Paul_1966 wrote:
I read them, but your arguments are inconsistent. You wouldn't support a law enforcing a healthy diet, immunizations, surgery etc. even if everything pointed toward such compulsion being in the best interests of both the person concerned and society as a whole, yet you do support belt laws. It's no good trying to excuse this inconsistency with claims that belts are somehow "a different matter" which bear no comparison.
Why do you assume my stance in other examples – how contemptuous! Please desist.
How many times!
Sometimes it’s nice to eat junk – it’s one of life’s pleasures. There is still something to be gained from it at some level, even if only at an emotional one; the same cannot be said for not belting up.
Surgery can substantially take away from the emotional character of a person.
Immunisations are a genuine inconvenience and can cause discomfort.
Please stop with these obviously flawed comparisons.
Paul_1966 wrote:
Except for those people who might be injured or killed because they were restrained. Getting killed is pretty inconvenient in my book. You have not tried to deny that this can happen in some cases, however small a proportion they may be of the total number of accidents.
That’s a specious argument (and not at all what I was talking about, see the next part below).
I can reverse that by saying that it is even more inconvenient to not belt up because (consensus accepts that) occupants are more likely to suffer injury or death because they were not restrained.
Paul_1966 wrote:
Whether you like it or not, some people simply do find it uncomfortable to have a strap pulling and rubbing across their chest and shoulder, just as some people find it uncomfortable to wear heavy boots or tight fitting underwear. If you can't see that, I really don't know how else to explain it.
How much/often can a seatbelt rub when one is properly restrained? Do people not wear clothes when driving? So how is that noticeably uncomfortable?
You cannot explain how or why or where it is uncomfortable. Also, you make no mention on the supposed restrictiveness. I think we can leave those points there.
Paul_1966 wrote:
Quote:
Have you ceased arguing the supposed dangers?

Now you're joking, surely? If I make a post about people finding belts uncomfortable you ask if I've stopped arguing about potential dangers. If I make a comment about the latter, I'm asked if I've stopped arguing about the former.
Well have you?
Paul_1966 wrote:
So again, I ask you a straight question: If everybody else is forced to pay for your (hypothetical) utterly needless risk in smoking 100 cigarattes a day, eating a dozen double-whopper-cheeseburgers every day, and plunging naked into a freezing cold lake for a swim every night, would you support laws against doing all those things?
Your comparisons are becoming tedious, especially as I’ve answered these types of examples already:
Smokers on average subsidise their care via the whopping duty they pay.
People who insist on ‘eating a dozen double-whopper-cheeseburgers every day’ are few and far between; their numbers are not great enough to warrant the effort of a policy change and subsequent enforcement.
Many people get a mental and physical stimulation out of immersing themselves in freezing water – they enjoy it. I’ve often used saunas, buried deep in the German alps, during winter – those guys are crazy, yet there seems to be no problem.
Paul_1966 wrote:
If you see somebody driving along without a belt, you don't actually know that he's breaking the law. He may have a medical exemption. The cop doesn't know that until he has stopped the vehicle and the certificate has been produced.
ANPR!
(granted the databases aren’t great but police won’t act at all on those who do belt up, so that problem is substantially reduced).