I appreciate the polite discussion. You raise good points and your disagreement is logical and respectful. Thank you.
That's an interesting point. It may be true, but it's also symbolic of the type of paralysis in congress and on the gun rights / gun control front. Everyone says that the other side won't compromise. I've been thinking about it a lot on the 2nd amendment side. Would I trade a stricter background check program for a less eroded 2nd amendment? I think I would. Is the NRA capable of having that discussion that includes compromise? Probably not. Is the gun control faction capable of having that discussion? Probably not. The reality is that the gun control faction doesn't believe a word that the NRA says and vice versa... So we've got an effective stalemate, maybe advantage NRA (due to funding and pretty solid conservative backing). Neither side should get to discuss it because they're both largely incapable of compromise.chasfm11 wrote: In my view, there is and never has been a compromise by the gun control faction. When they don't get everything they want this time, that is not a compromise because they are back proposing the rest of the package at the next event. They've lost with things like the assault weapons ban termination but were back with it in spades following Sandy Hook. They never compromise. They never go away. But that really wasn't the focus of why I posted this situation.
I had a lot of hope for the bi-partisan Gang of Eight - take out the hard core refusal to compromise of the party and make people have a rational discussion where everything is on the table. Of course that failed because the output went back to congress.
I agree with you on the legal system. It's wacked. It's also less wacked than the rest of the world. You're massive advantaged if you're wealthy. You're probably still advantaged if you're white. And we see instances all the time in the media where LEOs couldn't make a logical decision for themselves and DAs are even worse. Lives are ruined. Peoples finances are destroyed.
Speeding - you're right on. 95% of speeding enforcement is about revenue, not safety. When I lived in N. Dallas years ago, there was a little town near Lavon that wrote something like 10x as many tickets as they had people in that area. They eventually got sued and shut down. I think enforcement like that is partly why PDs can't get 100% of ticket revenue directly (if I remember correctly). I accept is as part of the system, however.. I used to get worked up over it, but eventually recognized it as my favorite kind of tax - the "voluntary tax". If I didn't speed, I didn't pay. That and I sold the Corvette, which makes me a little sad.