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by kstrauser
1842 days ago
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You listed a whole bunch of healthcare laws that restrict what you can do to other people. It's perfectly reasonable to be for each of them: - I don't want an untrained barber spreading disease. - I don't want a fake optometrist selling incorrect glasses. - I don't want someone buying penicillin off Amazon to treat their flu, or taking it for 2 days and then stopping so that they incubate a PCN-resistant strain of whatever. ...while still thinking grown adults should be able to decide which recreational chemicals they want to use. My drugs of choice are coffee and a monthly beer or nice whiskey. I don't have a moral high ground over someone who wants to occasionally use some weed to relax. Similarly, why do I care if someone (not me!) wants to take mushrooms? They don't get to tell me I can't sip a glass of whiskey, after all. |
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This is a fairly weird statement. For a start conflating "unlicenced" with "untrained" and then jumping to "spreading disease". I'm not sure catching a disease has ever crossed my mind while getting a haircut.
> - I don't want a fake optometrist selling incorrect glasses.
The fact that they are "fake" surely already implies fraud - so how does licencing prevent this?
> I don't want someone buying penicillin off Amazon to treat their flu, or taking it for 2 days and then stopping so that they incubate a PCN-resistant strain of whatever.
People already do this. I guess you're arguing against increased incentives but that's a bit of a leap.