stahrgazer wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:
Offhand, the two ideas I like best are to allow minor infractions to, not quite dissappear completely, but essentially fall off the record, only to be brought back if someone commits a serious offense.
Why bother bringing back a minor offense if someone commits a serious offense? Just deal with the serious offense.
Depends on how serious. I am just saying the records should not be entirely erased.
Maybe I should have said unless there is a new
string of petty offenses.
stahrgazer wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Second, to another escalation beyond permanent. For minor infractions, I can see adding 6 months, then a year. Anything over a year is not much different from a perme-ban anyway.
Why a year for minor infractions? If the offense is minor, the punishment should be minor; escalating, but still minor. Say, day, week, month, six weeks, 3 months for repeated infractions, then if behavior repeats when allowed back, automatically 6 weeks then 3 months; 6 weeks then 3 months; in a cycle. Eventually the person is likely to tire of the game of getting banned.
I was not really addressing that part, I was simply saying that a 6 month, even a year ban could be an option.
stahrgazer wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:This also has a tie-in to the justice system in our country. It definitely has tie-ins to the way most schools, even many families, work places operate. That keeps someone who just constantly breaks the rules (yes, DM probably qualifies)
Few justice systems punish jaywalking or speeding the same way murder or armed robbery is punished, no matter how many times a person jaywalks or speeds; some 3 strikes rules were written to appropriately indicate the less minor crimes as the only ones counting toward 3 strikes.
Perma-bans should be left for those who hack the system, either by electronic sabotage or repeated multi-isms. For people just being offensive, there'd probably be less of that if mods addressed offensiveness across the board, rather than just for those who aren't their pets.
True, but not true.
Have kids? You have rules. They break them, you have to give consequences. But what happens when your eight year old stares you in the face and says "no, I am not going to do that". At that point, its no longer about picking up the clothes or whatever, the
problem is the defiance. And either you fix it when the kid is 8 or .. . heaven help you (and the rest of us) later!
You could, potentially, wind up with 15 years jailtime for jaywalking if you leave your tickets go. You would not get 15 years for jaywalking, per se, but you could get it for leaving tickets unpaid for such a long time, ignoring court summons, etc.