the worst that would happen is that the deterrent effect of fines would be the same across wealth or income levels,” says Casey Mulligan. "We should start small—say, only speeding tickets—and see what happens."

Comment Re:Please stop. Just stop (Score 1) 1081

one innocent put to death is too many

"If it could save just one child", "Spare one innocent", or "Every life is meaningful"...

At some point, on a World with seven billion souls, it really just becomes a point of where exactly you prioritize the human lives. For whatever reason, lives taken unfairly in Western nations in the pursuit of justice are the epitome of travesty... yet it is important that we recognize crime and punishment must be dealt with the only way we humans can do anything: imperfectly.

Meanwhile, back in Western Africa, the ebola plague just took its 10,000th victim.

Submission + - France blocks Belgian euro coin marking Battle of Waterloo 2

hcs_$reboot writes: A COIN is threatening to inflame tensions in Europe.. Belgium hit out at France on Thursday after Paris forced it to scrap a new two-euro coin celebrating the 200th anniversary of the defeat of Napoleon at the Battle of Waterloo. Belgium decided to produce a coin marking the 200th anniversary of the Battle of Waterloo, where Napoleon was defeated by the British and the Prussians, featuring an image of the monument at the site. But Paris objected, saying that there would be an “unfavourable reaction in France” and that "the Battle of Waterloo has a particular resonance in the collective consciousness that goes beyond a simple military conflict".

Comment Re:I can't find the commercial speech section (Score 1) 239

That commercial corporations are people has been established in the protection of the least helpless among us...

I altruistically believe this protection ought to extend to the non-recipient of youtube's ad dollars, but then I'm a giver.

A multi-faceted amendment if there ever was one, AFAIC, the 1st gave us a right that was nearly as important as the freedom of speech, religion, and press: the separation of church and state.

Comment Depressed, you say. (Score 2) 123

The only way to avoid technical surveillance is to keep everything sensitive away from email or phone calls or instant messages. There is no way to avoid being the target of the NSA and CIA if they really want to get your data. None at all. The NSA and CIA are creating these techniques against countries such as Russia, China, and Iran with devastating success. (Look at the Iranian nuclear weapons program getting hacked by Stuxnet.) You have no way to avoid the hacking of your data if they are really set in doing it.

Pretty much this. Ergo, if you are intent on inviolable secrecy, you wouldn't be posting on ye olde green line site... nor any other. Who then, is willing to give up the internet and the freedom of speech to ensure no measure of antiestablishmentarianism viewpoint is uttered and recorded?

That I can still post my POV freely from the south side of somewhere without being erased by a midnight death squad is proof enough that the battle for your freedoms is not yet lost.

Vote for candidates, serve on juries, impress the importance of participation on your sports-distracted friends... do what can as one of the minority who can still afford to pay attention

Comment Re:LAPD Police? (Score 3, Insightful) 160

Is the LAPD so bad that they need a police force that exists just to keep them in line?

There is some historical evidence to corroborate your theory.

Of course, it could be the LAPD needs to justify the huge expense of patrolling from Ghetto Birds instead of ground-based black-and-whites, and they're not at all bothered by the statistical insignificance of the small sample trotted out here as causation.

Comment Re:Rock and Roll wouldn't EXIST without "stealing" (Score 5, Insightful) 386

The real thefts are conducted under the venerable eye of a litigious legal system gone mad for undeserved plaintiff judgements and the attorney's 30% cut.

The right to sue to wrong a grievance or unsafe condition is a foundation of free Western society, often allowing the little guy to challenge a behemoth.

Unfortunately, not unlike many grand and beneficial social systems, it is ripe for abuse by the unscrupulous.

Comment Re:Why is this a surprise? (Score 1) 156

Very few things are "worth" what they cost. I mean, sure, on one level things are worth exactly what they cost. But on another level there's the cost of the raw materials and the labour required to assemble them, and the factory and its running costs etc. Do you include marketing? Shipping? R&D which is required up front but not to manufacture. A $600 smartphone costs $100 or so to build, and less after a while. What's it worth - $100 or $600?

Very few things are worth what they cost...aside from the value-added things you mention, profit enters the mix as a reasonable consideration a company must account for if remaining in business is part of the mission statement.

Apple's products are Veblen goods of the most coveted sort: profitable and popular.

Things are always and only worth what you can get for them.

Comment Re:1st Amendment (Score 1) 449

That would be one interpretation of the Constitution.

Another, favored by those in the lawmaking business, believes the right to bear those arms comes with some red tape: serial numbers and background checks.

It's like a Baptist Preacher and a Catholic Priest arguing over the same biblical text.

Comment Re:It was secure, alright (Score 3, Insightful) 609

This, to me, is precisely the point.

Whatever else Hillary Clinton is, she is quite adept at the art of being in government.

Since this system was designed for her husband, she was aware of its advantages (and disadvantages). It was not used instead of the official gov't email on a whim. It just smacks of entitlement....... Maybe you don't know who I think I am!

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