Stanley Doble
Call Me a Cab
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There was a 35 MPH speed limit during WW2. It was not hard to enforce when everyone was driving on bald tires and rationed to 3 gallons a week.
In that hallway was a poster showing a photo of a thoroughly mangled motorcycle and a caption reading "Buy Your Son a Motorcycle for His Last Birthday."
To the larger issue, VL, the consequences of individual choices are rarely limited to that individual. I like to be left to my own devices as well. And I like to think that my own judgment can be trusted. Don't we all? But unless we live as hermits, we all see people making poor decisions that negatively affect others. I see it every day. That's among the reasons I am not so absolutist as I once was. There's something to be said for most any political perspective, and there's something to be said against it. Reality does not bend to any person's vision of how things ought to be.
I got cut off at an intersection the other day in my '41 Dodge by some clown in a vintage British sportscar doing about 70 in a 40mph zone. *And we were the only two cars on the road.*
My passenger pointed out that he yelled something at me as he passed, but fortunately the roar of my own 85 hp engine drowned him out.
When I'm dictator guys like that will be sentenced to drive a '48 Crosley, painted pink.
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I don't dream of a society of grumpy anti-social hermits, I dream of a society where people aren't forced to do anything. I'm not against charity, some of my family say I give too much to the homeless in my area. What I am against is the kind of "charity" where you are forced to give with a gun in your ribs. Live and let live. How much of a negative effect do a person's choices have? Is it inconveniencing you as much to avoid that persons actions as it would be for them to be forced to stop? Think of smoking bans. True, it is nice for many people to not have to inhale smoke when they enter a smoking building, but is the inconvenience of simply not going to that place or putting a filtering mask on equal to having to go outside in the sweltering heat or freezing cold to smoke? What if the smokers said the non smokers could go outside, and had the larger numbers? Make a law either way and the owner of the property loses the choice of whether to allow smoking or not, and if he can no longer choose to allow smoking on his property, does he really own the place in the traditional sense of ownership?
Although I have no evidence to support this, I believe the "organ donor" and "donor cycle" jokes are the result of the number of injured motorcyclists that Emergency Room caregivers treat and the severity of their injuries, not a commentary on the capabilities of those patients with regards to the operation of their preferred choice of vehicle. On any given day I see a number of motorcyclists who ride safely and responsibly, and a number who ride foolishly, but I can also say the same of people driving vehicles with four or more tires.This is the kind of thing I had in mind when I used the word cruel. For some reason, somebody referring to me as an "organ donor" makes me a bit angry. There are a whole lot more car and truck drivers on the road who are unfit to adequately operate their two ton projectiles then there are unfit riders. I'll bet they are a bigger danger too...
Speaking from personal experience, even the best parenting, societal influences, and/or laws won't and can't stop an individual who is bent on self-destruction regardless of what their "poison of choice" might be....Laws won't make anybody stop doing anything or suddenly create responsibility; only good parenting can do that...
In most respects healthcare is no different from any other profession. In every occupation I've had there were any number of inside jokes that would likely have offended someone if they were to become public knowledge, so I can't begrudge doctors and nurses for doing the same. Besides, most people in the medical and mortuary professions use humor as a means of protecting themselves psychologically from the things they often experience in their careers--things most of us don't want to hear or know about--so I'm willing to cut them a little slack....Whether the doctors should make "jokes" about an observed reality is another issue...
Are you serious? In your world, would it be legal for a private business owner -- a restaurateur, say -- to deny service to short people? Or persons of color? Just let the free market deal with it? Ask southern black folks how well those market forces worked for them prior to the laws "imposed" upon those "whites only" business owners by that overbearing federal government.
The irony is that in the libertarian absolutist's world, there would be no laws against slavery, because, well, that might violate the slaveholder's property rights.
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I don't dream of a society of grumpy anti-social hermits, I dream of a society where people aren't forced to do anything. ..
In any case, never mind "iegal" or "illegal." I think what's more important is for intoxication of any kind to be culturally and socially unacceptable. The damage drugs have caused in modern society is even worse.
It's always amused me how vigorously some people on this forum will condemn others for wearing a baseball cap to church, or in a restaurant, something which is, deep down, of absolutely no lasting harm or consequence to anyone -- but will find all sorts of ways of rationalizing or even defending practices which cause real, substantial harm to millions of people every day.
All laws force people to do (or not do) something. All laws restrict freedom. So you are left to reconcile your above statement with your assertion that ...
"In a libertarian society, there would be major laws against slavery; among them being laws against kidnapping, false imprisonment, forced labor, assault, and many others."
Those "major laws" would have enforcement mechanisms, right? They would have to, to be effective, wouldn't they? Wouldn't that make them forceful?
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Lastly, here is a thought that I have just now considered: That the rise of the drug culture has pretty much gone hand-in-hand with the casualization of American fashions. So, maybe there is more of a correlation between intoxication and wearing a baseball to church than you might think.
There is an old saying: "Your freedom ends where my nose begins." Libertarianism is about personal freedoms - for people to be free to make their own choices in their own lives, their own bodies, their own well-being and their pursuit of happiness - freedoms that do not directly or adversely affect other's right to do the same. I think we can all agree that would not include the freedom to rob, rape, or murder someone else, nor to own a slave.
Surely you know that correlation is not causation. The decline in cigarette smoking has occurred more or less simultaneously with the "casualization of American fashions" too.
Really? Was it because you showed up on a motorcycle? Or did your motorcycling attire not meet the restaurant's dress code?