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jimnotgym 3 days ago

This is how we will lose this war. 'Everyone knows it is fake', probably the authorities too. But dealing with it in modern bureaucracy will take years, by which time another fake insurer is up and running.

potato3732842 3 days ago | parent | next [-]

A big part of the problem here is that ships and trips that don't by the numbers benefit from buying insurance are being forced to so there's a whole ecosystem of various shades of sketchy insurance insuring all sorts of mundane things and so sketchy insurance is a poor heuristic for "they might be up to no good, it's worth looking into them".

There's an artificially oversized haystack the needles are hiding in.

throw83939449 3 days ago | parent | prev | next [-]

[flagged]

renewiltord 3 days ago | parent | prev [-]

It’s important to follow due process. We need more checks and balances, not fewer. Ideally, any accusations like this should first go through a careful examination by a jury of one’s peers rather than just being posted willy nilly.

We need to follow the process. And the process should be extensive. This is a problem of not enough process. Ideally, we could have more.

diggan 3 days ago | parent | next [-]

> Ideally, any accusations like this should first go through a careful examination by a jury of one’s peers rather than just being posted willy nilly.

Does Norway even have juries? At least in Sweden we don't have any juries in court (and the two countries tend to be more similar than not), so while the overall comment sounds fitting (and I agree), some details seem to miss the detail of what country this is about :)

Y-bar 3 days ago | parent | next [-]

Both Norway and Sweden have Lay Judges in the lower courts (which is little more than voluntary juries):

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lay_judge

diggan 3 days ago | parent [-]

Nämndemän (Lay Judges) are nothing like juries, at least how I understand juries. In lower courts (tingsrätt), those people are appointed by the city council, and the people chosen are often politically involved (yet the appointment is "unpolitical"), they're not just "randoms" who got called to be in the jury, like how I understand the juries in the US to work.

Y-bar 3 days ago | parent [-]

The randomness of selection is the only difference of any significance. Lay judges and juries have the same amount of judicial power and knowledge.

Edit: it has been pointed out to me that lay judges have even more powers such as interpretation of law than juries, which seems dangerous.

renewiltord 3 days ago | parent | prev [-]

Haha, I was explaining how it should be. Not how it is.

colechristensen 3 days ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Due process needs to be a lot faster and it could be. Things which warrant immediate action are delayed by months, years, or decades by wildly inefficient and slow processes that have nothing to do with someone's right to fair judgement.

renewiltord 3 days ago | parent | next [-]

We shouldn’t rush to judgment. A few years sounds like a good period of time for things that could affect someone’s life. One could argue it should take a century or more to convict people of such crimes. How can we be sure it’s not politically motivated? Only way is to ensure that we wait for political change and see if the crime is still to be prosecuted.

recursive 3 days ago | parent [-]

The longer it takes, the less of a deterrent it is. What would even be the point of convicting someone a century later?

AdrianB1 3 days ago | parent | prev [-]

"Justice delayed is justice denied".

OfficeChad 3 days ago | parent | prev [-]

[dead]