On 4/2/09, Joshua A. Andler wrote: > On Thu, 2009-04-02 at 10:55 -0700, Josef Lowder wrote: > > There is no sensible basis for opposing photo radar speed limit enforcement. > > Give me a break... if the people don't want it, and the government is > supposed to work for the people, that is a sensible basis. That is absurd. It is not, by any logic or reason, sensible to oppose enforcement of laws that exist to protect human life. If any given law is improper or needs to be modified in some way, then it is reasonable for "the people" to seek to change the law. However, unless and until any given law is changed, it is certainly not "sensible" to oppose enforcement of any laws that have been established to protect human life and safety. The bottom line in this matter is simply whether (A) there should be enforcement of established laws or whether (B) blatant disregard for established laws should be tolerated. Your premise seems to be "B," that if "the people" do not want enforcement of any given established law, then it is "sensible" for them to just ignore, disregard, and/or disobey it at will. My premise is "A" that all laws that have been established by governing authorities in a civilized society should be enforced. Which is sensible, and which is clearly not sensible? > > Opposition to photo radar is tantamount to advocating legalization of > > murder and/or manslaughter in any form by any means. > > Wow... that is probably the most absurd oversimplification I've seen on > this list so far. Murder and Manslaughter have very different > definitions and legal implications. I agree that murder and manslaughter have very different definitions and legal implications. However, the fact that they have different definitions and legal implications does not in any way make the underlying premise incorrect. That foundational premise is that for anyone to cause the death of another person by reckless driving (including exceeding posted speed limits) is manslaughter. And part two of this premise is that if anyone knowingly and intentionally facilitates the commision of a fatal act such as manslaughter, that can be shown to be murder in the second or third degree. Therefore, it is most assuredly *not* either "absurd" or an "oversimplification" to point out that failure to maintain and vigorously enforce established safety laws by all means possible is tantamount to advocating legalization of murder and/or manslaughter. Those who argue against enforcing established laws clearly do not have any reasonable, sensible, or justifiable basis for their arguments. --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss