Ienan wrote:
Aizle wrote:
Ladas wrote:
Or... you know, continue that line of thinking and make people responsible for their own personal choices, and the health care risks that follow.
If that were remotely possible, then I might agree with you. However, it's not. History has shown that people as a whole are not capable of accepting responsibility for their actions. And that society as a whole is not capable of forcing them to take responsibility. So unfortunately that leaves us with society having to try and mitigate and manage the risk to acceptable levels.
Really? Based on what Aizle? I think people are incredibly responsible as a whole when they see the consequences of their poor decisions on a regular basis. When people cease to be responsible is when safety nets are created so they don't need to suffer the consequences of those unfortunate circumstances. America pre-21st century worked pretty darn well. And people were largely responsible for their own decisions. A lot of private charity (both organized and unorganized) existed when people fell on hard times. This only started to change around the time of the World War I and the Great Depression.
I said based on what. Based on history. There are countless examples of both people not being responsible, and perhaps more importantly, not being held accountable for their actions. Individuals certainly can be incredibly responsible. However, I believe that if you look at the larger public as a whole, you can see that people (vs a person) are not overly responsible, unless someone or something is forcing them to look at the big picture.
I also believe you have a romanticized view of how good things were in the past. And just as a point of clarification, the Great Depression was in the first 1/3 of the 21st century, so did you really mean pre-20th century?
Ienan wrote:
I also find it funny that you think cigars are okay, but not cigarettes. Who are you to determine that? Cigars are made of tobacco and it has nicotine in it. In fact, I believe there's higher levels. Who are you to say one is better but not the other? Cheap liquor exists and so does expensive liquor. Let people decide what they want. I'm going to guess you smoke cigars or have on ocassion. So it really comes down to the fact that you don't want cigars taxed because it would directly affect you. So you need to justify the decision. Mind you, I made a gigantic assumption, but one that I think is rooted in sound logic at least.
I am entitled to my opinion, just like everyone else, so that's who I am to determine that. You are correct that cigars share many qualities with cigarettes. For me, however, the key difference is intent and purpose. Cigarettes are not designed to be enjoyed. They are designed to get people addicted and to buy more cigarettes. Cigars are designed to be enjoyed. Savored.
I don't mind cigars being taxed. I said I think they don't deserve the same level of taxation as cigarettes. That is largely due to the fact that they don't present the same level of economic and health burden on society.