Rigpig wrote:
Common sense wrote:
Yes you did, look.
Quote:
But when people do act in ways that really ought to be obvious to them as something they shouldn't be doing, they are a main cause of our legislative creep, where people take the piss acting in ways that are legal but highly undesirable, so we have to pass laws to be able to take action against them.
So what you seem to be saying is it doesn’t matter what the law is, if anyone amount of people are breaking it then that is all that is needed for the government to then leap into action and pass new legislative. There seems to be very little from you on now it effects the rest of the law abiding population, or how extreme the law goes, just as long as every person follows it zealously then that’s fine.
This doesn’t strike me as acting for the greater good of the people, infact it just went flying out of the window.
No, what he seems to be saying is that there is a
reason for the recent spate of new legislation addressing, say, perceived social ills. He doesn't necessarily appear to be advocating this strategy as such, mereyl offering a suggestion as to why it happens.
Exactly, my original point was that individual citizens with a particular attitude to their role in society are the problem. The email spammers, the eBay scammers, people in general who don't give a stuff about people's attempts to get them to behave in a reasonable manner and will try to find a way round anything that is put in place to attempt to prevent undesirable behaviour. I don't like having more and more legislation, but what else do you expect the people in power to do when faced with people who simply won't act in the way the rest of society wants them to? I would prefer it if everyone could behave reasonably and respect their fellow citizens.
But the other point that I still seem to be having difficulty getting across is the non-absolute nature of harm. Glider did understand the point, and attempted to describe a framework for viewing harm as an absolute, but to extend his thinking:
1: Physical pain. Yes, most actions that inflict physical pain on another person are illegal. Though it's all a bit confused - you can't punch someone with their consent, it's assault whether they consent or not. But you can coach an athlete and tell them to do things that will result in physical pain, and here the consent appears to make it okay. Or there are legal contact sports where pain is inflicted in a manner that would be illegal outside the sports. So it's not as clear cut as it might seem.
2: Emotional pain. Glider called this grief. I think my original description of it simply being an act that people don't like is adequate and not made incorrect by this. We're getting to the stage where even simple rudeness can be deemed anti-social behaviour. After all, a breach of the peace can be caused by simply causing another person to be "alarmed".
So we come back to who decides what constitutes harm? The answer surely has to be that it is our legislators who are empowered with this task. Once we say that each individual should be allowed to break any law they want, provided that individual believes no harm will be caused, you are on a very slippery slope. Most people on this forum might be happy to isolate the exception to obeying of speed limits. And perhaps red lights when an emergency vehicle is behind them. But perhaps on a burglar's forum, we might find a unanimous view that burglary doesn't harm anyone, because the homeowner can claim on their insurance. Mental anguish from being burgled - they'd probably think such people should stop moaning, that their complaints are ridiculous. Just like the people on this forum have no time for the 90 year old woman in a village who is too scared to cross the road because the speeding motorists think nobody is being harmed by their ignoring of a technical numerical speed limit.