• @[email protected]
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    4810 months ago

    Information not mentioned in this article:

    In Italy speeding fines are a fixed amount based on how far over the limit you’re going, which makes them a regressive tax on going fast - wealthy people can sinply afford to speed as much as they like while the poor suffer. That woman they quoted who clearly thought the cameras would meaningfully deter speeding was full of shit; the cameras are there to generate revenue, not reduce speeding.

    • @[email protected]
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      1410 months ago

      Just because some rich people can effectively ignore laws does not make fines for breaking those laws a tax. Not being financially able to ignore speed limits isn’t “suffering”.

    • @superbirra
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      610 months ago

      I love how ‘simply respect the speed limit’ is often not considered as an option :D

    • hannes3120
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      310 months ago

      They don’t have punishments like taking away the license (for a time) after a certain amount of fines?

      • @[email protected]
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        310 months ago

        For some reason you can also pay your way out of it: they take some points from your licence but you can buy them back from driving schools.

        • @superbirra
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          110 months ago

          you don’t ‘buy them back’, you attend a paid driving course and obtain some points

      • @lexiw
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        210 months ago

        They do. Driving licenses are a point based system, points are taken proportionately to the infraction, they are slowly added over time if no infraction happened in the time range, but there is a cap. Once they get to zero your driving license is suspended.