LadyKate wrote:
Ladas: My position is a little bit of both.
Perhaps the guy couldn't afford it, but even if he could and he just didn't pay, I don't see how letting the dude's house burn down is ok.
You don't pay your car note, it gets reposessed. You don't pay your house note, it gets foreclosed on.....you don't pay $75, they let your house burn to the ground?
Yeah the dude should have paid the $75, but I really don't think its ok to just let his house burn because of it.
It interesting you would use those specific examples, considering it is exactly the line you are trying establish between responsibility and neglect that gets blurred by what you support.
Right now, there is a large contingency of politicians who think not paying your loans is not sufficient reason to lose your car/house. Its a continuation of the erosion of personal responsibility. Its no like this guy didn't know the consequences, wasn't aware of the risk and opted to ignore the need for this type of insurance (and this fire response fee is exactly that, a form of insurance).
Presumably, this particular individual was smart enough to weight the consequences against the rewards for action or lack of action, and made plans accordingly. Of course, I suspect that is not the case, but I'm not going to let this persons stupidity become the fault of others who were responsible, or have the burden of supporting his stupidity put upon those people.
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I also don't think the lawyer analogy fits either.
In what way? Both professions provide a service that is just as likely to be used to correct stupid behavior or assist with unusual situations, both professions are service based, both require specialized training, and both deal with circumstances that are generally considered "emergencies" only to the person in question, and both ideally provide a service to mitigate a bad situation getting much worse and potentially becoming a life altering event.
But, my comment about the lawyer was directly to RD and a rebuttal of his position that the professional has a moral obligation to assist regardless of compensation. It was a question about whether he practices what he preaches. Not that I don't agree with his comment that morality... however, instead of "should help", I think it would be "great if they did". My personal ethic says to be prepared and take responsibility for my own actions. If I get a in a bind and receive help, great, and when I can, I try to help others in a bind. But if I don't get help, I'm not going to blame others for the effects of my own decisions.
Unfortunately, there seems to be a general trend in society that professionals are always just that, professionals in their field, and as such, their time and expertise is expected at no cost, and they become liable for situations outside their control.... doctors, lawyers, architects, engineers, etc.