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hippichyesterday at 3:17 PM6 repliesview on HN

One thing that stopped me from seeking the vanity plate - I learned that at least in Texas all plates are made by minimally paid prisoners. So any desire to finance that system beyond what's absolute possible minimum (i.e. regular plates) evaporated.


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rsstackyesterday at 3:31 PM

In New York it's the same, they make the license plates and also school furniture, and maybe other things too. I was scared for a moment when I was told by USPS Informed Delivery that I have incoming mail from Auburn Correctional Facility - but it was a license plate.

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alexfooyesterday at 4:51 PM

> One thing that stopped me from seeking the vanity plate

I'm sure it differs between countries but in the UK vanity plates have become reasonably contentious.

As a gross generalisation they're fine if the car is worth hundreds of thousands or the plate itself is worth hundreds of thousands.

The UK plate "F1" last sold for just under £1m (about US$1.3m) over 10 years ago and it's rumoured that there are offers for ten times that from someone who wants to buy it now.

It comes down to a classic British issue of "class", which is inherently difficult to explain.

If you have the money to have, say, a Ferrari 250 GTO then you can do what the hell you like with it, including getting a vanity plate for it. You are rich enough that you don't care what anyone else thinks about you. Anyone seeing you and that car will know you are rich.

If you have the money to spend close to £1m on a plate like "X1" and decide to put it on beat up 15 year old 1.2 litre Ford Focus then, again, it shows you have stupid amounts of money and some delicious irony in putting it on an old beater of a car.

But if don't have a supercar and you get a relatively cheap vanity plate like "RMZ 1327" and stick it on a Range Rover Evoque that's only a couple of years old then it just shows that you're trying too hard and just aspire to be seen as rich. You don't have enough money for a really nice car, or a really exclusive vanity plate.

I guess the other way of looking at it is that people who don't have the money to get a vanity plate aspire to being able to do so as it would mean they have more money than they have now. Once they get to having that amount of money most realise that the money is best spent elsewhere (or not spent at all). Once they have so much money that having a vanity plate is inconsequential to their finances they may as well do it. So it's natural that some people want to pretend they've reached the "rich" state by buying a vanity plate preemptively - the problem is that this is so easy to spot it just looks gauche.

All of this obviously doesn't apply to countries where vanity plates aren't traded for stupid amounts like famous pieces of art.

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embedding-shapeyesterday at 4:00 PM

> I learned that at least in Texas all plates are made by minimally paid prisoners

Lol, wasn't slavery outlawed in the US, or were some states still allowed to keep it? That's absolutely bananas if true.

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BurningFrogyesterday at 6:47 PM

Imprisoning people for years seems like a much worse thing to do to people than underpaying them for work they do while locked up.

Is it that the latter can be called "slavery" that makes people upset?

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htx80nerdyesterday at 4:15 PM

they shouldnt be paid at all. they're in prison for a reason. they have a debt to society. a great many of those people didnt do 'one bad thing' then got caught. it was just the last bad thing they were caught for. any many of them did 'the bad thing', then continued doing other bad things up until the point they were put in prison.

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paulddrapertoday at 12:40 PM

“The morally correct thing is to pay them even less.”