An expression about barn doors and horses comes to mind.
It makes sense when there are still 1000 horses in the barn.An expression about barn doors and horses comes to mind.
That kind of argument pulls at the heart strings but is not logically sound. If that were truly our standard then everything that was even slightly dangerous would be outlawed.But if it saves the life of just one child it's worth it.
Isn't that the standard rhetoric whenever a new anti firearm law is proposed?
lawn darts.That kind of argument pulls at the heart strings but is not logically sound. If that were truly our standard then everything that was even slightly dangerous would be outlawed.
Yeah. Don't try selling those at your yard sale.lawn darts.
Logic has little to do with it, if it did you would'nt be able to buy the very dangerous and highly addictive drug tobacco at your local gas station when you fill up your 150mph sports car.That kind of argument pulls at the heart strings but is not logically sound. If that were truly our standard then everything that was even slightly dangerous would be outlawed.
Fast cars aren’t dangerous. Idiots with fast cars are the danger.Logic has little to do with it, if it did you would'nt be able to buy the very dangerous and highly addictive drug tobacco at your local gas station when you fill up your 150mph sports car.
Which takes us back to the whole point of the thread. Can an idiot, AKA multiple DUI offender, be trusted with a car or should he be banned from owning one?Fast cars aren’t dangerous. Idiots with fast cars are the danger.
Tobacco certainly is addictive. And the long term use of it can be a health hazard to the smoker and to a lesser degree those that inhale significant amounts of second hand smoke. Federal and state laws have tackled the second hand smoke issue by pretty much banning smoking in public places and work places, so for the most part the only ones affected are those who voluntarily choose to smoke or be around the smoker. You don't kill a random stranger in a matter of seconds with a cigarette like you can do with a gun, or even a car. Logically, of course, people should choose not to smoke. So the issue here is different, and the analysis therefore changes. Instead of looking at preventing danger to others, the issue with tobacco is whether the government ought to act in a paternal role to protect the person from himself. In other words, should the smoker have the right to take that risk if he or she wants to do that? In a free society, I say if he/she wants to take that risk of future health problems knowing what they are (and the risks are printed on the packages) he or she should have the right to do that, so long as he/she also pays the higher health insurance premiums to cover the higher health care costs that smokers are likely to incur.Logic has little to do with it, if it did you would'nt be able to buy the very dangerous and highly addictive drug tobacco at your local gas station when you fill up your 150mph sports car.
Logically it is not owning the car that poses the risk. The risk is in the person driving the car. After two or three DUI certainly the person ought to banned from driving a car for a significant period of time. That's done by taking away the license. I don't advocate true lifetime prohibition on driving, however, because people do have the capacity to change and if they do they ought to have the opportunity to drive again. Especially when driving is still so central to life in many parts of this country.Which takes us back to the whole point of the thread. Can an idiot, AKA multiple DUI offender, be trusted with a car or should he be banned from owning one?
What if he is only chauffeured? Should he be barred from owning his own means of transportation?Which takes us back to the whole point of the thread. Can an idiot, AKA multiple DUI offender, be trusted with a car or should he be banned from owning one?
So let's take this a little further and ask why tobacco is still legal when it should be a Schedule I or Schedule 2 drug.Tobacco certainly is addictive. And the long term use of it can be a health hazard to the smoker and to a lesser degree those that inhale significant amounts of second hand smoke. Federal and state laws have tackled the second hand smoke issue by pretty much banning smoking in public places and work places, so for the most part the only ones affected are those who voluntarily choose to smoke or be around the smoker. You don't kill a random stranger in a matter of seconds with a cigarette like you can do with a gun, or even a car. Logically, of course, people should choose not to smoke. So the issue here is different, and the analysis therefore changes. Instead of looking at preventing danger to others, the issue with tobacco is whether the government ought to act in a paternal role to protect the person from himself. In other words, should the smoker have the right to take that risk if he or she wants to do that? In a free society, I say if he/she wants to take that risk of future health problems knowing what they are (and the risks are printed on the packages) he or she should have the right to do that, so long as he/she also pays the higher health insurance premiums to cover the higher health care costs that smokers are likely to incur.
Yes, just like a felon cannot own a firearm, even if the felony has nothing to do with firearms. For example here in New Mexico passing a bad check is a felony.What if he is only chauffeured? Should he be barred from owning his own means of transportation?