From listening to Paddy O'Gorman's coverage of the Courts on the Sean O'Rourke show every week, it appears that only a tiny minority are actually stupid enough to pay the fines imposed.
Most are driven to jail, registered, given a meal and a bus ticket back to whence they came. All on the same day. It's seen as a day out by many.
A lot of those cases that Paddy O'Gorman covers about women being brought up to Mountjoy for a day seems a total waste of time for me. The amount of police time, court time, legal time, prison time, for a fine of a couple of hundred. And people who clearly can't pay. Crazy stuff.
As they say in The Wire, it's all part of 'the game'A lot of those cases that Paddy O'Gorman covers about women being brought up to Mountjoy for a day seems a total waste of time for me. The amount of police time, court time, legal time, prison time, for a fine of a couple of hundred. And people who clearly can't pay. Crazy stuff.
That does seem crazy, but nor should they get a free pass to avoid any laws or regulations or contracts to which there are fines attached ... There have to be consequences for all citizens.
The fines should come out of any welfare payments they get, all to be collected in 12 months max.
That would focus a few minds
Free pass, the people Paddy talks to don't get no free pass. Seem like desperate people to me. Most of them didn't pay as they had other priorities like food and clothing. I see no point hounding such people, particularly when it means it will cost taxpayers for the expense of the revolving door in Mountjoy and the added stress to the families involved.
I'm not sure where you are going with this, do we exempt them from all legislation and laws where fines can be used as punishment?
Does Paddy talk to people whose fines are for road traffic offences? Littering? Public order offences?
The desperate people you describe don't seem to be the kind of person who racks up hundreds of unpaid tolls on a motorway?
What if the reason they were fined is because their behaviour was causing stress to other people???
Even an apparently routine chore like having an NCT done can drive certain people to literal despair.
So if someone suffers episodes of depression they shouldn't be driving, even though they have passed the same test and have the same licence and insurance as you and I? Maybe we should go back decades and start locking them up in secure institutions? Nice social empathy there. :mad:Should such people be driving ? Surely if someone lacks basic self-organisation skills to the extent that getting the NCT drives them to literal despair, they are unlikely to be suitable to be in charge of a ton of metal going at 50kph.
Cremeegg,
For the absolute avoidance of doubt, when I mentioned "can't pay" I meant it in it's true sense.
Anyone worth their salt would go through a person's bank statements and credit card statements thoroughly, then even go and hire a private investigator, before accepting that a person genuinely can't pay. It's not hard to see what cars are in a driveway, what schools the kids are going to, what the people are doing socially etc. Anyone found to be telling lies should be dealt with most severely.
So if someone suffers episodes of depression they shouldn't be driving, even though they have passed the same test and have the same licence and insurance as you and I? Maybe we should go back decades and start locking them up in secure institutions? Nice social empathy there. :mad:
A day in the "audience" of a district court is very educational.
You'll see lots of people who don't have the skills (social or educational) to function and interact with mainstream society.
What if they are among the 18% of adults who are functionally illiterate? Given that in 2009 1 in 5 15 year old boys was functionally illiterate (the most recent data I could find) I don't see that figure improving any time soon.Should such people be driving ? Surely if someone lacks basic self-organisation skills to the extent that getting the NCT drives them to literal despair, they are unlikely to be suitable to be in charge of a ton of metal going at 50kph.
I find the process of getting an NCT stressful, though not to the point of literal despair. It seems to me that someone who does might also find the stresses of driving, traffic, lights, drivers that cut you up, people busy putting on lipstick etc. so stressful that they would be a danger to themselves and others.
There isn't much social empath in allowing people perform tasks that are beyond them.
What if they are among the 18% of adults who are functionally illiterate? Given that in 2009 1 in 5 15 year old boys was functionally illiterate (the most recent data I could find) I don't see that figure improving any time soon.
That doesn't mean they can't drive but it does make form filling difficult.
Yes it all starts in school.
I dont recall there being many forms to be filled in connection with the NCT
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