"If that's the case then the law shouldn't punish people because they are poor" How do people really think Establishing an overhead bridge serves a public purpose. It is designed to ensure safety and efficiency in the community. Allowing vendors to obstruct it compromises the very essence of its purpose. The official who dismantled the illegal setup acted in accordance with the law. Sympathy and empathy are noble virtues, but they lose their essence when they condone actions that undermine public safety and order.
@Lucas I disagree with you on this one we can have a conversation on x The situation at hand requires us to differentiate between compassion and the dangerous habit of normalizing lawlessness. While we sympathize with the struggles of individuals trying to make a living, it is imperative to maintain order and uphold the principles of a functioning society. Allowing unlawful behavior, regardless of its emotional backstory, sets a precedent that erodes societal structure. What the old man did well serve as deterrent. Let's stop that unnecessary convo that the country is poor or she is poor ahh what society are we building? Every serious thing bia then we attached emotions What's that?
Perhaps you can come out with fact I understand your sentiment However, In Ghana, public spaces are governed by laws to ensure safety, order, and fairness. Selling at unauthorized locations, such as an overhead bridge, violates municipal regulations designed to protect both vendors and the public. Article 41(d) of the 1992 Constitution of Ghana mandates citizens to safeguard and preserve public property and prevent its misuse. By selling there, the vendor not only contravenes this principle but also creates a potential safety hazard. When one disregards the law, authorities have the mandate to enforce compliance, even through means such as removing or destroying illegal structures. The destruction of the table, though regrettable, is a necessary enforcement action to prevent further violations.
@@WONDERBERKOHHmm the issue and lawlessness was WHERE she set up to sell, not THAT she was selling. How will she move and sell somewhere else without her table? She still needs her table to sell elsewhere does she not? . Simply setting up cameras or gaving a police car patrol the interchange on the hour will deter people as they know they'll be caught and fined. This should have been for seen by the government though. Some people will generally always try and break rules.
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"If that's the case then the law shouldn't punish people because they are poor"
How do people really think
Establishing an overhead bridge serves a public purpose. It is designed to ensure safety and efficiency in the community. Allowing vendors to obstruct it compromises the very essence of its purpose. The official who dismantled the illegal setup acted in accordance with the law. Sympathy and empathy are noble virtues, but they lose their essence when they condone actions that undermine public safety and order.
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These two 😂😂😂
@Lucas I disagree with you on this one we can have a conversation on x
The situation at hand requires us to differentiate between compassion and the dangerous habit of normalizing lawlessness. While we sympathize with the struggles of individuals trying to make a living, it is imperative to maintain order and uphold the principles of a functioning society. Allowing unlawful behavior, regardless of its emotional backstory, sets a precedent that erodes societal structure. What the old man did well serve as deterrent. Let's stop that unnecessary convo that the country is poor or she is poor ahh what society are we building?
Every serious thing bia then we attached emotions
What's that?
You just agreed with me on everything aside the man destroying the table. That one is unacceptable!!!
Perhaps you can come out with fact
I understand your sentiment
However, In Ghana, public spaces are governed by laws to ensure safety, order, and fairness. Selling at unauthorized locations, such as an overhead bridge, violates municipal regulations designed to protect both vendors and the public. Article 41(d) of the 1992 Constitution of Ghana mandates citizens to safeguard and preserve public property and prevent its misuse. By selling there, the vendor not only contravenes this principle but also creates a potential safety hazard. When one disregards the law, authorities have the mandate to enforce compliance, even through means such as removing or destroying illegal structures. The destruction of the table, though regrettable, is a necessary enforcement action to prevent further violations.
@@WONDERBERKOHHmm the issue and lawlessness was WHERE she set up to sell, not THAT she was selling. How will she move and sell somewhere else without her table?
She still needs her table to sell elsewhere does she not? . Simply setting up cameras or gaving a police car patrol the interchange on the hour will deter people as they know they'll be caught and fined.
This should have been for seen by the government though. Some people will generally always try and break rules.
U ar very clever, I like that
@@KinTerq thanks