..PAUL4PRES..
Member
- Joined
- Dec 10, 2007
- Messages
- 447
What do you think?
I don't care what people consider it, it IS unconstitutional.
If you're the type who thinks that English words printed on paper don't mean what they objectively mean, then you're probably not going to appeal to constitutionality in the first place.
If you are the type who thinks that words have meanings, then there's no defense for the constitutionality of the act.
I agree but how should it be handled in a Libertarian society? Would it even be addressed?
I agree but how should it be handled in a Libertarian society? Would it even be addressed?
Let endangered species enjoy the same kind of protection for their posterity that the free market affords to cows, chickens, and other such animals that will never go extinct precisely because it is profitable and legal to sell products that come from them.
For example, the rhinoceros would not be endangered today if it were legal to sell rhinoceros horn. Then entrepreneurs in search of profit would have incentive to use methods of taking bits of their horns at a time and keeping the species alive, rather than sneaking around and killing rhinos out in the middle of nowhere to cut their whole horns off to sell on black markets.
This is exactly why the American Buffalo is no longer endangered.
Agree for the most part, BUT --
For all we know, the saliva of the wizened moonbat may hold the cure for AIDS; which thing won't be discovered until 2015, but if it goes extinct in 2012 prior to the discovery of a commercial interest, we will have lost the cure for AIDS.
That might be true. But by the same token, it might not.
On the other hand, we will never exhaust the pool of animal and plant based substances to research among the species that do remain available to us, regardless of however many go extinct. And since we don't know which species will pay off, then we really can't do any better than simply to do however much research we can within the unexhaustible pool of available species, rather than picking winners by assigning certain endangered species a special status of deserving protection that always seems to turn out to be pretty costly to us in the present in hope of a future payoff.
Given the information now available, which is the only information we can use in making a decision about whether to enact a law today, we really can't say that finding a cure for AIDS or anything else will be more likely in the scenario where we do protect endangered species than in the scenario where we don't. But we can say with 100% certainty that there will be costs involved in enacting that law that will materialize in ways that will be harmful to people. Rerouting roads, for example, will result in greater distances traveled, more traffic accidents, more fuel consumed, and rising costs for all things transported on those roads (including food and medicine). The added burden of preventing other kinds of things from being built where they otherwise would have been built will similarly result in costs passed on to the public in a wide variety of ways that, when looked at in the aggregate, include a certain decrease in the availability of things we consider important for life.
Also, between all that would go on in the process of legislators writing those laws (or constitutional amendments) and the bureaucrats enforcing them, I'm pretty skeptical of their ability to end up doing a very good job of accomplishing what they're supposed to, while I'm quite certain that they would accomplish a lot of bad things they're not supposed to. If any government entity could do a good job at something like this, it would be only the most local one, like at the level of the city or county, where the particular species about which the legislators and bureaucrats would be concerned would be one they know personally within the rather limited range of kinds of ecosystems in their area. I'm even skeptical of that, but to push the process out farther to a whole state or much less the federal government (with or without a constitutional amendment), I can't conceive of doing more good than harm.
And even if kept very locally, I have to wonder how much we can really know about the resilience of any given species, and how the ecosystem in question would adapt in one scenario (the one where they enact protections), as opposed to how it would adapt in another (the one where they don't). I don't think we can really predict that or even know all the variables involved. I do know that when legislators involve themselves in it they'll inevitably concentrate on that which is seen, and ignore that which is unseen. And they'll be guided in that by well-intentioned advocates for protecting a species whose beliefs about the inability of that species to survive will turn out to be myths (the spotted owl is a great example of that).
Let endangered species enjoy the same kind of protection for their posterity that the free market affords to cows, chickens, and other such animals that will never go extinct precisely because it is profitable and legal to sell products that come from them.
For example, the rhinoceros would not be endangered today if it were legal to sell rhinoceros horn. Then entrepreneurs in search of profit would have incentive to use methods of taking bits of their horns at a time and keeping the species alive, rather than sneaking around and killing rhinos out in the middle of nowhere to cut their whole horns off to sell on black markets.
This is exactly why the American Buffalo is no longer endangered.
In a libertarian society, foundations would form to protect endangered species. People would donate money and volunteer to assist these foundations in their endeavors.
Animals have zero rights. They are protected through property rights. When you have landowners nothing is universal. Hunting is never universal. So animals are protected. And they always have been, until government gets involved
BenIsForRon said:You know most animals don't reside on a specific piece of property their entire lives. If a bird looks for food on your property, but has a nest in a tree on anothers property, you can't say that you own the bird.
Besides, animals do have rights, especially the right to not be forced into extinction. Hence, the environmental movement pressured congress to write the ESA in the 70's.
As for the constitutionality, many say it is covered under the commerce clause. Of course, the commerce clause is a vague part of the constitution, but it is there. I'd like to see some scholarly opinions on whether it is or not. That said, either way we should have an amendment to strengthen the legitimacy of the ESA.
You're totally wrong here. Some animals simply don't have as much economic potential as a cow. Therefore, you're saying that animals without an economic use should go extinct, or that there's nothing we can do to stop them from going extinct.
I think people would probably be happier if we had more buffalo around.
I think people would probably be happier if we had more buffalo around. A buffalo is larger has more tasty meat than a cow and be hybridized into a smaller more manageable stock as well. From what I understand they have a more compatible grazing behavior for maintaining your land as well. Instead we got fat stationary gas bags for McDonalds.