• Dustin D. Wind@mastodon.cloud
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    1 year 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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      1 year 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@mastodon.cloud
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        1 year 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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      1 year 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.