EAllusion wrote:subgenius wrote:huh? taxes and fines are 2 different animals, it is erroneous to try an draw a parallel.
The principle is equality of financial impact.
which is not a principle in your tax example...a rich guy pays the same sales tax as a poor guy when buying beer at the 7-11.
EAllusion wrote: Saying not having a flat fee everyone pays the same creates inequality is analogous to saying that not having a flat tax amount creates inequality. Yes, but not in a sense that we ought to care about is the position you are disagreeing with. If you think there is a distinction here, you aren't articulating it. Why should a equality of the absolute number matter more than equality of financial impact?
because "equality of financial impact" is not a tangible concept nor is it a reasonable basis for law enforcement policy. That is why a crime that is punishable with 30 days in jail basically applies to everyone regardless of how many days they have lived or have left to live (please, spare me any anecdotal argument for the exception, we are talking about the rule).
EAllusion wrote: There's a social recompense argument to fines you aren't mentioning, presumably because it hasn't come to you, but fines are generally untethered from that and are instead just punishments meant to modify behavior.
now you sound like a nationalist.
EAllusion wrote:Perhaps one can make the argument that a penalty should be economically feasible, either by total cost or payment plan - but most fines exist to deter the crime, and to that end we must dismiss the "burdensome" argument with regards to poorer offenders. In other words, that circumstance is not under discussion, but rather how do we impose the same burden on a wealthier offender.
You now seem to be engaged in a different position than what was earlier taken, whereas (as the OP suggests) one is imposing on the poor.
The prorating of fines likely would both reduce the burden on the poor and increase the burden on the wealthy. That's because fine amounts are keyed into what's affordable to the middle class and if we kept the same sense of penalty, a scale would likely have that effect.
But prorating does not resolve the issue, it simply relocates the "grey" area. Additionally it serves to diminish the concept of equality under the law with regards to criminal justice.
EAllusion wrote:You can make your prorating scale as harsh or soft as you'd like, though. But then you'd have to explain why littering or having weeds in one's lawn is something that should financially destroy a person. I suspect that if people making 75k a year would have to pay $2500 a day for having an unkempt yard, the severity of the penalty, or its existence at all, might change real fast.
But do we see these people consistently keeping unkempt yards? - nope.
If you issue is that some crimes are more burdensome for the poor than other crimes then make your case, but a sliding (a.k.a. arbitrary) scale does not alleviate that issue. Either your position is that no crime should financially destroy a person; or that some crimes should financially destroy some people; or it is some convoluted and subjective feeling that you currently have conceived for whatever crime floats across your horizon.
EAllusion wrote: There is no evidence that crime is more affordable for any class of person.
Don't architects have to take math classes?
Yep we sure do...but again, you still have no given evidence to support you wholesale revision.
https://nypost.com/2017/09/05/george-co ... architect/point being, just because someone is making $175k a year does not conclude with them being able to afford a $500 fine at any given time...that person may have financial circumstances that make such a fine burdensome - and this is not a unique or outlandish scenario.
So, yeah...don't do the crime if you can't do the time.