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Originally posted by babybunnies
Driving laws are not a right, and therefore can be subject to change at any time.
Driving is a priveledge. In order to drive, you need to follow the rules of the road.
You voluntarily accept the rules of driving by getting a drivers' license, and if you don't like the rules, you can choose not to drive.
Originally posted by Zaanny
If I CHOOSE to not wear a seat belt while I am driving alone in my car
I CHOOSE to go through the windshield that I PAYED for.
I CHOOSE to land on the road that I PAYED for.
I CHOOSE to go to the hospital and use the insurance I PAYED for.
So leave me alone and let me live with my choices.
Originally posted by frazzle
Originally posted by babybunnies
Driving laws are not a right, and therefore can be subject to change at any time.
Driving is a priveledge. In order to drive, you need to follow the rules of the road.
You voluntarily accept the rules of driving by getting a drivers' license, and if you don't like the rules, you can choose not to drive.
A license grants permission to do that which would otherwise be illegal. Did you know that until several years ago it was perfectly legal for an unlicensed farm boy to drive his father's tractor down a paved highway? As far as I know they managed to follow the rules of the road without a scrap of paper in their pockets to keep them from going through the windshield. Oh, wait.
Licensing is a permission tax and you must follow a continually growing body of rules that further limit that permission or you'll be fined. Big time. They couldn't care less how you die, they just want your money before you croak and they want control over your every move until you do.
Originally posted by jacobe001
reply to post by Motorhead
In regards to your post, and a few other's where they lamblast the Op....
If people want to go through a windshield, or practice personal responsibility and buckle up, then that should be their freedom of choice.
If you want to bring in the costs incurred from their stupidity, then why stop there?
What about the costs incurred I have to pay through medical insurance, because of the foods people eat or their poor lifestyles etc.
Should the government step in, anytime, it is costing me and others money?
Originally posted by H1ght3chHippie
Your intellect should dictate your actions: For example wearing a seat belt when driving a vehicle.
I don't know if terms like "Medical insurance" ring any bell, no ?
So just because you think it's a good idea not to wear a seat belt while driving, I should be forced to pay more and more insurance fees each month because of the morons not wanting to wear a seat belt, thus suffering more severe ( and therewith costly ) injuries ?
Your OP reveals a lot about your state of mind. Please don't wear a seatbelt and drive against a tree. Win win situation for you and the whole society. Thank you.
licensing was instituted to protect people from other people....if you drive a car, a license means that someone else had actually checked to see if you know how to drive around others safely...if you are an electrician, a license means someone checked to see that you know enough so that you don't burn a house down, if you build a house, a license means you have knowledge on how to build it safely, so it does not collapse on the occupants...etc....
A license grants permission to do that which would otherwise be illegal.
In other words, a "license" is generally permission to engage in an activity which has the potential to cause others "harm" -- an unintentionally tortious, but otherwise illegal act because of its potential for "harm" (in 'whatever form'). And, yes...
Originally posted by jimmyx
then i guess you want the government to let people die
Originally posted by jimmyx
then i guess you want the government to let people die, if saving them costs you money...you can always move to a third-world country where that happens on a regular basis...sudan, and cambodia are 2 countries that you would be happy living in.
Originally posted by jacobe001
It seems to be an issue about saving lives vs freedom of choice, does it not?
Perhaps, you would agree that we should have let the British win during the civil war, because those that died for our freedoms, would have lived instead then. It would be more important had they lived, correct?
Originally posted by pendracon
reply to post by frazzle
I'm not sure what your point is, but the hippocratic oath is about practicing medicine ethically, not "without harm". When read in light of the rest of the original oath, "do no harm" clearly means "do no intentional harm" -- practicing medicine is afterall, in its nature, "doing harm", e.g.: puncturing with needles, cutting with scalpels, "treating" with pharmaceuticals, freezing with stethoscopes (I digress ). Modern doctors have plenty of laws reminding them that (like the rest of us), they, too, are prohibited from "doing (tortious) harm". This, however, does not eliminate one's potential for it, anymore than being "licensed" does so. A license does not guarantee competent action, but some licenses imply a demonstrated competence under normal circumstances.
Intoxicated, but licensed, drivers who kill others in collisions have, at some time, demonstrated the "prescribed" competence to be licensed, though at the time of collision they were certainly not acting competently ("ethically"?). This, however, is not quite the same since one does (should) not demonstrate their competence for a driver license while intoxicated. I think it's safe to presume that, were those drivers not intoxicated, they would not have intentionally rammed their vehicle into another. To be fair, when a doctor acts "unethically", its likely that only "one" person is being directly harmed, whereas for that driver...
Originally posted by AngryCymraeg
Originally posted by Zaanny
If I CHOOSE to not wear a seat belt while I am driving alone in my car
I CHOOSE to go through the windshield that I PAYED for.
I CHOOSE to land on the road that I PAYED for.
I CHOOSE to go to the hospital and use the insurance I PAYED for.
So leave me alone and let me live with my choices.
And if your choices lead to other people being injured or even killed?
Originally posted by jimmyx
Originally posted by Zaanny
If I CHOOSE to not wear a seat belt while I am driving alone in my car
I CHOOSE to go through the windshield that I PAYED for.
I CHOOSE to land on the road that I PAYED for.
I CHOOSE to go to the hospital and use the insurance I PAYED for.
So leave me alone and let me live with my choices.
fine...and if...any public money is used to cover the losses to you or anyone else you hurt or kill or property that is damaged, you and your family will be monetarily responsible for however long it takes in your lifetime and theirs.
What gives the federal government the right to dictate to us like that?
then you affirmed this ridiculous statement with ... caselaw.lp.findlaw.com...
In this case, Article I, Section 8, Clause 7 of the United States Constitution, also known as the "Postal clause". It's that which gives the government the power to maintain the US highway and interstate systems (though the commerce clause also has a lot to do with the latter), along with all the regulatory weight that comes with it. It's what your "road taxes" go towards (and why the "postal service" effectively funds itself) -- despite Warr-bama wanting you to believe it was really to help you build your business (*ahem*).
Originally posted by frazzle
Lessee
• 12,000 deaths per year due to unnecessary surgery
• 7000 deaths per year due to medication errors in hospitals
• 20,000 deaths per year due to other errors in hospitals
• 80,000 deaths per year due to infections in hospitals
• 106,000 deaths per year due to negative effects of drugs
www.health-care-reform.net...
But of course none of those deaths were intentional. Maybe that's why medical professionals are just licensed to practice medicine.
Now lets compare these totals (which are conservative) with annual US motor vehicle fatalities ~ oh wait, I can't even find the total, even for DUI. Now why on earth would those totals be so hard to find. Maybe you'll have more luck with it. (ETA I found the number, its about 34,000 per year.)
Ok, ok... if considering only "harm to a persons body" and looking at "injuries caused by" the activity then, according to this site, that number is much higher:
"On an average, there are more than 6 million car accidents on the roads of the US, annually.
More than 3 million people get injured due to car accidents, with more than 2 million of these injuries being permanent."
I don't know where their statistics come from but I see no reason to assume them false. So, where's the statistics for the number of accidental "injuries" caused by doctors? How do you qualify them? If by annual "malpractice suits", then the number does not go up very much from your death count, at least according to this report. Hmm, dead or permanently maimed... there's your choice. At least, when I visit my doctor (whom I personally know), I know the odds are more in favor of me leaving his office "unharmed". I can't say the same for whenever I get in my car to go somewhere, and remain under constant threat from the countless faceless others driving around in their vehicles.
I do, however, accept the fact that not everything in my life rests squarely within my own private domain and, therefore, I must remain cognizant of the fact that my actions could but must not negatively impact others -- or, in legal terminology, "know the laws that apply" to my actions, regardless of how inconvenient those laws may be or unlikely I am to act harmfully, in the first place.