Khross wrote:
Because it's always cheaper to bury someone than treat chronic, slow killing disease? Because the more smokers that die very visceral and observable deaths, the less other people will engage in that behavior?
Well, I for one am not interested in deciding to simply let people die because it's cheaper. You may feel that's a good place to sit, ethically, morally, and/or politically. Me, not so much. It's always easier to wish that death on the amorphous "other", who is easily constructed as the foolish, lazy person without value who deserves to die. But that person is a citizen just like anyone else. They are also a human being.
Khross wrote:
So, because we've already failed to properly regulate smoking, we must regulate more?
So, every time someone fails at something, they should never try to get it right? I don't know about you, but when I attempt something, and fail, I attempt it again, and I attempt to do it better than before. First, we don't know if our current regulation of tobacco has failed. In fact, there's lots of evidence that smoking bans are very successful. However, let's assume all efforts have failed. That does not mean it's a bad idea to regulate tobacco. It only means we haven't found the best way to do it.
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The solution to failed government intrusion is more intrusion?
Again, your argument presumes failure, which is not clear. In fact, it's probably simply wrong. Regulation efforts combined with public education efforts, the legal settlements with tobacco companies, etc, are all having a profound effect on smoking rates, which translates over time to a profound effect on cancer rates. However, even if you are correct, you are constructing a straw man. No one argued that simply *more* intrusion was a solution. My position is that the correct regulation, the most efficient and effective, is a solution.
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Humanity has little to do with treating smokers for self-inflicted lung disease. Of course, I'm talking about allowing the smoker to suffer the consequences of their actions, while you're simultaneously saying we should regulate smoking and do everything we can do to treat the smoker for the damage they've caused? That's a bit of a Catch-22, Montegue.
No it isn't. Plenty of countries treat addiction like public health problems, and do so with great success. If you become addicted to a substance in many countries, they treat you for your addiction. This costs less in the long run, and is significantly more humane. Again, we do this because even smokers are
human beings.
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You complain about the damage smokers cause other people, but you insist on mandatory intervening health care because "we're human beings"? Isn't that a bit problematic? Instead of letting a "poison" source remove itself from the environment, we must preserve it to continue producing poison?
What about the people who are poisoned by the source? Where do their rights come into play?
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You're being inconsistent.
No, I am not.
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I really don't think you quite understand the situation. I'm not talking about local ordinances or the few state level bans on smoking in "open to the public" locations. I'm talking about the whole FSC Regulation. I'm talking about multi-tiered taxation that redirects funds all over the place. I'm talking about nearly every state in the nation with multiple "cigarette law suit" settlements misspending the money and mishandling the trusts.
Which has nothing to do with the viability of regulation, and everything to do with holding individuals accountable for their choices in government, via the vote.
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I'm talking about a government that, as Michael points out, simultaneously subsidizes the production and then taxes the targeted consumer segment.
I certainly agree that our government should not be subsidizing the tobacco industry.
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1. What's the naturally occurring homeostatic population point for Human Beings? How many human beings past that point are we?
2. How many human beings need to remove from the population to ensure that we are within the normal and safe population limits for our species with regard to the ecosystem?
Both of these questions are entirely irrelevant. We aren't going to go about killing untold millions. It's not even worth mentioning. We can, however, regulate the kinds of pollutants our industrial society creates. This is a more reasonable, rational approach.
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3. The EPA did in fact declare CO2 a poison/pollutant.
So now it's a poison/pollutant? First it was just a poison? Which is it?
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1. How should we construct the rights of children? What rights do they possess within the social contract before the age of majority? Who is the executor of their rights?
So, we finally agree that we construct rights, and that they aren't an inherent quality of man, then?
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2. What rights do parents possess? What obligations do they possess with regard to their children? What are the parental responsibilities?
Also great questions, and absolutely key in this discussion.
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As a general rule, the legal system in the United States holds that the parents are both holder and executor of the child's rights until the age of majority. In extreme cases, generally murder or some other violent crime, children are emancipated and awarded the full battery of rights and responsibilities of any citizen for the sole purpose of standing trial. However, for the most part, there's really no mechanism for making this determination except an arbitrary age of majority.
That's not entirely accurate. According to US Law, children are citizens (due to the equal protection clause in the 14th amendment). For example, children have the same rights to legal due process as an adult. They have the right to free speech, the right to not incriminate themselves, etc.
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So, in all probability, as executor of child's rights, the parents can technically make the decision to smoke around their children in current U.S. society.
Yes, currently, parents can smoke around their children. However, we would all object to a parent feeding their child Arsenic in their chocolate milk. But for some reason, we aren't willing to go after a parent who blows Arsenic into the air their child is breathing. I honestly think you are making the issue much more complicated than it is.
Are parents allowed to poison their child? No. I don't think any reasonable reading of the law would uphold a paren't right to lace their children's food with arsenic.
Is cigarette smoke a poison? Yes. By any rational study of the definition of a pioson, and the chemicals in second hand smoke, cigarette smoke is definitely a poison.
Therefore, we can conclude that smoking around your kids is really no different than lacing their food with arsenic, and that it would be reasonable to treat it in the same light.