be subject to?

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bieasy

Senior Member
Joined
May 30, 2007
Member Type
Student or Learner
Native Language
French
Home Country
Belgium
Current Location
Brazil
Hi,

Is the following passage correct?

"Anyone who pollutes or cause environmental damage will be subject to a fine."
 
Hi,

Is the following passage correct?

"Anyone who pollutes or causes environmental damage will be subject to a fine."

Yes, with the small correction it's fine.
 
It is, however, so vague as to be unenforceable. If I drive to a park to help plant trees and pick up the trash left by others, I've polluted because my car is not electric. (And if it were electric, then using electricity to charge it would have caused pollution because the power plant that creates the electricity pollutes.) Am I to be subject to a fine?
 
The less we pollute, the better. It's the result of the equation that matters.
 
I don't argue that idea. I argue the idea that you'll be fined for polluting. We all pollute, to a greater or lesser degree, no matter how careful we are.
 
Should I write: "Any one who throws trash in inappropriate spots is subject to be fined"?
 
That's called "littering" here. Littering is punishable by a fine. You will be fined for littering.
 
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