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by osigurdson 744 days ago
Yes, and then explained precisely the harms being caused to them personally - all based on distance driven. Please just admit the thing you really don't like is the culture associated with large trucks. No one "needs" anything, least of all any kind of vehicle.
1 comments

>Yes, and then explained precisely the harms being caused to them personally - all based on distance driven.

To everybody, naturally including them personally.

And none of the harms are based on distance driven. US-sized trucks are worse than smaller regular cars on those metrics for the same distances too.

>Please just admit the thing you really don't like is the culture associated with large trucks

One can dislike both you know.

How much compensation, should you personally receive from the hypothetical situation described above?
Let's say someone purposefully spits on you. How much compensation, should you personally receive from that hypothetical situation?

Just because some particular damage can't be measured financially or settled with a fine, doesn't mean it doesn't exist.

This is especially true about things economists call "externalities", which includes the damage to the environment and things outside direct economic dealing.

This is an incredibly flaw analogy. Spitting on someone is a direct assault. Legally owning something unliked by various random people worldwide is not morally equivalent to spitting in someone's face.
Morals are subjective and a function of time.

Just because you don't see it as equivalent, doesn't mean others don't

Certainly, people can come up with all manner of perceived injustices. Spitting on someone is considered a crime in many jurisdictions however. It is not the same thing as someone legally owning a vehicle that you do not like.