Stathol wrote:
There's nothing sophomoric about it if you believe it is the government which has an obligation to justify itself to the governed rater than the other way around. What specifically about the combination of two legal activities creates an overriding public interest where none previously existed? And, no, "well it's just different" is not a valid answer.
The need of the government to justify itself to the governed is not relevant here. There is hardly any major public demand that it be legal to blackmail people. The need of the government to justify itself, furthermore, does not translate to someone who thinks a particular prohibition is a good idea needing to justify it to those that for whatever reason want to take issue with it. "The governed" are not a unified group in agreement with one another.
Quote:
Sometimes there is a rational justification in these sorts of situations. For instance, drinking is legal, driving is legal. Why is drinking and driving illegal? Though the answer might seem "obvious", it's important that we ask and receive an answer to it -- most importantly because law without justification is simply tyranny. Beyond that, there are many ways and degrees to which these actions can be combined. If the government cannot elucidate what exactly the public interest is, it cannot determine the proper conditions for the law.
The government elucidates exactly what it thinks the public interest is according to the views of those that happen to be in office at the time. The public, in turn, is responsible for electing those people in the first place.
Law "without justification" is not "tyranny" at all. Justification to whom, exactly? To the voters? If the voters feel the law is unjustified, they are welcome to demnd it be changed, or to elect new representatives who will change it in the future.
Furthermore, Carlin's "why isn't selling **** legal?" is, indeed, sophomoric. The government of any of the 49 states where it is not obligated to explain itself as to why prostitution is illegal. It's illegal because the voters there either want it that way, or are unconcerned enough with the issue that they have not demanded change in the law. Just because someone asks a "Gotcha" rhetorical question that they would not be likely to actually accept any answer to anyhow does not mean the government has no justification for the law.