GE Morton wrote: ↑November 23rd, 2022, 11:45 amThe short answer is we the people. However, just like parent-child relationships, public safety plays a more significant role. A such, among other things, laws are there to protect citizens and/or help those who cannot help themselves. So, in the case of complete ignorance or unfair or unjust practices (unjust or unconscionable enrichment), those laws are a delicate balance between authoritarianism and public safety.chewybrian wrote: ↑November 23rd, 2022, 5:16 amYes, free speech means that some people will utter false claims, either for some self-serving reason or just because they're ignorant, and others will believe them. It is YOUR job to sort the fact from the fiction --- not the government's. If you eschew COVID vaccines because you've been persuaded they are ineffective or harmful and die from COVID, it is YOUR fault, no one else's. Others have no obligation to do your thinking for you.
This is just all wrong. For example, Covid is not a "narrative". We lost as many people to covid as we lost in all our wars combined. Some people realized that they could make money by lying about vaccines. Fear sells. They couldn't care less if they get thousands killed if they make a profit. Vaccines save lives and our top priority was, correctly, getting as many people vaccinated as quickly as possible. Speech has consequences.
We should be wary of limiting speech and accept some collateral damage from allowing people speak their minds, but there must be some limits.Ah. And who is to define and impose those limits --- Joe Biden? Donald Trump?
Think of it like antitrust laws and price fixing. Those laws, while seemingly authoritarian, protect those who are the incent victims of power and greed. Just one reason we pay taxes is for protectionism. But again, (relative to supply and demand), a moderate balance is the virtuous path which generally leads to equality.
Take for instance the cost of steel. When Trump put tariffs on imports, the US manufactures saw an opportunity to raise prices because of less competition. Similar to some aspects of oil. The current economic recovery spurred greed. While there should be no laws that limit profits, there are those said price fixing antitrust laws to encourage competition and transparency. Additionally, laws that police unsafe products and services are there to protect people/public safety. Like people who are unaware of such proprietary danger(s) about consumption of a particular product or service, including ignorant people like us.
So unfortunately, or fortunately, we pay taxes to police the bad people from taking advantage of people who sometimes have no control over those economic circumstances or otherwise. We rely on Government to do certain things. And we pay a fee for that. Free enterprise is good, but the few entrepreneurs that only care about the money at the expense of endangering the safety of others, should face the consequences. In other words, like public transportation laws, inspections of roads and bridges are not only there for both long term maintenance and public safety, but also to protect citizens from shady contractors who don't build the stuff right for a quick profit. What do you say to the family that unknowingly crosses a bad bridge that fails, don't drive across it? How would they know? Or a family that eats something that kills them?
Now if you don't behave GE, Mama's going to put you back in time-out! Maybe, just put down the crack pipe and you'll think more clearly!
― Albert Einstein