fatjohn
Member
- Joined
- Jan 17, 2008
- Messages
- 2,285
Hello, this might be a weird question on such a libertarian minded forum but hear me out.
During the writing of an essay I came up with the following idea.
A law as using a helmet on a motorcycle is justified because
A) it decreases the chance of you getting hurt so costing less to society
B) the life of an individual is valuable to the individual and to society. So a normal individual will protect its life due to the great benefit that stems from this action (the individual can live on) and since that his/her life is also valuable to society, society gives the individual an extra incentive to protect it.
answer on A: You are the one paying whether or not via insurance. If the government intervenes due to subsidizing health care then there is validity in the claim to punish such crimes, but the government has a choice in creating this validity.
answer on both: “One is innocent until proven guilty” With that in mind, why would actions (like not using a helmet) that might give a higher probability of future crimes (like taking away your life and future accomplishments from society) then be viewed as illegal?
Any more thoughts on the B argument?
During the writing of an essay I came up with the following idea.
A law as using a helmet on a motorcycle is justified because
A) it decreases the chance of you getting hurt so costing less to society
B) the life of an individual is valuable to the individual and to society. So a normal individual will protect its life due to the great benefit that stems from this action (the individual can live on) and since that his/her life is also valuable to society, society gives the individual an extra incentive to protect it.
answer on A: You are the one paying whether or not via insurance. If the government intervenes due to subsidizing health care then there is validity in the claim to punish such crimes, but the government has a choice in creating this validity.
answer on both: “One is innocent until proven guilty” With that in mind, why would actions (like not using a helmet) that might give a higher probability of future crimes (like taking away your life and future accomplishments from society) then be viewed as illegal?
Any more thoughts on the B argument?
