I consider that both foolish and irresponsible at best; negligent at worst. If your child was molested by the VCP-reading boyfriend (and I'm by no means suggesting that that's certain, and I'm also clarifying that the molestation could have absolutely nothing in reality to do with his reading VCP (of course, we'll never know for sure!)) and the Authorities discovered that you'd consciously elected to allow him to co-babysit your child, what would your response be if challenged?
No, I wouldn't. Sorry. It would be the responsibility of the boyfriend and maybe the girl (if she decided to help him). As I stated, I'm hiring the girl, not the guy. I would have (and have had) strict policy of no visitors.
If my child got molested because the boyfriend came over and did it, it wouldn't be my fault. Let me make it clear, I would feel horrible but I wouldn't be responsible.
Would it be:
If so, you would deserve to be indicted for failing to adequately
care for a minor in your charge, and rightly so. You clearly haven't thought this through properly, preferring to defend an untennable principle through sheer dogmatism. Not to worry, though - we all KNOW what the real answer is, if push came to shove!
No, we don't. You are ignoring the possibility of hiring the girl with the football player boyfriend. What if HE bust his way into the house and beat up his girl and my kid, by your logic, would I be responsible then too?
What if the boyfriend didn't show up at all the
girl herself molested my child regardless of which boyfriend she had? Would I be responsible then?
See, no matter what is said, one can come up with a lose-lose situation. The "boyfriend reads VCP" is a red herring. I could hire anyone and their spouse/significant other/parent/son could do all sorts of things. How can I be held responsible for someone elses friend's actions?
I'm sorry, and I don't mean this as a dig, but if you are saying that I shouldn't hire the girl with the boyfriend who uses VCP because he
could show up and molest my child is exactly the same argument I hear from Christians who say to me "you should become Christian because when you die you
could be wrong and go to hell."
It's exactly the same mentality. I refuse to fall for that fallacy.
I'm dodging it because it's irrelevant.
I'm glad you admit to dodging it.

However, it is NOT irrelevant.
Why? When you write about "government" what and who do you think you're referring to? You're referring to people. People who, in all likelihood, are no different from RandFan, in principle. What makes you think that lawmakers do, or should, think differently from everybody else? Are they some form of special breed? I have no doubt that many lawmakers would offer exactly the same ill-considered response as RandFan has if faced with the same "dilemma". Do you think that it's reasonable to expect that they should somehow divorce their humanistic thoughts from their decision-making process? Hell - why don't we just develop some appropriately complex algorithms and have a couple of laptops write laws for us?
Yes. I DO expect them to go beyond irrationality and knee-jerk fear. Yes, I DO expect them to divorce their humanistic thoughts from their decision making process and actually see all sides of the coin. Yes, I DO expect them see the rights of all people, know that one's rights doesn't mean taking another's rights away, the concept of equality, the concept of innocent until proven guilt, the concept of what it means to live without fear.
Yes. I do. I can. It's what the country was based upon.
No, they are not a "breed apart", however, they should be able to step up to the plate and see the difference between a curve ball and slider. Even RandFan said he was being irrational, and he has every right to be but he also stated that the government should not be irrational and use fear and the lawmakers should be very aware of what is irrational and not knee jerk a quick solution. It's alright to do that as an individual, it's your right. But as an elected official, someone who is trying to keep everyone's rights healthy and equal, you are in a position that a bunch of people trust you to do the job.
Just like someone hires me to go onstage and entertain a whole bunch of people. A lot of people can't do what I do, but I am going to do what I am trusted and paid to do, otherwise, I don't keep my job.
In fact, I voted for Obama partly because he didn't campaign "fear this, fear that". McCain did to some degree, Palin certainly did. In the past eight years with George Bush we were governed by fear. It was the lowest time in America's recent history in my opinion.
Laws are designed to protect society. If society is fearful of something that can be assuaged by law, then hell, yes, of course it should be addressed by law. Why on earth do you think murder is illegal?
Wrong. Laws are designed to protect human rights. I explained this before. Murder is illegal because when Person A kills Person B, Person A has removed Person B's rights (in fact, all of his rights) permanently. Gotta see it from that angle. It may sound unemotional, but the government (the US government anyway) isn't interested in emotion (or shouldn't be) but interested in keeping people's individual freedoms and rights in check so that they do not interfere with other people's individual freedoms and rights.
Yes, I'll admit our government doesn't always succeed and there are some sticky points that come up, but the philosophy I've stated is what our government is based upon.
I don't think you mean how this literally reads.
Oh yes I do.
If you're equating introducing laws to assuage society's fear (irrational or otherwise) with positively inciting fear in society (clearly not irrational!) as a means to introduce an otherwise unjustified law, I think you've confused yourself slightly. If not, perhaps you could contextualize your question.
Any government who uses fear to rule it's people, whether it's to appease or not, is not a good government.
I cannot make it any clearer than that.
Notwithstanding that I'm intrigued to learn what such warnings actually say(!), as I wrote above, laws are designed to protect society. If there's a net benefit to society in having perspiring people instead of scared people and a law would achieve that then yes, fans should be made illegal. It's no different, in principle, to recognizing the net benefit to society in having an educated populace, hence making schooling compulsory (hey - perhaps I should suggest that to strengthen my argument - compulsory schooling for children? No - I'll just get shot down in flames -it's surely a breach of the fundamental right not to educate your kids!). I would, however, ascribe to the idea of exhausting all other appropriate means to address the issue first, though, like education, for example!
Wiki is our friend:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fan_death
The Korea Consumer Protection Board (KCPB), a South Korean government-funded public agency, issued a consumer safety alert in 2006 warning that "asphyxiation from electric fans and air conditioners" was among South Korea's five most common seasonal summer accidents or injuries, according to data they collected.[11] Also included among the five hazards were air conditioner explosions and sanitation issues, including food poisoning and opportunistic pathogens harbored in air conditioners. The KCPB actually published the following:
If bodies are exposed to electric fans or air conditioners for too long, it causes [the] bodies to lose water and [causes] hypothermia. If directly in contact with [air current from] a fan, this could lead to death from [an] increase of carbon dioxide saturation concentration [sic] and decrease of oxygen concentration. The risks are higher for the elderly and patients with respiratory problems. From 2003 [to] 2005, a total of 20 cases were reported through the CISS involving asphyxiations caused by leaving electric fans and air conditioners on while sleeping. To prevent asphyxiation, timers should be set, wind direction should be rotated and doors should be left open.
You claim to be a skeptic and a critical thinker. Can you, in all conscious as someone who is a critical thinker believe that it's okay to spread a lie to keep people in line? Keep people ignorant, keep them suspicious of all others, keep them in fear for their own good?
I'm sorry to say this. That to me is profoundly scary thinking.
Aaaaaand by the way, it is NOT mandatory to have your children go to school. Many people choose home-schooling. In fact, my ex-wife chose to home-school my son. Believe it or not, I do not agree with her decision, but as the non-custodial parent, she had the final choice.
But it worked out. The good news is that my son is going back to school next year for his first year in a high school with a specialty in marine studies (which he is very enthusiastic about). He has already taken the aptitude grade equivalency test to get in a passed with flying colors.
I'm sorry. I'm very proud of my son.
