Acknowledged - I have trouble with the categorical imperative.You're interpreting Kant's words very literally.
Would the world be a better place if everybody sat in the front of the bus? Would the world be a better place if everyone became an engineer, or a farmer, or a president?
But Rosa Parks wasn't demanding the right to sit in front of the bus. She was demanding the right to sit in any vacant seat she chose. If a bus is full, you can't sit in the front, or in the back, or anywhere at all. And Rosa Parks wasn't demanding the right to sit whether or not there were seats available.
But the U.S. is a better place because she has the same right as anyone else to any vacant seat.
And the U.S. is a better place because everyone has the right to become an engineer, or a farmer, or a president.
Now, let's get back to the question I asked: Would Manassas be a better place if everyone had the right to put up a 40-foot sign in their yard? Would you want to live there?
