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by whatthesmack
2019 days ago
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I get the sense that you're applying your feelings to a group you don't like. As a conservative, I can say that I am interested in safety as much as anyone. I certainly don't want to become a victim of an avoidable incident, and I don't want anyone else to become a victim either. > American conservatives tend to dislike safety (people should be responsible for their own safety, regulation will slow down business and make everyone worse off) People being responsible for their own well-being certainly doesn't imply a dislike of safety. It's acknowledging a reality that ultimately we are responsible for our own fates. And it certainly doesn't rubber-stamp fraud, as is the case here where companies literally lied about the leveling of their product. In addition, it does not allow the government to shirk responsibility for requiring the use of the dangerous product in this case. > it’s not the government’s job to decide what truth is Allowing governments free reign to determine truth has historically led to immense suffering and hundreds of millions of documented deaths. |
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It's literally impossible for a consumer to evaluate all the materials, labor, and external effects involved in all the products they encounter or are effected by. Even then, if they identify something they find unacceptable, how do they avoid it if it's related to a necessity and it's an industry standard?
How do you propose the consumer has any realistic chance of having a say in these matters other than collectively empowering a group of people to look into it and enact recommendations and rules?