Well, it seems that excellent Finnish education system fails to teach you good reasoning (See: Fallacy. Which one suits you the best? Straw Man???) or you are underestimating foreigners logic.Upphew wrote:Yet you would be moaning, if you bought something that needs to be 500cm long and it would be 499cm? Thus reducing yourself to idiot a$$hole?umit wrote:If the law says "You cannot park your car less than 5 meters to a pedestrian crossing" and a parking warden gives me a ticket for parking my car 4,99 meters away then for me he is an idiot a$$hole. If you are defending him for doing his job properly and criticizing me for not obeying the rules than you are either a "helpless monkey" or a "masochist robot".
Experiences: Parking Fines
Re: Experiences: Parking Fines
Re: Experiences: Parking Fines
And when does he stops to be this £$€¤%&? At 4.98 meters, 4.50 meters, 3.99 meters?umit wrote: If the law says "You cannot park your car less than 5 meters to a pedestrian crossing" and a parking warden gives me a ticket for parking my car 4,99 meters away then for me he is an idiot a$$hole.
Re: Experiences: Parking Fines
(Not) hypothetical situation:
Neighbor's car parked with 2 wheels inside the adjacent parking place. What do you do?
- Call the parking smurfs. The bastard should learn how to park.
- Park your car a little further, let him some space, and expose yourself to getting a fine, because you will be also over the line.
- Park your car normally, inside the lines, forcing him to get into his car from the passenger's door.
Neighbor's car parked with 2 wheels inside the adjacent parking place. What do you do?
- Call the parking smurfs. The bastard should learn how to park.
- Park your car a little further, let him some space, and expose yourself to getting a fine, because you will be also over the line.
- Park your car normally, inside the lines, forcing him to get into his car from the passenger's door.
Re: Experiences: Parking Fines
It differs according to every individual case. 500cm safe, 499cm dangerous... Is it?rinso wrote:And when does he stops to be this £$€¤%&? At 4.98 meters, 4.50 meters, 3.99 meters?umit wrote: If the law says "You cannot park your car less than 5 meters to a pedestrian crossing" and a parking warden gives me a ticket for parking my car 4,99 meters away then for me he is an idiot a$$hole.
Re: Experiences: Parking Fines
So sometimes 500cm is mandatory and other times optional? Who should decide when 500 is 500 and when not? What if there is difference of opinion, warden vs. you vs. salesman?umit wrote:Well, it seems that excellent Finnish education system fails to teach you good reasoning (See: Fallacy. Which one suits you the best? Straw Man???) or you are underestimating foreigners logic.
I'm not underestimating anyone's logic yet. Just probing the logic behind opinion. I know how things are done here, sometimes I know why they are done that way. Why change the way?
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Re: Experiences: Parking Fines
Strictly speaking, parking your car in a way which prevents access to another vehicle or which prevents another vehicle from being driven away is also illegal, regardless of whether it's in your reserved spot or not. So that option would theoretically expose you to a fine as well, although it's unlikely that you'd get one.MTB wrote:(Not) hypothetical situation:
Neighbor's car parked with 2 wheels inside the adjacent parking place. What do you do?
- Call the parking smurfs. The bastard should learn how to park.
- Park your car a little further, let him some space, and expose yourself to getting a fine, because you will be also over the line.
- Park your car normally, inside the lines, forcing him to get into his car from the passenger's door.
Re: Experiences: Parking Fines
Becaue we expect others to take responsibility for their actions. You know, responsibility? It's that concept you are having serious issues with... Read about it:umit wrote: Then why do Finns whine when it comes to save the a$$es of those "relaxed" nations? You should be happy and proud for obeying and fulfilling EU rules... You should feel a masochist joy for working harder to pay their debts.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Responsibility
And you, by not respecting common rules are irresponsible idiot, a$$hole, criminal and generally worthless person.Anyway, discussing on the fallacies doesn't help anyone. I never said not obeying the rules is good. What I have been saying is applying a rule strictly as it is written is not necessarily the best approach. If the law says "You cannot park your car less than 5 meters to a pedestrian crossing" and a parking warden gives me a ticket for parking my car 4,99 meters away then for me he is an idiot a$$hole. If you are defending him for doing his job properly and criticizing me for not obeying the rules than you are either a "helpless monkey" or a "masochist robot".
Why YOU had to get your car 1cm over the line? What prevented YOU from parking 1cm further away so that you would not violate law?
Re: Experiences: Parking Fines
true, provided that he can prove he parked there first, and not me. (that doesn't mean I would go for option 3)Strictly speaking, parking your car in a way which prevents access to another vehicle or which prevents another vehicle from being driven away is also illegal, regardless of whether it's in your reserved spot or not. So that option would theoretically expose you to a fine as well, although it's unlikely that you'd get one.
Another example:
parking in a Zone 1 parking space in the center, 10 minutes before it was free. Went to the cash machine and checked, didn't have coins and decided to risk it for 10 minutes. Got a fine at 17:59 (or 18:59, don't remember it is free from 6 or 7 there). Whether I agree I should pay some compensation for not paying initially 1 euro, I cannot help to observe it is outrageous to punish this small mistake with 50 times the amount. As long as car wasn't impeding any traffic, being actually parked in a designated parking place. Probably if I was to go to court with this, would've got away. But the appeal is to same people who issued it, and they don't bother "it is the law, blah blah". Well the law is bad, in this particular case (i still keep the fine to show it to friends who cannot believe it). And don't say they cannot know if I parked there 10 ours before or 10 minutes. It is their problem to know and prove what am I guilty for, not my problem to demonstrate I am not guilty.
Re: Experiences: Parking Fines
Erm, if you parked there 10 minutes before it was free and didn't pay, you are guilty. This is exactly the same thing as the above example with parkin 4.99 metres from the pedestrian crossing - it's an attempt to draw the line somewhere other than where it has already been drawn.MTB wrote: Another example:
parking in a Zone 1 parking space in the center, 10 minutes before it was free. Went to the cash machine and checked, didn't have coins and decided to risk it for 10 minutes. Got a fine at 17:59 (or 18:59, don't remember it is free from 6 or 7 there). Whether I agree I should pay some compensation for not paying initially 1 euro, I cannot help to observe it is outrageous to punish this small mistake with 50 times the amount. As long as car wasn't impeding any traffic, being actually parked in a designated parking place. Probably if I was to go to court with this, would've got away. But the appeal is to same people who issued it, and they don't bother "it is the law, blah blah". Well the law is bad, in this particular case (i still keep the fine to show it to friends who cannot believe it). And don't say they cannot know if I parked there 10 ours before or 10 minutes. It is their problem to know and prove what am I guilty for, not my problem to demonstrate I am not guilty.
I understand why people think a law is bad and why they don't obey it, but what I can't understand is that they somehow expect not to be punished for breaking it.
Re: Experiences: Parking Fines
No, it's about the punishment severity in accordance to gravely of the infringement committed.
Sello shooter: 400 euros total fines for being caught a couple of times having illegal amunition with him.
Friend of mine: 400 euros fine for driving 108 in a 80 zone on somewherevayla.
Sello shooter: 400 euros total fines for being caught a couple of times having illegal amunition with him.
Friend of mine: 400 euros fine for driving 108 in a 80 zone on somewherevayla.
If you owe me some 2 euros and you promise to give it back tomorrow, and tomorrow you don't have them (you forget to take cash again), is it ok to demand 100 euros the next day?Erm, if you parked there 10 minutes before it was free and didn't pay, you are guilty.
Re: Experiences: Parking Fines
No, it's about obeying the rules that you choose to accept when you enter a rule-enforced area.MTB wrote:No, it's about the punishment severity in accordance to gravely of the infringement committed.
Erm, if you parked there 10 minutes before it was free and didn't pay, you are guilty.
If you are standing, by choice, in a zone in which the rules quite clearly state that the fee for overdue cash loans is 100 euros per day, then yes, it is perfectly okay. Just like if you choose to park for 10 minutes in a zone in which the rules quite clearly state that the fee for parking is 2 euros per hour or part thereof, then that is your choice. Just because you'd prefer a different payment system doesn't make your behaviour correct. You chose to use that parking space, in which case you chose to abide by the rules clearly laid out for the aforementioned space. If you didn't want to accept those rules, you were free to find a different parking space elsewhere.MTB wrote:If you owe me some 2 euros and you promise to give it back tomorrow, and tomorrow you don't have them (you forget to take cash again), is it ok to demand 100 euros the next day?
Re: Experiences: Parking Fines
Both had good head start to killing people, so fines should, imo, be equal. As they were.MTB wrote:No, it's about the punishment severity in accordance to gravely of the infringement committed.
Sello shooter: 400 euros total fines for being caught a couple of times having illegal amunition with him.
Friend of mine: 400 euros fine for driving 108 in a 80 zone on somewherevayla.
Better example, from today: 18e and 24e fines for helping to move the body after third person had murdered the victim
( http://www.kaleva.fi/uutiset/pudasjarve ... kot/878539)
If you owe me some 2e and you know that you will get 100e on top of that if you don't pay tomorrow, is it ok to demand that what was agreed when you didn't pay as agreed?MTB wrote:If you owe me some 2 euros and you promise to give it back tomorrow, and tomorrow you don't have them (you forget to take cash again), is it ok to demand 100 euros the next day?
Should the additional demand be lower? Maybe, but then you shouldn't have agreed to the deal. Negotiate before committing to the contract.
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Re: Experiences: Parking Fines
There are laws which specify how much you can ask as a penalty for overdue cash, as far as I know. Definitely not 50 times more, I think that is even a criminal offence. But, there are exceptions... and exceptions. What if I wanted to pay, and didn't have coins, and by the time I went to change and come back... I think that maximum 20 euros fine in this case, given that it is not a traffic offence, since the car is parked in a designated parking place (which happens to be a public property) (I am sure police would'n care as it is not their duty to check if parking has been paid or not), but it is a financial offence for not paying your 1 or 2 euros tax to the municipality.
Or, I can agree to double the normal price, but in this case you should have the proof for exactly how long the car was there.
Or, I can agree to double the normal price, but in this case you should have the proof for exactly how long the car was there.
Re: Experiences: Parking Fines
Compound interest and handling fees... btw there are laws but they don specify how much you can ask, but there are laws that do specify when you can park for free or how much space must be left before crossing.MTB wrote:There are laws which specify how much you can ask as a penalty for overdue cash, as far as I know. Definitely not 50 times more, I think that is even a criminal offence.
15-50e, depending where you parked ( http://www.finlex.fi/fi/laki/ajantasa/2010/20100583 ). If you went with stub showing that you had paid, they would have canceled the fine. Especially if your payment would have been made in decent time, not 3 hours after the fine was issued.MTB wrote:What if I wanted to pay, and didn't have coins, and by the time I went to change and come back... I think that maximum 20 euros fine in this case, given that it is not a traffic offence, since the car is parked in a designated parking place (which happens to be a public property) (I am sure police would'n care as it is not their duty to check if parking has been paid or not), but it is a financial offence for not paying your 1 or 2 euros tax to the municipality.
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Re: Experiences: Parking Fines
If you don't have the change, you first go get some and then you can park. Why do you insist on making life so difficult for yourself?MTB wrote: What if I wanted to pay, and didn't have coins, and by the time I went to change and come back...
(And for the record, parking without paying the fee is a traffic offence. It's in the Road traffic law.)