jtr1962 said:
I'm with you on most of what you wrote, especially the environmental regulations, although I don't think the government should treat health conditions bought about by poor lifestyle choices. If you get AIDS by indiscriminate sex or diabetes because you're 500 pounds and eat at McDonalds each day tough. Ditto if you're an alcoholic, smoker, or drug addict.
I have a fundamental agreement with this but it would be too difficult to legislate & enforce. Long-term smokers were raised on the belief that smoking was a health benefit so it's hard to tell people of that generation that their lung cancer isn't covered because smoking was bad for them .. they were told otherwise.
Now, for someone who started smoking int he past 20 years or so, I would tend to agree. But you will always find extenuating circumstances. And for legislating it, where do you cross the line? Any cigs ever and your not covered, anything more than a pack a day? 2 packs? Do people need to keep receipts? How do you prove it one way or the other?
I've no problem with 'sin taxes' as long as the funds could be used to treat the victims and promite the eventual demise of the unhealthy sin. Every year, cig taxes should go up a buck a pack. Use the funds to treat the patients. Maybe 25 cents a year for liquor -- or more for the types that tend to produces alcoholics and less for the types that don't. The reason for the graduating increase vs. a flat $10 a pack or something is to wean people off. Find their breaking point. Encourage them to reduce, then eliminate.
The harsh side of my personality says let the drug addicts kill themselves off; it's a long-term benefit to society. But that's not a very compassionate view. Maybe help them but at the price of rendering them infertile so they don't reproduce? That'd never fly, but what would? Legalize and tax it to death?
Another one is pregnancies while on public aid. Personally, I believe that reversable infertility (via Norplant or the new one they just released for men) should be a condition for granting public aid. The gov should help those in need as long as they aren't making the problem worse.
And we should damn well be providing job training and any other reasonable assistance to reduce reliance on the system. Welfare will always be needed, but it should only be for those in transition between jobs and not as a way of life. Those states that said 5 years of aid and that's all have the wrong idea as their programs, as far as I've heard, don't help people get what they need so they can get a job.
And I'm 100% against laws restricting people's actions because a few cause problems. You're right about bike messengers. I even wrote to my City Councilman and the Mayor that the solution was to ban bike messengering, not to ban bicycles from sidewalks. The problem with lawmakers today are the throw out the baby with the bathwater solutions to every problem.
Agreed. Although banning the messengers is a little drastic and would arguably put some people out of a job. Mandating a bike lane (shared if not exclusive) would probably do wonders to reduce the problems. Do they have those? Downtown Chicago doesn't to my knowledge.
The bathwater laws, so to speak, are all just pandering for attention. None of them ever mean anything and have little effect on reality. Ban cel phone use while driving? That's already covered by laws against distracted driving, reckless driving, unsafe driving habits (only 1 hand on the wheel), etc. Indiana had (dunno if it still has) a law banning wearing headphones while driving as people wouldn't be able to hear emergency vehicles. It came about when walkmen became popular, I think. But that too would have been covered by existing laws.
While I hate the Republican's stance on the environment the Democrats are no better. Eight years of Clinton-Gore gave us SUVs and more airline flights than ever.
So, what did the Clinton-Gore era do to aid the sales / development of SUVs? It seems to me this is a big business and societal move and not a political one. The automakers made and marketed SUVs to the environmentally-ignorant public. SUVs have been around since before then, BTW. My first father-in-law had a Trooper back in 85 or 86 (no logical reason for him to have it, BTW, just like most other truck-based SUVs).
I personally have little problem with the latest car-based 'crossovers'. Mileage is nearly the same as the car they're based on. Crossovers are the station wagons of this decade.
The mostly Democratic NYC Council recently banned smoking in most business establishments because of concern for air quality while they really should have banned everything except zero-emission vehicles from city limits since that's the larger problem.
It'll never happen.
Wonder why people are voting for third parties? It's because they're disgusted with the two main ones. I wish there were such a party as environmental libertarian. I'd vote for them in a heart beat.
The problem with that is you have to look at the full picture. Nader never wins because, while he's a strong consumer advocate, he has no knowledge/experience with economics (that I know of) and foreign policy. Currently, foreign policy is going to be needed bigtime by US leaders as they try to slowly repair the damage done to the US image by Bush.
As for the last election it was more than a little difficult to decide. Neither candidate was inspiring. Although in the end I went for Bush I could just as easily have gone for Gore. Perhaps if there had been more environmental legislation during the Clinton administration I might have been swayed. I liked Gore's environmental stance, I liked Bush's tax cuts. Too bad I couldn't merge candidates.
I abstained. But I couldn't have voted for Bush as I knew he'd do what he has so far done to f*** up the future of the country. Yes, the recession was going to happen regardless of who was in charge -- that's Wall Street's fault and not the politicos. Wall street never should have overvalued the companies the way they did on the late 90s. When a little dose of reality hit, the numbers came crashing down.
The tax cuts won't help anyone that matters (trickle down failed in the 80s and will fail again because it just doesn't work) and companies are still sending more and more jobs out of the US. The environment is worse off and so is the average citizen. Republicans talking about family values make me want to vomit. I can't think of one event, in my lifetime, that I've seen the Republican party do that I agree with with regard to bettering the lives of the average person. 3Rs in education? That's just lowering the LCD (and Riting and Rithmetic DON'T begin with R!) of the education system. Legislating morality makes me want to renounce my citizenship.
Enough of that! That was a fun little rant.
- Fushigi