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-8 points

That sounds good in theory but that only hurts the middle class disproportionately. Not to mention it violates the constitution.

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7 points

Maybe there’s some precedent, but I can’t see why equally proportionate punishment should be unconstitutional.

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-8 points

Proportionate to what? Net worth? Income? If you actually think it through you are not targeting the rich by doing this. You are targeting small businesses and middle class families.

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8 points

You could curve the proportion to income to scale impact to something more equitable. How you decide what’s equitable would be another problem to solve, but I imagine it would involve benchmarking around the middle class and poverty line. Right now fine rates are okay for the middle class, so keep the proportion similar, fine rates really fuck up poor people, and fine rates mean nothing to the upper class. So imagine you you feel would be a fair impact for a fine and scale it accordingly.

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5 points

So you don’t think progressive taxation is possible?

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1 point

Not to mention it violates the constitution

Almost as if relying entirely on an aged document written by the rich to set laws for the modern rich doesn’t work 🤔

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1 point

Say what you want about it but that price of paper is the o my reason you aren’t British.

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3 points
*

No, it isn’t. The Articles of Confederation are what we had first before deciding it had too many flaws and ditching it for the new constitution in 1789. (Note: this is 6 years after the Revolutionary War ended, and 14 years after it started.)

There’s no reason we can’t or shouldn’t do the same again now. The original writers clearly weren’t shy about pointing out the flaws, and anyone else defending the current constitution as if it shouldn’t be torn to shreds is not following what the founders wanted for us.

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2 points

You’re assuming the fines will be scaled up to hurt everyone as much as they hurt broke people. They should be benchmarked against somewhere in the middle class, scaled down for poorer people and up for richer.

Fines should be punishing but not devastating. At least not for speeding.

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-1 points

Again in theory it sounds great. However you can not realistically put something like this on paper because a good lawyer would tear it apart.

Inal but I can think of several reason and scenarios why this wouldn’t be fair. There are way too many situations that people deal with that affect their income and saying if you make X amount of money you must pay more for no reason other than you are successful is discrimination.

Many young people don’t understand this but when there are rules in place, they need to apply equally to everyone, even the ultra wealthy. The fact that they aren’t isn’t a problem with the law, it is a problem with our police and public officials. Take it up with them instead of fixing something that isn’t broken. If it isn’t being done correctly now, what makes you think putting higher fines on rich people is gonna fix it?

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1 point

“Being rich” isn’t a protected class. That’s not discrimination lol lol. We already structure taxes like this lawfully.

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