http://www.autoblog.com/2017/04/26/oregon-fines-man-500-for-using-math-to-fight-red-light-cameras/

×   
Oregon fines man $500 for using math to challenge red-light cameras

It's a free-speech issue. And math is math, Oregon!


Few things in this world are as universally despised as traffic cameras. After 
his wife received a ticket for tripping a red-light camera, Oregon resident 
Mats Järlström openly criticized the Orwellian devices and the mathematical 
formulas these cameras use. It seems Big Brother doesn't take too kindly to 
dissenters, as according to the Institute for Justice Järlström was fined $500 
for violating a law that prohibits mathematical criticism without a license.

Free speech is a term that's often misconstrued. It's not some blanket to hide 
behind while spouting ridicule and hate to anyone and everyone. In the US, what 
free speech does protect is the right of a person to openly criticize the 
government, as Järlström was doing when he argued that the equation which 
governs the traffic light timers was out of date. After being fined, Järlström 
filed a lawsuit against the ban on mathematical debate.

The Institute for Justice says the actual fine was for Järlström calling 
himself a "professional engineer." The thing is, Järlström does have a degree 
in electrical engineering, though he doesn't carry a state license. In Oregon's 
eyes, that doesn't make him a real engineer. Järlström's initial issue was that 
the green-yellow-red progression was too short for lights with a left or right 
turn. Using his engineering expertise, he began to criticize the math equation 
that governs this timing, hence the fine.

Järlström and the Institute for Justice claim these licensing boards violate 
free speech by fining those who criticize both the boards and the government 
agencies behind things like traffic cameras. A lawyer for the Institute for 
Justice makes the point that you don't need to be a licensed lawyer to write an 
article disagreeing with a Supreme Court decision. Free speech, whether used to 
challenge Supreme Court decisions or traffic cameras, is a fundamental freedom 
granted by US Constitution.

And it's also no stretch to say that using mathematics is a fundamental human 
right - part of what actually makes us human. No law can take away our math.
[end of quote]
           Jim Bell

Reply via email to