High Treason, on 28 July 2020 - 01:31 AM, said:
Dude you don't fucking know me wahahhauhahfankenike (pukes on floor).
Yeah, nah, car drivers are total pussies, they smirk until you get off the bike, then they lock themselves in and try to hide under the steering wheel. They'll miss anyway because they're driving drunk, apparently. Kinda hard to catch a bike in a city, there's traffic and I can sail by it because filtering is legal here, there's literally nothing to stop me doing 40 along the edge of the opposing lane if the road is wide enough.
Cringe.
Forge, on 28 July 2020 - 05:29 AM, said:
>wants the government out of the driver harassment business
>refuses to make compromises to put the responsibility back on the driver
The responsibility remains on the driver. If you drive recklessly, you are breaking the law. If you kill someone, you have broken the law. It's simple.
R A D A Я, on 28 July 2020 - 05:39 AM, said:
While I agree with Jimmy on principle, I think some things are just a matter of culture. There's a good argument to be made that driver's licenses are a restriction on personal freedoms. But they're accepted as a way of life in every civilized country and they probably help make the roads safer. Probably.
It's not a good argument. I'd believe it was about safety if the government didn't use it as an opportunity to make money off of it.
You didn't need a license to drive a horse and carriage. The founders didn't make any provisions for restrictions on travel. Licenses are inherently unconstitutional. The government maintains that driving is a "privilege." From where does this power to arbitrate such a thing come from? Am I really supposed to believe the founders couldn't have imagined future methods of travel?
Forge, on 28 July 2020 - 06:19 AM, said:
i don't completely disagree with him
what i do disagree with is complaining about a problem, then automatically rejecting every possible solution short of burning the entire thing to the ground.
Might as well join the drum-circle at the portland courthouse
The problem is that the thing exists. Getting rid of it is the only solution.
I believe in law and order. The first step to law and order is making yourself lawful and orderly.
If everyone learned and understood Natural Law then the world would be a better place.
gemeaux333, on 28 July 2020 - 06:49 AM, said:
Universal healthcare is not perfect, but have at least the merit to allow everyone to get cured when he is sick
Alfie Evans.
gemeaux333, on 28 July 2020 - 06:49 AM, said:
for the good reason that everybody is human and dignity and security always comes first ... true life is about what you give, not what you get !
These are meaningless platitudes. In over half of the world you'd be lucky not to get grabbed by some criminal and have you penis chopped off and shoved in your mouth. The world is not a place of safety. Your sense of safety is privileged and misguided.
Danukem, on 28 July 2020 - 11:11 AM, said:
Also, you do realize that we have accepted all kinds of regulations and inconveniences that don't offer much protection, right? People put up token resistance at first, then they give in and accept it. That's why I half-joked that in 10 years you will be saying that the mask requirement is fine.
Accepting tyranny does not make it right.
ck3D, on 28 July 2020 - 01:32 PM, said:
Which is equally important, isn't it?
Why is other people's health my responsibility. If you're so sickly that you cannot go into public places unless you're making everyone else's lives less, you're better off dead.
gemeaux333, on 28 July 2020 - 02:41 PM, said:
Anyway Insurances are supposed to help anyone paying for them
No it's not. Insurance companies are running a business. You're just dumb enough to fall for their marketing.
Hendricks266, on 28 July 2020 - 02:42 PM, said:
Would you run a car without an oil filter?
I'm sure a woman has done this.