← All dilemmas
⚖️justice
A carbon quota system lets the wealthy buy unused credits from the poor. Is trading personal carbon limits just or exploitative?
Vote to reveal how SplitVote voters split.
YOUR CHOICE
OR
Anonymous voting. No account required. Results update in real time.
Why this dilemma matters
No legal answer is the same as a moral answer here — both have to be argued. Choosing “Allow trading — the poor gain income, the rich bear the cost, and emissions still fall” prioritises the strict rule; choosing “Ban trading — carbon limits must be equal obligations, not a privilege the wealthy can buy out of” gives more weight to a context-aware exception.
Worth asking yourself
- Is mercy a kind of justice here, or its opposite?
- Would you apply the same standard to yourself?
More Justice Dilemmas
- A new tax would halve the income of the top 1% and double the income of the bottom 20%. The total wealth in society stays the same.
- An AI sentencing tool is more consistent than human judges across similar cases, but cannot explain its reasoning. Should it be used?
- You are a juror. Every piece of evidence says guilty — but your gut tells you the defendant is innocent. The jury must be unanimous.
- DNA evidence exonerates an innocent person after 25 years on death row. The real killer is 85, frail, and dying. Do they go to prison?