(November 9, 2016 at 7:41 pm)mlmooney89 Wrote:(November 9, 2016 at 3:06 pm)Yeauxleaux Wrote: I have to argue though, how would you go about enforcing a ban from using cellphones, or even cars?
There's ways around that, very easy ones. You could just use someone else's car and use a phone that's on a contract in someone else's name. That's not an effective form of punishment. I actually really like the idea on paper, but it's not very practical.
You would take away their driver's license sweetie not the actual car.
But again, you can't enforce that.
You can take away the driver's license yes. There's still nothing stopping that person from getting in a car, either their own or someone else's, and driving around. It's not often the police just stop people "for no reason" just to check if they have a driver's license, it's very easy to get away with driving without one unless you attract attention to yourself while driving.
"Adulthood is like looking both ways before you cross the road, and then getting hit by an airplane" - sarcasm_only
"Ironically like the nativist far-Right, which despises multiculturalism, but benefits from its ideas of difference to scapegoat the other and to promote its own white identity politics; these postmodernists, leftists, feminists and liberals also use multiculturalism, to side with the oppressor, by demanding respect and tolerance for oppression characterised as 'difference', no matter how intolerable." - Maryam Namazie
"Ironically like the nativist far-Right, which despises multiculturalism, but benefits from its ideas of difference to scapegoat the other and to promote its own white identity politics; these postmodernists, leftists, feminists and liberals also use multiculturalism, to side with the oppressor, by demanding respect and tolerance for oppression characterised as 'difference', no matter how intolerable." - Maryam Namazie