Original link

Every police chase is a danger to innocent people’s lives. Some chases are necessary, but a broken taillight is not worth that risk.

  • @[email protected]
    cake
    link
    fedilink
    English
    96 months ago

    The benefit to society for most traffic tickets is negligible at best. Let it go…

    This is an extremely naive view. While the cops enforcing the law are almost always corrupt and do it in a corrupt way

    The “benefit is negligible” is a mistake. The fact is driving around without brake lights IS a problem, driving without a seatbelt IS a problem, speeding IS a problem. That is why these laws came about in the first place. The facts and statistics are very clear about the increased accidents.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      16 months ago

      You appear to be assuming that I’m suggesting citations be done away with entirely…

      I’m suggesting that a citation doesn’t warrant a pursuit.

      I’ll go a little further and say that a “no pursuit” policy isn’t appropriate either (and that sounds contradictory I’m sure, but if you publish it as a policy it becomes an incentive, not good), but a pursuit over a citation is negating, in a huge manner, the safety those citations provide…

      Someone fleeing the police is a ridiculously more dangerous condition than an occasional citation getting skipped… how many people flee? 1%? I doubt it’s even that… The statistical deterrence isn’t affected by that, and arguably, the citation won’t have a statistical impact on that fringe group anyway. The reduction in accidents happens in the 99% that pull over and simply pay the fines.

    • Doug HollandOP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      06 months ago

      The facts and statistics would be, I’d guess, exponentially more clear about the increased accidents from police chases.