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by ahmeneeroe-v2
513 days ago
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>It's only when you replace a set of rules with a different set of rules to serve the same purpose that you've moved the fence. Fence #1: the existing set of rules defining a more limited US Federal Government and a more limited USCG and a more limited DHS Fence #2: removed limits on Feds, expanded those organizations, placed limits on [insert economic activity] Whatever your opinion on the wisdom/value of this, this move by the DHS is an attempt to replace Fence #2 with the original Fence #1. Put in your terminology, they are replacing a set of rules (expansive gov) with a different set of rules (limited gov). Put in my terminology, this is correcting the original violation of Chesterton's Fence. |
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Fence 1 is that we have the NCFSAC that serves to ensure the safety of commercial fishing.
Fence 2 is no fence because we don't want to limit economic activity.
That's by definition removing the fence, not moving it.
Safety policy is written in blood. By getting rid of the committee that writes that policy you aren't moving the fence, you are just getting rid of it and letting the blood that chesterton's fence once stopped to flow again.