Padawanbater2
Well-Known Member
Do you believe the gov. should have the legal authority to enact and enforce seatbelt laws against American citizens by threat of fine? Why/why not?
Using a cost/benefit analysis, if it costs more to clean you up off the road after an accident without a helmet than it would benefit the society and taxpayers for you to wear one, how would letting people ride motorcycles without helmets and possibly be subject to the taxpayers expense be morally justifiable? You want to ride without a helmet because it makes you, personally, happy. But if you crash and die and have to be scooped up off the road, that's coming out of my pocket, so using a libertarian viewpoint that the government should be involved as least as possible, how do you reconcile those seemingly opposing viewpoints?We imposed helmet laws.
Well, people traveling in a bus are less likely to be involved in a traffic collision statistically, but what would your argument be if people were required to wear seat belts on bus' too?For safety and financial ramifications I understand why they do it but I think it's nonsense.
If the risk of one person not buckling up is such a problem than what's the difference with the 40 people unbuckled on the bus. Or 25 kids on a school bus? They don't have to buckle up.
The ultimate irony would be getting a seatbelt ticket from a cop on a motorcycle.
Well. To that I say, to save money just use a bucket truck. Seems like the procedure is what costs so much. Not the fate.Using a cost/benefit analysis, if it costs more to clean you up off the road after an accident without a helmet than it would benefit the society and taxpayers for you to wear one, how would letting people ride motorcycles without helmets and possibly be subject to the taxpayers expense be morally justifiable? You want to ride without a helmet because it makes you, personally, happy. But if you crash and die and have to be scooped up off the road, that's coming out of my pocket, so using a libertarian viewpoint that the government should be involved as least as possible, how do you reconcile those seemingly opposing viewpoints?
Well, people traveling in a bus are less likely to be involved in a traffic collision statistically, but what would your argument be if people were required to wear seat belts on bus' too?
For safety and financial ramifications I understand why they do it but I think it's nonsense.
If the risk of one person not buckling up is such a problem than what's the difference with the 40 people unbuckled on the bus. Or 25 kids on a school bus? They don't have to buckle up.
The ultimate irony would be getting a seatbelt ticket from a cop on a motorcycle.
should perhaps extend this seat belt law to alcohol and tobacco which cause more deaths than folks not wearing seat beltsDo you believe the gov. should have the legal authority to enact and enforce seatbelt laws against American citizens by threat of fine? Why/why not?
Using a cost/benefit analysis, if it costs more to clean you up off the road after an accident without a helmet than it would benefit the society and taxpayers for you to wear one, how would letting people ride motorcycles without helmets and possibly be subject to the taxpayers expense be morally justifiable? You want to ride without a helmet because it makes you, personally, happy. But if you crash and die and have to be scooped up off the road, that's coming out of my pocket, so using a libertarian viewpoint that the government should be involved as least as possible, how do you reconcile those seemingly opposing viewpoints?
Well, people traveling in a bus are less likely to be involved in a traffic collision statistically, but what would your argument be if people were required to wear seat belts on bus' too?
should perhaps extend this seat belt law to alcohol and tobacco which cause more deaths than folks not wearing seat belts
which is a bigger burden on the tax payer
people should also be banned from climbing mountains its completely unnecessary, they have all been climbed before
if people want to climb mountains they should pay for their own rescue services if they fall off, that is if they don't die
Because everyone makes money. From the farmers to the doctors struggling to pay off school loans. Imagine if you had a good paying job at a tobacco company. Would you feel guilty?Why are cigarettes still legal?
no no and no, actually.We banned X-large sodas.
We banned Super-Sized fries.
We banned a flag.
"sovereign" citizens like you are also against pedophilia laws.should perhaps extend this seat belt law to alcohol and tobacco which cause more deaths than folks not wearing seat belts
which is a bigger burden on the tax payer
people should also be banned from climbing mountains its completely unnecessary, they have all been climbed before
if people want to climb mountains they should pay for their own rescue services if they fall off, that is if they don't die
Who needs super size? Just get 2 large fries and be done with it. McDs fries are awesome.no no and no, actually.
Yes I would. If I had to make a living by participating in the predatory tobacco industry, I would feel very guilty.Because everyone makes money. From the farmers to the doctors struggling to pay off school loans. Imagine if you had a good paying job at a tobacco company. Would you feel guilty?