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7 Kommentare

  1. War_Eagle451 on

    Maybe make the fines actually hurt. 120% of what was illegally charged. Otherwise nothing will change

  2. NickdoesnthaveReddit on

    I (a law abiding citizen that has worked in public safety for 2 decades) accidently owe the CRA a couple hundred bucks from a minor mistake, unbeknownst to me, 20 years ago with my student loans. They found out recently and are hounding me for it – threatening me with significant consequences and legal action. They’ve made serious threats and are treating me like a criminal. (Before you ask, it’s legit and not a phishing scam haha).

    THAT SAID: Surely justice will be compounded exponentially and fairly for these giant companies deliberately robbing the country of *hundreds of millions of dollars* for their personal profits with full awareness and intent behind their actual malicious actions, especially after receiving slaps on the wrist and clear warnings not to do that – right? Right?!?

  3. Immediate-Link490 on

    >Lee, the retired CFIA inspector, says grocers that repeatedly break the rules should face financial penalties. But she argues the current maximum fine, $15,000 for such violations, isn’t high enough for major supermarket chains. 

    >“It’s nothing. It’s their cost of doing business,“ Lee said. „It needs to be enough so that it deters them — half a million dollars.“

    If the only punishment for breaking a law is a fine than that law is meant to only apply to the lower classes (in this case independent grocery stores run by locals), not the ultra wealthy.

  4. DisastrousCause1 on

    I have always wondered about moisture content being infused to up the weight.

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