Right, and that's all painfully obvious. Let's flip it the other way, though, which is why this thread has me perplexed.
Should you be *forced* to take the girl aboard?
if a person as a right to life, yes.
Should the slim chance that you'd be an asshole enough to kick her off of the boat and let her drown be reason enough to make it illegal to pass her by?
yes, what else are laws for, if not for the extreme scenarios which people can't predict?
If that's true, then how "close" is close enough to render you responsible for attempting to aid her?
Humanly possible and without the same detriment or risk to yourself, at least.
Getting your shirt wet, and breaking a boat, is not the same as risking her life.
Breaking your leg, losing jewelry you might have on the boat, could be arguable.
How far does this aid go? Who decides, and who enforces it?
the same people who decide how much theft is punishable.
the same people who decide what's manslaughter vs murder.
the same people who decide what's starving and starving to death.
the same people who decide what's vegetative state vs actually dead.
Does the baby being on your doorstep now mean you are responsible for its well-being *LEGALLY*, which means if you do not do a certain amount to ensure its continued survival and health, you might be held liable?
Good question, see what happens when you believe in "right to life"?
What if you're on vacation and the baby dies there because no one ever got to it? Your fault?
To those who voted that it should be illegal, I am wondering how you would phrase the law?
Here's an old ruling, "duty to rescue"
http://philosophy.wisc.edu/hunt/duty2res.htm