| > You can take two views of humans. Nothing in life is black or white. Life has many shades of gray (more than 50). > Freedom means being able to make bad choices. Yet here we are, where you're fined for drunk driving or for not wearing a seat belt. * * * There are no penalties for making bad choices that only affect <<you>>. But almost every choice you make, good or bad, affects someone else. For an example of a very personal and selfish choice that actually impacts <<others>>, if you don't wear a seat belt and die, your family will greatly mourn your loss, but they might also not be able to make it without your financial support and have to get help from social services or from others, which others have to pay for. You'll probably turn a small accident into a big accident, and if you're not the only person in the car, you'll traumatize those with you for life (again, maybe needing help which others will pay for!) plus you're probably going to total the car (which the owner will have to pay for). Humans aren't trees falling in a forest, trees that no one can hear falling. * * * Simple rule of thumb: if a restriction has been agreed to by diverse societies across the world, across tens and hundreds of countries, maybe it's there for a good reason and you're statistically not smarter than billions of people. I hope you are, but I'm willing to bet you aren't. Approach these things more humbly, please. |
Sure there are, easiest one to reach for is the consumption (or even ownership) of various drugs.
Beyond that there's prostitution in many jurisdictions, and no doubt there are other "victimless" crimes still on the books (basically those formed around morality - and therefore moral harm - rather than an otherwise identifiable harm or loss).
The problem with reaching for the "almost every choice you make affects someone" trope is that it's very easy to use it to justify any moral panic you choose. Sodomy (and by that I mean non-procreative sexual activity) is an excellent example whose laws were still active in some states up to 2014* (and maybe still).
* https://eu.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/04/21/12-stat...