• @Showroom7561@lemmy.ca
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    710 months ago

    I believe it 100%.

    I started riding with a Garmin bike radar and installed an app that tells me exactly how fast a car is going when it passes, and the majority are over the speed limit.

    Just the other day, in a 60 km/h zone, I clocked two cars going 125 km/h.

    If I thought for a second that police would charge these drivers using photo/video evidence, I’d fork over the $500 to get the radar with a camera built-in and report each and every speeding driver that passes me.

    • @TDCN
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      1.48K10 months ago

      In Denmark we have the lovely new law that if you drive more than 100% over the speed limit and over 100 kmh or drive over 200 kmh at all or drunk driving with over 2‰ they confiscate the car and you are not getting it back at all. They confiscate the car regadles of who owns the car (with very few exceptions) and that is also if it is leased. So far since when the law started they have confiscated over 2000 cars in two years. It’s my favourite law of all laws right now. The fine for driving crazy is also nicely proportional to your income and it removes the car so the person cannot just drive without license afterwards.

      • @GBU_28@lemm.ee
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        410 months ago

        I can’t get behind property seizure without compensation, but I can understand everything else.

        Even if they said “you can’t have this car any more, but can sell it from our facility” that’d be better I think

        • @TDCN
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          2810 months ago

          Normally me neither, bit in this context where you are driving so recklessly you are endangering everyone else and we are talking over double the speed limit I’ll allow it. Noone has any rights left when you are doing that kind of stuff deliberately.

          • JB
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            110 months ago

            @TDCN @GBU_28 i’m genuinely missing how the state keeping the car versus giving it back to the leasing agency is a reasonable choice. Why does the owner of the car, if it is not the violator, get to get fucked by this?

            • @TDCN
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              2810 months ago

              As I wrote to someone else my reasoning is this. It puts the responsibility into the hands of the car owner. Just replace the word car with gun and it all sounds reasonable. If I just lend my gun to a friend who I only know very little or I have never seen hold a gun in his hand that would be very bad. Or if a company leases big guns that are super dangerous. Even if he has a license for guns. And if he shot someone or broke the law in other ways with the gun I’d only expect the gun to be confiscated regardless of who owns it.

            • IIVQ
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              110 months ago

              @jbsegal @TDCN @GBU_28 There are a lot of leasing agencies (small backalley operations) that exist for exactly this cause: leasing cars to speeders and criminals, so they don’t own anything that can be confiscated. This law will stop those businesses.
              Bona Fide leasing agencies will just have contract clauses with an employer as a warrantee against the cost of a car when someone drives reckless, or speed limiters installed.
              Why would anyone need a car that can do 100km/h over the speed limit?

                • RevK :verified_r:
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                  110 months ago

                  @GBU_28 @TDCN @jbsegal @antipode77 just to check. Are you saying it should be valid to impose legal penalty on innocent companies because they are not human? (That is before considering whether the owners and employees of companies that may suffer from a penalty have “human rights”).

                  • antipode77
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                    110 months ago

                    @revk @GBU_28 @TDCN @jbsegal

                    A company is not able to be guilty or innocent.

                    A company is a legal construct consisting of a group of humans taking decisions on behalf of a collective we call a company.

                    As such the decision makers are in the end guilty or innocent. Therefore they are the ones the law must hold accountable for what the company did or did not do.

                    When guilty these persons must go to prison or pay significant fines.
                    The company itself must be fined for the damage they did.

                • JB
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                  110 months ago

                  @antipode77 @revk @TDCN @GBU_28 Does the accused’s elderly parent, who doesn’t know what they get up to, but who needs the car for some reason or another have any? If, after due process it can be shown that they reasonably SHOULD’VE known? Ok, maybe. Before that? Nope.

                  • RevK :verified_r:
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                    110 months ago

                    @jbsegal @GBU_28 @antipode77 @TDCN I’m all for those who are guilty being punished, which may include a fine or losing some of their property, but it needs to be with due process and without impact on parties that are not guilty of a crime, IMHO.

              • JB
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                110 months ago

                @nortix @TDCN @GBU_28 forcing the owner to deal with the court system, and to be without a car for however long this takes seems extremely unfair to me. And potentially seriously damaging, if they rely on their car for something. Punish the fuck out of the perpetrator, but if it is not their car you don’t get to take it away from the person who owns it.

              • JB
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                110 months ago

                @jamesjm @TDCN @GBU_28 this presumes a: the perpetrator has compensation they can pay to the car owner, B: that the car owner can deal without the car, or without the compensation, for the length of time it takes to get the lawsuit processed and paid out. This is not fair to the owner. Punish the fuck out of the perpetrator, sure. Don’t fuck the car owner.

          • AGTMADCAT :verified:
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            110 months ago

            @TDCN @GBU_28 In a country like Denmark where it’s unlikely that having a car vs. not is the difference between living indoors and dying on the street I can see this working okay. I don’t think it would translate well to a country like the US where as well as killing the poor generally it would also be heavily exploited by the police to kill minorities.

            I hope in Denmark there’s a very high standard of evidence which the police have to present so they can’t just lie about the speeds they observe?

        • @threedaymonk@discuss.tchncs.de
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          510 months ago

          In effect, is it really that different to a fine? It seems to have a couple of advantages, though: it’s easier to collect, and it’s proportional, so a person who can afford a fancy luxury car pays more than someone in an old banger, without the complexity of having to evaluate their income and savings.

          • @TDCN
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            3110 months ago

            This is exactly the reason they are doing it. Proportional to income and the car is completely and physically removed from the road. There was a big issue here where the offender would just drive without license or the car was leased or borrowed so there was no real penalty. Now the leasing company would have to take responsibility for leasing fancy supercars to anyone and everyone and people lending their car to a known drunk or fast driver would definitely think twice.

            • Jeppe Øland
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              110 months ago

              @TDCN

              That part is all good. The problem is they don’t care whose car it is. If I was to borrow your car, and then break this law, then YOU are out a car. Yes, you can try and get the money back from me, but that might take a decade if I don’t have money to replace your car.
              If you ask me, that’s crazy.

              • @TDCN
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                1410 months ago

                Well I agree it might be a bit crazy, but I also must admit that I like the law because it works and it makes it such that I don’t want to lend my car out to anyone unless I know for sure how they drive by driving with them a few times. It puts the responsibility into the hands of the car owner. Just replace the word car with gun and it all sounds reasonable. If I just lend my gun to a friend who I only know very little or I have never seen hold a gun in his hand that would be very bad. Even if he has a license for guns. And if he shot someone or broke the law in other ways with the gun I’d only expect the gun to be confiscated regardless of who owns it.

                • Sheean Spoel
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                  110 months ago

                  @TDCN @joland here in the Netherlands the fine for a traffic violation is already up to the owner to sort out. They don’t give AF who drove the car. Your car. Your responsibility. Your problem.

                  • @TDCN
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                    210 months ago

                    I like that actually

                  • supernov
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                    10 months ago

                    @sheean @TDCN @joland Except it’s not proportional to one’s income. I lived in Denmark and I like how they do things quite a bit better.

                • Alfred M. Szmidt
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                  110 months ago

                  @TDCN @joland replacing car with gun or riffle makes it even more absurd. You saying that if I lend a riffle to someone on a hunt, I should bear the consequences for their actions if they miss and hit something? Thankfully the law in rest of Scandinavia isn’t as insane…

                  • @TDCN
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                    510 months ago

                    There’s a significant difference between an accident and deliberately being wrekless

              • NiceMicro
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                110 months ago

                @joland @TDCN yeah but if you borrow your car to someone they could also just total it in an accident and die, and in that case they also won’t be able to give it back to you and you definitely won’t get paid for the car.

                This is just one more reason to not borrow your car to people you don’t trust 100%.

              • Falcon
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                110 months ago

                @joland @TDCN I think it’s good. Don’t lend your car to friends that you know don’t respect the law

        • Jesse
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          210 months ago

          @GBU_28 @TDCN In Australia we have a law that lets the police make you watch while they crush your car.

        • rus
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          110 months ago

          @GBU_28 @TDCN this is basically an income adjusted fine for breaking the law in egregious ways. Are you also opposed to fines for other bad behavior?

          I also appreciate that it gets more people thinking about ways to move without a car. that is more doable in Denmark then in the US, but cars are dangerous, and if you put other at risk so casually I have little sympathy.

          • @TDCN
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            210 months ago

            It also makes people think twice before lending their car to any random friend

          • @GBU_28@lemm.ee
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            210 months ago

            For the sake of conversation, let’s consider some other owned object. I’m grasping here but say you had your computer seized for anti government speech. (I know, not the same as endangering people with a car).

            It wouldn’t be right to lose a multi thousand dollar device simply because the government willed it. Certainly not without compensation.

            • rus
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              010 months ago

              @GBU_28 skip any example that doesn’t routinely involve the single biggest cause of child death in the US. There is no reason for a person to be exceeding the speed limit by double. That’s just gambling with others life and limb.

              I think a multi-thousand dollar, income adjusted fine should be the minimum in that case.

              • @GBU_28@lemm.ee
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                10 months ago

                The point is I selected an example that had no relation to cars or driving, and no safety context.

                The point of the example was ownership, and dealings with the government.

                Critical thinking 101

                I made clear in earlier comments that I’m aware driving is a privilege and reckless driving is a serious crime

        • BrianKrebs
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          110 months ago

          @GBU_28 @TDCN I can get behind a law like this in the states. Too many drunk drivers who kill have had close calls before and were able to get back in their cars and do it over and over. Auction the car and any $ from that should be deemed a fine.

          • hwyaden
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            110 months ago

            @briankrebs @GBU_28 @TDCN We finally got rid of civil forfeiture. Thank goodness. It was such a corrupting incentive to police forces. It works on the first case, and then it is just abused by municipalities to line everyone’s pocket.

            • cd ~
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              110 months ago

              @hwyaden @briankrebs @GBU_28 @TDCN The rules are pretty clear in this case. I’m curious how it would be abused and how anyone’s pockets could be lined. Can you explain? Or were you talking more about the concept in general and not so much about the specific Danish scenario?

            • Björn Lindström
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              110 months ago

              @hwyaden @briankrebs @GBU_28 @TDCN in the Scandinavian countries (except for parking fines) go to the central government and are not dedicated to any special purposes, so there aren’t incentives like that.

              If there are any bad incentives involved it’s that police let “small” speeding infractions go with warnings, in order to seem relaxed and be more popular or something.

            • jnbhlr
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              110 months ago

              @hwyaden @briankrebs @GBU_28 @TDCN i guess it depends a lot on your baseline of corruption which I guess is fairly low in denmark. Even if some corruption happens, I’d rather have that than people killing other people.

          • jnbhlr
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            110 months ago

            @briankrebs @GBU_28 @TDCN in germany we had cases in front of the court where the truck driver killed f a second time and still got a punishment that was essentially telling him he didn’t do anything severly wrong.

          • @GBU_28@lemm.ee
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            110 months ago

            Where did I say consequences shouldn’t exist? Massive ones?

            You have the reading comprehension of a child

        • :thilo:
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          110 months ago

          @GBU_28 @TDCN Think of the car as a “dual use” item - i.e. you can use it as transport or to (potentially) get other people injured or killed.

          The law aims at the second (mis)use. Even though I’m a car-loving German I really second that part of the Danish law and I honestly wish we would have something similar.

        • Bernd Paysan ✅
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          110 months ago

          @GBU_28 @TDCN It is seizure of a dangerous means to commit a crime, it is punishment. And no, you shouldn’t have the money to buy yet another dangerous car.

        • @Crisps@lemmy.world
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          110 months ago

          As long as it then goes swiftly through the court system to confirm this. Otherwise it is theft, like US asset forfeiture.

          • @GBU_28@lemm.ee
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            110 months ago

            Sorry I won’t budge on property rights.

            Driving is a privilege, and the government can absolutely bar you from using public services (roads) but ownership is a serious thing to me

        • …might work for coffee…
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          110 months ago

          @GBU_28
          We often have the discussion whether it is an instrument for murder.
          So going insanely fast, often within city limits, is considered in comparison to planned homocide.

          So why should they hand out the potential weapon, just because you missed someone?

          Furthermore we have issues of companies renting out overly powerful cars, so some tourists can go crazy on our autobahn in a Ferrari.
          IMHO this business model is insane and this is a valid way to stop it.

          Would love this in De.

          @TDCN

        • Morten Grøftehauge
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          110 months ago

          @GBU_28 @TDCN It’s a fine imposed on the vehicle owner.
          Tbh, I think this was instituted after the “fines proportional with income” because drug dealers had fast cars but no official income and were among the most likely to drive extremely recklessly. And they don’t necessarily officially own their own car.

        • Joe
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          110 months ago

          @GBU_28 @TDCN, really??
          You happily can endanger other people’s lives but can’t have your means to do so taken away?
          Same for CEOs of companies going bankrupt: you can take away others livelihood by your decisions but nobody can touch your hording.
          That sounds like rich person’s privilege syndrome!

          • @GBU_28@lemm.ee
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            110 months ago

            My dude, I said take the car away! Fine them! Take the driving privileges! Just pay them for their property or allow them to sell it!

            Man you can’t hold more.thwn one thought at a time huh

        • William / HestenettetDK
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          110 months ago

          @GBU_28 play stupid games, win stupid prizes. Driving a car is not a right. Especially in Denmark where public transport is an perfectly viable alternative for most of the population.

          • @GBU_28@lemm.ee
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            10 months ago

            Totally agree, which I said in my comment.

            But owning property is owning it outright. You don’t own it at the whim of someone else.

            I in general do not agree with government seizure of property without compensation.

            I agree with losing your license, losing the privilege to drive and use public roads, etc.

                • @r000t@fosstodon.org
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                  010 months ago

                  @GBU_28
                  That really, *really* shouldn’t matter. One of the biggest problems around the world today are people checking for labels and group membership before considering otherwise valid points.

                  For what it’s worth, I’ve found this behavior exhibited by all groups.

                  • @GBU_28@lemm.ee
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                    110 months ago

                    I have no clue what you’re talking about,

                    I essentially said “I don’t understand the wording of your comment”

              • @GBU_28@lemm.ee
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                110 months ago

                I do, with compensation. Obviously I am not suggesting there isn’t incarceration happening

            • Joe
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              010 months ago

              @GBU_28 @JegVilleSeShitposts , all property is owned at the whim of someone else !
              The person that chooses to work for you, the customer that chooses to buy your goods, the person that chooses to sell their house, etc …
              You’re just a care taker for a short while and if you’re mistreating that privilege it should be able to be revoked!

              • @GBU_28@lemm.ee
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                110 months ago

                Wrong! You challenge bodily autonomy if you disrespect physical property.

                Do you disrespect a person’s bodily autonomy?

              • @GBU_28@lemm.ee
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                110 months ago

                Fines are fine. I understand at the end of the day they behave similarly. But the value of the car may not be the right amount for the fine, and the citizen may be able to get the best sale price for the car.

              • @GBU_28@lemm.ee
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                110 months ago

                So is police brutality.

                I’m allowed to have opinions not codified in existing standards

          • @GBU_28@lemm.ee
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            110 months ago

            Why are you @'ing everyone? You replied, we will see it.

            Leases are not ownership

        • @TDCN
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          110 months ago

          It is already super expensive for a normal speeding ticket so yes people are really careful. Still people speed everywhere it’s just only a little over

        • @TDCN
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          310 months ago

          Lol thank for letting me know. That’s definitely interesting. I ditched Reddit so don’t really care for karma farmers. They could at least have linked to my original post but it’s Reddit after all so what can you expect. Funny it gets reposted back to lemmy

      • Markus Eisele
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        210 months ago

        @TDCN I do admire the Danish pragmatism endlessly. One of my favorite countries. Thanks for sharing.

      • Adam
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        210 months ago

        @TDCN @Showroom7561 I’ll be honest I think it’s an an odd stance to take to say confiscation is wrong. The 100 kmh limit is about 60 mph, to be over 100% that means the limit is 30 mph. This limit is normally through a town, village or urban area. So if someone drives at 60 mph down the high street, that’s not just a “little bit of speeding”, that’s completely reckless

        • @TDCN
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          110 months ago

          Exactly

      • Michele
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        210 months ago

        @TDCN @Showroom7561 In my hometown its kind of a hobby to rent fancy sports cars for the weekend and this is as stupid as it sounds. I would love this law for Germany as well.

      • Lu, Magical Goth
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        110 months ago

        @TDCN in Brazil if you are driving with ANY level of alcohol (limit is ZERO) you are arrested, and in case of accident you are most likely the guilt part.

        • @TDCN
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          10 months ago

          Oh you be dead if you walk on a bike lane 😅☠️

      • mike805
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        10 months ago

        @TDCN @Showroom7561 So if it is leased, do they sell the car and pay off the lease? Or do you have to pay for insurance that covers the lease holder if this happens? I guarantee you the banks that finance leases are not just eating that.

        Here in the USA it is almost routine for the drunk who finally causes a fatal accident to have six DUIs, a .15 BAC, and a revoked license at the time of the mishap.

        • @TDCN
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          210 months ago

          Tbh I have no idea how it works in practice but I’d assume the leasing companies will just pass on the cost to the offender

          • elCelio 🇪🇺 🇺🇦
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            110 months ago

            @TDCN @mike805

            I think in the US, car leasing is more common than in Europe.

            it also looks like to me that it is more acceptable to put someone in jail for a prolonged period of time even for minor offenses, than to confiscate material stuff for similar offenses.

            • mike805
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              110 months ago

              @elCelio @TDCN This is true when it comes to car type violations. You can easily get yourself jailed for unpaid traffic tickets or street racing. It’s just about guaranteed for DUI - there are a lot of anti-DUI pressure groups. But you will still have the car when you get out and lots of people drive without a license. That gets you jailed too, but in large parts of the USA not having a license is basically house arrest anyway.

              Drug and money offenses get property seized. Especially cash.

      • Lawrence Walters
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        110 months ago

        @Showroom7561 @TDCN all the “but they need a car” people in the comments should also take a look at the amazing public transit options in Denmark and think about how that could make their life great (especially us USians)

        • @TDCN
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          210 months ago

          Also… Just drive the speed limit and noone takes your car away from you

      • James Evans
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        110 months ago

        @TDCN Solid plan. Property seizure as an outcome of breaking the law seems completely reasonable in these circumstances, in the same way other items used to commission crimes of violence would be confiscated.

      • Stahlbrandt
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        110 months ago

        @TDCN @Showroom7561 The law seems inspired by the Swiss. They have had proportional fines for long (e.g. I recall the wealthy Finn racing in CH in his sports car and had to pay a fortune). Car removal is probably common in CH as well.

          • Alex@rtnVFRmedia Suffolk UK
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            110 months ago

            @stahlbrandt @TDCN @Showroom7561

            UK has speeding fines partly proportional to income (albeit with maximum of about £1500 or £2000, so still not a deterrent to superrich) and strong penalties for DUI (min 12 months driving ban + fine and 11 years of higher insurance premiums), but vehicles are only confiscated (usually temporarily) for Section 59 offences which normally involve deliberate anti-social driving (doughnuts, drifting, making noise in public areas with illegal exhaust mods) >>

            • Alex@rtnVFRmedia Suffolk UK
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              110 months ago

              @stahlbrandt @TDCN @Showroom7561

              the problem with 20mph zones in some parts of UK is resources aren’t always put into enforcement; which requires either “boots on the ground” and/or cameras - both aren’t cheap and they are often in middle class residential areas where folk get paranoid about any CCTV camera; even if it is clearly there for traffic enforcement purposes…

                • Alex@rtnVFRmedia Suffolk UK
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                  110 months ago

                  @meijerjt @stahlbrandt @TDCN @Showroom7561

                  in many parts of England we do have speed reducing layouts (for both 20 and 30 mph roads) such as road narrowing with pedestrian refuges every few hundred metres, and most 20mph streets have parked cars either side.

                  Even so, there are still those sociopathic motorists who will flout the limits, some even see it as a “protest” similar to environment activists but from the other side. Maybe UK has more of these than other Northern European countries?

                • Alex@rtnVFRmedia Suffolk UK
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                  110 months ago

                  @mike805 @stahlbrandt @TDCN @Showroom7561

                  in England most of these areas are far from sudden, there are plenty of prominent speed limit signs. Also cops aren’t allowed to directly keep the revenue from speed camera fines, they go to a “road safety partnership” which is a mix of public sector organisations; and are reinvested in road safety measures. in a well designed 20mph (or 30mph) zone there are usually other physical traffic calming measures such as road narrowing, bollards etc

                  • bhtooefr
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                    110 months ago

                    @vfrmedia@social.tchncs.de @mike805@noc.social @stahlbrandt@infosec.exchange @TDCN@feddit.dk @Showroom7561@lemmy.ca yeah, speed traps are something very different from an area that should have a low speed limit.

                    so the classical form of speed trap in the US is a small town along a state or US route - not many people live there, there’s not much of an economy at all (the one nearest me doesn’t have any grocery store, even, you have to go a few miles to the next town over), but they have a well-staffed police department, and they may or may not have decent public services for the few people and businesses that are there. this is because the police department’s job is to bring money into the town, from traffic offenses. they don’t keep all of it, but because they, not the tax department, are the primary revenue source for the town, they get what they want. to maximize revenue, they have to induce offenses.

                    usually this means a couple strategies: speed limit reductions that are more severe than expected or in places that they’re not expected, and trying to hide the speed limit signs (behind overgrown tree branches is a common strategy). in my state, the typical way you enter a municipality is, you reduce from the 55 MPH speed limit that most 2-lane rural roads use, to 35 MPH at the municipal limits which typically coincide with where things get built up, and 25 MPH in downtown or on residential side streets. a common speed trap pattern is to have the village limits far away from where things get built up, and drop the speed limit to 25 MPH at the limits (or, more insidiously, post 55 MPH at the village limit sign which overrides the 35 MPH default within municipal limits, then drop it to 25 a bit later. bonus points if the 25 MPH sign is hidden. and you know there’s a cop hiding right after that.)

                    there was actually an extreme case of that in my state where a speed trap town’s entire government was one family that also ran the police department and the village traffic court, and the police department was doing classic bastard shit like pulling people over, smashing their tail light with a baton, and then ticketing them for the tail light being broken. they were also doing shit like calling in false police chases to the highway patrol, and it actually got to the point where the highway patrol publicly said they wouldn’t continue any chases that this village’s police started, as long as you were down to the speed limit by the time you got out of village limits. IIRC the state ended up passing laws to make that village illegal, and then dissolved it.

        • seemaedel
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          110 months ago

          @EikeLeidgens @TDCN @Showroom7561 I also doubt that the part of the law that allows the car to be confiscated if the owner wasn’t the driver would survive a trial at the Bundesverfassungsgericht. I understand why they are doing it that way in Denmark but think it goes over the top. Someone who isn’t guilty shouldn’t be punished.

      • Timo Würsch
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        110 months ago

        @TDCN Sounds interesting. Does the law work - in the sense that it deters people from driving recklessly, or is it too early to tell?

        • @TDCN
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          110 months ago

          I just tried looking uh up and it’s still too early to say. Of course the car lobby ar criticising the law and asking why they are not year concluding anything yet but to be fair it has just been covid and 2 years is just so short to see any impact to the statistics. In my own opinion I think it must work. It’s a specific type of people who drive wreklessly and often in groups of “cool guys”. If you start to remove cars from those groups they will be more hesitant to lend each other cars. If they get impacted the story will carry more impact than a massive fine. A car is very a physical object and is more visible than a debt. If a dad find his son drove wreklessly and got the car confiscated it wil be a stronger lesson for both the father and the son. I can be unfair but we have tried fines for so long and it has not worked. We already have the some of the biggest fines for traffic violations in the world.

      • Adrian
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        110 months ago

        @TDCN @Showroom7561 do you know why they put the 100kmh limit on? Driving double the limit in an urban area is more likely to kill someone than a deserted rural road.

        • @TDCN
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          110 months ago

          If you have a 20kmh zone it sounds unreasonable to get your car taken if you drive only 40 kmh. 40 is still quite slow

          • Jesse
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            110 months ago

            @TDCN @acs 5 out of 5 pedestrians will survive a collision with a car traveling at 20km/hr, only 4 out of 5 will survive a collision with a car traveling at 40km/h.
            This doesn’t include the large difference in level of injury.

            So by speeding your taking a situation where nobody should die and making it a situation where someone might.

            A 20km/h area is an area where there will be lots of people to hit so it’s even more important to stick to the speed limit in that situation

            • @TDCN
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              110 months ago

              You still get a massive fine of 1200 kr (175usd) in this case at 20kmh and at only 30% above you get a “cut in your license” (like a yellow card in football). 3 of those “cuts” and you have to get a new licens. 60% above the limit they outright take your licens and the fine goes up. If the speed limit is reduced due to road work the fine is doubled. And many more rules. If you are a student or pensioner you fine gets halfed for instance. Besides the fine if you go at 60% or above you also need to pay 500kr or more to a “victims” fond that raises money for the victims of traffic accidents.

            • Adrian
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              110 months ago

              @jessta @TDCN 20kph is also the extreme end of the scale. The figures get even worse if you are going at 80 in a 40 zone, only 1 person in 4 will survive that.

              • Jesse
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                110 months ago

                @acs @TDCN Ideally it shouldn’t be possible to actually go 80km/h in a 40km/hr area, at least not without immediately crashing your car.

      • oo
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        110 months ago

        @TDCN @Showroom7561 Perfect timing, netherlands is planning a law to ban cash transaction over 3000 so you both just meet in germany and voila cheap cars for the cartells and you have regular traffic laws, so people stay in denmark.

      • Dustin D. Wind
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        110 months ago

        @TDCN @Showroom7561 Rich person drives 240kmh drunk out of their mind, loses expensive car, gets another the next day because it’s still just pocket change to them.

        Boyfriend “borrows” the old-but-working car of his abused girlfriend who’s barely making it paycheck to paycheck, drives 110kph, her car gets seized and she now has no hope of escape.

        An extreme comparison? Yes. But it illustrates that nice simple one-size-fits-all laws often have abhorrent results.

        • @TDCN
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          110 months ago

          There are exemptions in the law for this exact matter. It states of the punishment is unreasonably hard on the owner they can get it back

          • Dustin D. Wind
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            110 months ago

            @TDCN I envy you for having reason to believe that’s how things actually work most of the time. Here in the United Empire of Profit not nearly so many people believe that any more, because (as with “if you’re innocent and can’t afford a lawyer you’ll get equal justice from a public defender”) there are so many counter-examples to demonstrate that’s not how things actually work in practice.

        • @TDCN
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          110 months ago

          I forgot to also add that they obviously don’t just take the car from the owner as the only thing with this kind of offence (obviously, otherwise it’ll be a dumb law). On top there’s a huge fine for the driver and they take your lisence and you are banned from driving for X amount of years. You have to pay for a completely new drivers license which is really expensive but mire importantly really time-consuming in Denmark we are talking weeks of training and mandatory tests, first aid exam and hours of theory and practical lessons. There are payments to a fond that raises money for traffic victims and possibly jail time if you drove exceptionally wreklessly or drunk. Even if you are rich this is not just “pocket money” there’s more context than you think.

      • Nick Lockwood
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        110 months ago

        @TDCN @Showroom7561 like most fines, this just makes it legal for rich folk and potentially life-destroying for poor folk.

        If this happens to a taxi driver, they might end up homeless. If it happens to a rich playboy they’ll just go buy a new car and carry on speeding.

        • @TDCN
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          110 months ago

          The taxi driver could also… Just hear me out… Drive the speed limit and not drive like a maniac. Then he’s fine and noone takes his car.

          • Nick Lockwood
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            110 months ago

            @TDCN sure, unless it was the car owner’s friend, or kid, or crack addict neighbour who took their car and then committed the crime.

            Regardless, the issue is not whether crimes should be punished, but whether it makes sense to have punishments that only affect the poor.

            • @TDCN
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              10 months ago

              Just don’t lend the car out to anyone you don’t fully trust. Take responsibility of your vehicle and make it clear to the borrower that he/she should drive properly regardles of that being your mom or your best friend. If the car is taken without your consent it’s theft and grounds for the exceptions in the law so you get it back.

              • Nick Lockwood
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                110 months ago

                @TDCN again, why is personal responsibility only for poor people? That’s the key point but you keep glossing over it.

                • @TDCN
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                  110 months ago

                  Okay hers the thing. It’s naive to think that it’s just “nothing” for rich people. You have to take the rest of the law into consideration. They obviously don’t just take the car from the owner as the only thing with this kind of extream offence (obviously, otherwise it’ll be a dumb law). On top there’s a huge (and I mean huge) fine for the driver and they take your lisence and you are completely banned from driving for X amount of years. After the ban you have to pay for a completely new drivers license which is really expensive but more importantly really time-consuming in Denmark. We are talking weeks of training and mandatory tests, first aid exam and hours of theory and practical lessons. There are payments to a fond that raises money for traffic victims and for multiple offenses or if you drove exceptionally wreklessly there’s possibly jail time. Even if you are rich this is not just “pocket money” there’s more context than you think.

            • Jesse
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              110 months ago

              @nicklockwood @TDCN @Showroom7561 no, it’s just politically impossible to mandate speed limiters. Governments tried 50yrs ago and haven’t tried again since. Car manufacturers want people to know they can speed. It’s all over their marketing.

              • Nick Lockwood
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                110 months ago

                @jessta @TDCN @Showroom7561 if they really wanted to they could use the traffic camera network that already tracks numbers plates to do average speed checks on every car and issue fines automatically. I suspect they don’t because then traffic would grind to a halt.

                • @TDCN
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                  110 months ago

                  Why would it grind to a haltm I see no reason for this. People just need to drive the speed limit. In Norway for example they have cameras at the begining of long stretches of highway and a camera at the end and if your average speed is higher than allowed it automatically sends you a fine. Those stretches of road are soooo nice to drive because everyone are driving the same speed and it’s so smooth

      • @PadreWil@mastodon.sdf.org
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        110 months ago

        @TDCN @Showroom7561 We have to do something in Amer. about this terrible problem. The laws we have now are pretty tough, but these morons who like to drink and drive just AREN’T getting it. Think Denmark is too tough ? Ask the families of the dead victims that have been murdered by drunk drivers !! This crap has got to stop !!

      • Narayoni
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        110 months ago

        @TDCN @Showroom7561 wow this is incredible! Now definitely this becomes one of my favourite laws too, while admittedly I never considered I could have any such favourite list.

        • @TDCN
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          210 months ago

          I do t agree on the crushing aspect of this law. It’s environmental iresponsibil and stupid. Just sell/auktion the car and spend the money on making better traffic safety

      • wink
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        110 months ago

        @TDCN But naively, isn’t this also some sort of “never let a friend borrow your car”? Wouldn’t that encourage middle-class people who don’t own a car because they can sometimes borrow one to just buy one now? I suppose this is a miniscule percentage, but still. (Disclaimer: Am German, currently I have no car of my own, and averaged like 1 speeding ticket per 7 years of driving)

        • @TDCN
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          110 months ago

          Maybe it will, but good second hand cars are not that difficult to get hold of. But people still lend eachother their cars, but I guess in suirtain groups of people where driving super fast is “cool” they’ll be more hesitant which is good because then the law is working

          • wink
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            110 months ago

            @TDCN Yeah don’t get me wrong, I think it will probably a net positive and I definitely would wish for harsher penalties here… but I can simply imagine a lot of “false positives” that could end catastrophically.

            E.g. basically everyone here has a story where at a construction site on a highway/country road the signage was horrible and they breezed through the temporary 30/50 zone with the normal 100/120, just because there are no real rules. You can have a limit to any arbitrary number on the unlimited stretches of the highway, so there’s no “oh, construction zone, this must be 50 now”, no it could be any of: 100,80,70,60,50,40,30.

            • @TDCN
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              110 months ago

              Signage is suuuuper well here so no excuses at all for this sorry. And if you can prove the signs are wrong I guess you can take it up in court.

      • Seb
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        110 months ago

        @TDCN @chris That explains the insane amount of bicycles in Copenhagen?! 🙏🏼🙌🏼 Indeed a creative law.

      • Sven Geggus
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        110 months ago

        @TDCN @Showroom7561 What would happen to Carsharing Organisations? Forcing them to drop these customers would be fine but confiscating their cars would be a very bad idea IMO.

            • FanCityKnits 🇺🇦🧶
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              110 months ago

              @jnfingerle @giggls @TDCN @Showroom7561

              It’s the same if I’d total the car driving drunk or similar behaviors. They have comprehensive insurance but that doesn’t cover reckless behavior so the risk is there already that they need to recover money from their members.

              It’s a huge co-op - 30.000 drivers, 1.600 cars, close to 30 years experience. They can probably calculate the risks accordingly.

              • Jan Niklas Fingerle
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                110 months ago

                @FanCityKnits
                This may be true for this co-op, but not for smaller ones. And I’m pretty sure that they can have insurance that compensates reckless behaviour by a third party and then tries to recover the cost there.

                Anyway, I still see a big difference if the cost comes from direct action of the member or from the government inflicting costs to a non-perpetrator. Fascist policies seem to be en vogue.
                @giggls @TDCN @Showroom7561

                  • Jan Niklas Fingerle
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                    110 months ago

                    @FanCityKnits
                    This isn’t true, and you know it.

                    “If you get drunk and drive we’ll kill your firstborn. No it wasn’t the government who killed the child, it was your action.” That’s *structurally* the same, and it is wrong.

                    And yes, reckless behaviour as in criminally risking the live of others should have severe consequences. But not for some co-op, the employer, other family members, friends, and so on. Collective punishment is a fascist idea, full stop.
                    @giggls @TDCN @Showroom7561

        • @TDCN
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          110 months ago

          You got it.

      • Kevin Karhan :verified:
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        110 months ago

        @TDCN @Showroom7561 Personally, I think banning.someone from driving hurts them harder than loosing a vehicle, as one can’t just get a new driving license - the loophole that allowed one to just make a new license in another EU member state has been closed for those barred from (re)issue of a license.

        • @TDCN
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          210 months ago

          Trust me they are still banned from driving for a year or more if this law triggeres

          • Kevin Karhan :verified:
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            10 months ago

            @TDCN that’s quite low.

            People speeding 100% over limit usually get barred for life from attaining any permit unless they get medically certified to be able to drive.

            And even then they’d likely not face charges for speeding alone but literally charges for attempted homicide by gross neglect and recklessness.

            I mean if one’s driving like 100km/h on regular city roads they don’t just loose their license but face serious jailtime.

            And I think that’s more than justified.

            • @TDCN
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              210 months ago

              I said “or more” because I don’t know the details. Depending on what you did you can get banned for much longer or even face jail time if it’s very severe. It’s individual and depends on the offence

            • Kevin Karhan :verified:
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              110 months ago

              @TDCN Like there’s difference between “driving fast” and "being an antisocial asshole and seemingly wanting to commit vehicular assault against any random person that happens to be at the wrong place at the wrong time.

      • Paris Lord
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        110 months ago

        @TDCN @Showroom7561 This sounds terrific. Do you have a link to that law please. (In Danish is fine). I want to use it as an example for discussion leading up to my city’s elections next year. It will upset the many car brains who run my city. 😀

        • @TDCN
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          110 months ago

          It’s not a single law to say but changes to the existing law so the actual writing is spread out over a few paragraphs. Here’s a link for the entire traffic law LINK Start at §119 about confiscation and §133 about offences that causes you to loose your licens. The details can be a bit difficult to sift out. It’s law stuff I guess.

        • @TDCN
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          110 months ago

          I don’t understand what you mean, of course they work and then if its high they verify with a blod sample to verify and to give you the benefit of the doubt

          • Nora Reed
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            110 months ago

            @TDCN oh i’m just from a country that uses breathalizers as evidence on their own and they don’t actually work

            • @TDCN
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              110 months ago

              Damn that’s shity… I feel sorry for you.

      • Francesco Buscemi
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        110 months ago

        @TDCN @Showroom7561 it’s very nice as an idea, but I doubt it’s constitutional, I fear that a good lawyer would be able to get back your car. You would need the money to hire a good lawyer though.

        • @TDCN
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          110 months ago

          Nope, doesn’t work like that here. We don’t have constitutions the way you do on the US. Many cases have been tried in court and the offender lost in many cases

      • Benton Greene
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        110 months ago

        @TDCN @Showroom7561 I really like this law in principle, but without *free* rehab, or really any other drug recovery assistance, and without a good social safety net, it does inordinately punish poor people. Yes, if the person is a rich asshole, 300% take *all* their cars. But sometimes the person is poor and using alcohol to just feel less shitty about their life and need the car to be able to have a job. Not that that’s good, but it *is* a reason to not take their car…

          • Benton Greene
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            110 months ago

            @kytkosaurus @TDCN @Showroom7561 and in Denmark, this is an excellent law! In the US, it absolutely isn’t. But people see it working (I assume?) in Denmark and think “yeah,we should do that here!” and don’t think about the disparate consequences for poor people in places where a car isn’t just a commodity but a prerequisite for living on par with (and arguably more so) a house or apartment that often people can’t afford to replace once lost.

            • Kytkosaurus
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              110 months ago

              @neonregent @TDCN @Showroom7561 True. Although any place, where it is necessary to own a car to get work is in deep problems and should immediately think about how it got into this stupid situation and how to get from it as quickly as possible.

              It will make them much more livable and bring an important part of freedom to their citizens.

        • David
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          210 months ago

          @Z_Zed_Zed @TDCN @Showroom7561 2‰ = 0.2%. The per-thousand sign isn’t used often in informal English, but if someone took the effort to select the character, they probably meant it. 🙂

          • @TDCN
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            210 months ago

            Exactly. In Danish we exclusively use promill (per thousands) for blood alcohol level so it’s a habit for me to use ‰ or more commonly the written form promille

      • immibis
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        110 months ago

        @TDCN @Showroom7561 I assume they keep the car, so they get to steal innocent people’s cars (belonging to people who committed no crimes) and keep them for profit.

      • standev
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        110 months ago

        @TDCN in a lot of US jurisdictions those would lead to arrest. Hazardous driving of that magnitude is almost unheard of.

      • AlexanderMars
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        110 months ago

        @TDCN @Showroom7561 unfortunately, police in the US have a great deal of leeway in how and when they enforce laws like this. I’m sure some wealthy individuals would get punished, but as is often the case over here, non-whites would probably be disproportionately represented as they already are with civil forfeitures. Conversely, I am all for the drivers of White BMW/AUDI SUVs having their cars seized and crushed, you know who you are.

        • @TDCN
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          210 months ago

          That’s probably the exceptions I mentioned. I’m no expert, bit of be unreasonable to the owner if the car was stolen.

        • @TDCN
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          110 months ago

          It’s still confiscate. The law is pretty clear that it pretty much doesn’t matter who owns the car.

            • Kelvin n0mql EN35ld
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              110 months ago

              @floris @TDCN @atlefren

              They’re thinking they’re better than the rest of us - that the rest of us do not matter.

              They think they’re royalty. Ordained by god to suffer no consequences for putting others at literally grave risk.

              It is immoral for anyone - ANYONE - to hoard enough wealth to afford a multi-million-dollar/euro car.

              So fuck 'em. Take their toy, sell it, & use the money to feed & house people fleeing poverty & oppression.

            • @TDCN
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              210 months ago

              The law works because if he was just slapped with a fine that’s just like saying "yes you can drive like a maniac as long as you just pay and he can clearly afford it. This way he’s stopped properly and will probably never be speeding again in dk

        • sabik
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          110 months ago

          @melissabeartrix @TDCN @Showroom7561
          Counterpoint: some roads switch between 70km/h or 80km/h and 40km/h based on time of day; so you’re on a road engineered for 70-80km/h, there are no children anywhere because school won’t be out for another half an hour, but it’s already 75% or 100% over the speed limit if you mistake the time

        • @TDCN
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          2110 months ago

          In a good way yes.

      • clay shentrup 🌐🚲
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        10 months ago

        @TDCN @Showroom7561 it obviously shouldn’t be proportional to your income, it should be set to the actual negative externality cost. this is a failure to understand basic economics. If we can save more statistical lives with the money from the tax then the statistical expected loss, then we want these people speeding and paying for it.

    • Advanced Persistent Teapot
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      110 months ago

      @Showroom7561 @mondoman712 the UK also has new amendments to the highway code about safe passing distances for bikes, horses, etc; my brother has front and rear cameras for his bike and the police are actually following up on his reports of drivers passing dangerously close, even at lower speeds. Sometimes things do change for the better

      • @Showroom7561@lemmy.ca
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        110 months ago

        Yes, I recall someone in the UK posting videos of dangerous drivers and the follow up by police. Many of the consequences are light for the behaviors witnessed, but it’s better than nothing.

      • @Showroom7561@lemmy.ca
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        110 months ago

        The radar tells me when cars are approaching from behind and how far. It’s been a massive gamechanger for safety by enhancing my spacial awareness.

        There’s an app for my bike computer that also captures speed and car counts using the radar.

        I would imagine that aggregating this data from thousands of users could help cities to plan better cycling infrastructure and build traffic speed/flow mechanisms to enhance cyclist safety.