Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One day someone will not give YOU the benefit of the doubt.
Please remember in that moment, that you did not give the benefit of the doubt to anyone else either.
Do not come on DCUM to whine.
Why does someone need to be given the benefit of the doubt? That's what the courts are for. If you're in the right, all will be sorted out just fine.
I don't need anyone to give *me* the benefit of the doubt, because I have all my ducks in a row. I'm not a thief or cheat.
Anonymous wrote:One day someone will not give YOU the benefit of the doubt.
Please remember in that moment, that you did not give the benefit of the doubt to anyone else either.
Do not come on DCUM to whine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you saw your neighbor repeatedly taking something off the shelf in a store, and walking out the door not paying for it, you think it's no big deal? Because they shouldn't have to pay for things in stores?
This. Is. No. Different.
Yes, there are people with actual exemptions. Leave those in charge to sort it out.
But there are a lot of people who justify stealing from the rest of us.
Agree with this. Tax evasion is very anti-social. It hurts all of us. Also the more people report otz the less normalized it will become. By reporting you can prevent people from ever trying it because it won't be worth the effort. That's the goal.
You guys are such losers. But you’re also quite stupid if you think your ad hoc neighborhood watch reporting network of uninformed dipdwads calling the county clerk’s office is going to have an impact on … what, exactly? Tax avoidance? Theft generally?
You’re just sad, bored, busybodies. Regular people think you are weird and avoid you. And I’m sure it’s not limited to this particular issue.
Anonymous wrote:Because a huge number of those care are probably driven by illegal immigrants, OP. Out of state registered cars are often driven by illegal immigrants trying to skirt registration issues because they have no valid ID and no permanent address. They try to avoid identification from the state.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I report people who park in our neighborhood in DC. It’s super easy to do on the DC311 app. We have zoned 2hr parking and lots of them are rich Georgetown students with out-of-state plates.
There’s nothing more satisfying than waking up, leaving the house, and seeing tickets plastered on a line of cars outside my house. The DC ticket ladies come out at 4am and just start nailing everyone with an OOS plate.
Love it when stupid people pay my taxes for me.
Do you report people with accents to ICE too?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you saw your neighbor repeatedly taking something off the shelf in a store, and walking out the door not paying for it, you think it's no big deal? Because they shouldn't have to pay for things in stores?
This. Is. No. Different.
Yes, there are people with actual exemptions. Leave those in charge to sort it out.
But there are a lot of people who justify stealing from the rest of us.
Agree with this. Tax evasion is very anti-social. It hurts all of us. Also the more people report otz the less normalized it will become. By reporting you can prevent people from ever trying it because it won't be worth the effort. That's the goal.
You guys are such losers. But you’re also quite stupid if you think your ad hoc neighborhood watch reporting network of uninformed dipdwads calling the county clerk’s office is going to have an impact on … what, exactly? Tax avoidance? Theft generally?
You’re just sad, bored, busybodies. Regular people think you are weird and avoid you. And I’m sure it’s not limited to this particular issue.
Anonymous wrote:I live in Maryland, but the only people who I know live in Maryland with out-of-state plates are military.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you saw your neighbor repeatedly taking something off the shelf in a store, and walking out the door not paying for it, you think it's no big deal? Because they shouldn't have to pay for things in stores?
This. Is. No. Different.
Yes, there are people with actual exemptions. Leave those in charge to sort it out.
But there are a lot of people who justify stealing from the rest of us.
Agree with this. Tax evasion is very anti-social. It hurts all of us. Also the more people report otz the less normalized it will become. By reporting you can prevent people from ever trying it because it won't be worth the effort. That's the goal.
Anonymous wrote:If you saw your neighbor repeatedly taking something off the shelf in a store, and walking out the door not paying for it, you think it's no big deal? Because they shouldn't have to pay for things in stores?
This. Is. No. Different.
Yes, there are people with actual exemptions. Leave those in charge to sort it out.
But there are a lot of people who justify stealing from the rest of us.