Politesse
Lux Aeterna
- Joined
- Feb 27, 2018
- Messages
- 14,067
- Location
- Chochenyo Territory, US
- Gender
- nonbinary
- Basic Beliefs
- Jedi Wayseeker
Hell, even the common perception of crimes is very class-biased. Talk to any random American, of any class, and they're likely to draw a distinction between "white collar crimes" and "serious crimes"; if a very wealthy person is doing it, it is somehow perceived as less serious or real a crime regardless of the scale of its consequences. If I go out and shoot a man on the street tomorrow, that's considered a violent crime and I should be locked up forever with no hope of release. But if I make a management decision that gets people killed on the job, it's likely that only the victims' families and maybe immediate coworkers will honestly consider me a violent criminal and my sentence is likely to be a financial penalty rather than a jail sentence, even if my decisions got a lot more people hurt. I realize that this is not exclusively an American phenomenon. But I do get tired of it sometimes.