| I'm not sure where you get that at all. I really see no one anywhere saying anything like that. The starter of this thread is clearly being tongue in cheek. The next person was addressing that by arguing that corruption causes people to get unnecessary parking tickets. The next one was saying that he was overstating that because he himself had managed to avoid that (side note: so have I). I don't think: "you should not be allowed any redress on parking tickets" was ever broached. What I take out of this is that there are bad parking tickets and there is a system for dealing with bad parking tickets. No system is perfect, all systems have compromises, design flaws and humans who make real mistakes implementing them. Accepting this I personally feel revenue from parking tickets is an excellent way to keep taxes lower. I happen to see this process in action as part of my employment, so perhaps I am biased. I have also seen places who basically feel the way you do about parking enforcement and I do not like it (I’m looking at New York here). I will take the tradeoffs and if I choose not to, I will address the problems with my elected officials whose job it is to oversee the budget process to avoid exactly the kinds of corruption we’re speculating exists. |
We're not speculating. I live in a suburb of Philadelphia. Last summer our traffic courts were permanently closed, their cases turned over to the municipal court system. 9 of the traffic court judges, and 3 other city officials, were indicted on criminal charges related to fraud and corruption.