I would rather have judges, in a court case where parties get to represent themselves, applying common law, with a jury of my peers deciding the verdict... than random idiots elected by a bunch of other random idiots I don't know make laws without my input.
You just died because, during treatment for an easily treatable medical problem, a lack of regulation allowed some part of that treatment to have a higher probability of complications.
That just doesn't make any sense. That's a problem with and without regulation. First of all, some medical procedures have risks. That's just how it works. Second of all, someone could die in a world with a ton of regulations by a problem that could have been "solved" by a regulation. So you're emotional retort applies here too: "Now go elect a new representative to pass a different law."
It makes no sense to die from an unregulated medical procedure?
Let's say it's stitches, and there's no regulation against reusing a stitching needle because in your world the elected body doesn't do that sort of thing. The doctor just washes it off a bit so it's not so gross looking every time.
You're one of the 1-2% that contracts something horrible from the doctor and you're dead within 24 hours.
> It makes no sense to die from an unregulated medical procedure?
What? No. Your argument doesn't make any sense. I then went on to explain why.
> Let's say it's stitches, and there's no regulation against reusing a stitching needle because in your world the elected body doesn't do that sort of thing. The doctor just washes it off a bit so it's not so gross looking every time.
> You're one of the 1-2% that contracts something horrible from the doctor and you're dead within 24 hours.
> Now sue.
This is precisely the same argument as before, but with an example. My criticism still applies. I'll adopt your example so that my criticism is crystal clear:
> Let's say it's stitches, and since law makers didn't setup regulation against reusing a stitching needle because in your world the elected body is incompetent/ignorant/behind. The doctor just washes it off a bit so it's not so gross looking every time.
> You're one of the 1-2% that contracts something horrible from the doctor and you're dead within 24 hours.
> Now elect a different representative to change or add that regulation. Or lobby your existing one.
In either scenario, the end result is "you're dead, so ANY fix is moot."
But they're already elected and already regulating. The counter argument is an argument against regulation, period, let lawsuits and the free market sort it out.
The theory goes, people won't go to doctors that reuse stitching needles vs. the doctor down the street who does.
This is not a theory I subscribe to -- that's the politest thing I can say about it.
Common law is popularly chosen law created by the people. Statutory law (almost entirely with the exception of a few states and their referendums) isn't. Statutory laws applying to 350+ million people are crafted by 435 people.