PC1 said:
Who answers the call when there's a fire? The local fire department of course. Are they required to rush into a poorly designed and built house to try and save the cheap and/or stupid father's children?
No, which is how another market force enters into the picture. I would have no trouble privatizing local fire departments so they could issue code reccomendations and deny service to anyone who didn't abide by them. By providing the fire department as a free service people are relieved of that cost and factoring it into their considerations of what they can and can't afford, and those who work for the fire departments have to run into all buildings, regardless of whether or not they meet any standard, either because of stupidity or lack of government enforcement of existing rules, and they don't know beforehand which it is. When it's handled by the private market not only is the cost borne by those who are directly benefitting, there are a myriad of layers of insurance agencies, builders, buyers, neighbors and courts that could and would require the adoption of those standards.
Should the children be forced to pay for the father's freedom of choice with their lives? What about the neighbors if that house is in a densely settled neighborhood?
Another market force. The contractor who initiially developed the area could work fire standards into his contract to build to begin with, as could the people who were set on buying his homes, the fire department that serves those homes, the insurance companies that cover those homes, the neighbors who would sue if their homes were damaged... I think you're missing the fact that there are other ways than government fiat to ensure such standards get met. Even when it comes to enacting a government regulation there are ways to make sure the costs are dealt with in more equitable fashion that just enacting one size fits all standards.
For example that previous intance I mentioned in my last post of a requirement for flood covereage. Undoubtably some people got screwed by it, but far fewer than get screwed if the government decided to provide flood coverage. Just take that regulation away from FEMA and apply it at a local level and you have a solution that's even closer to ideal.
Look at the development of Underwriters Labs the century before last. There was a demand on the part of the market to ensure safety standards regarding electricity and the market answered. In fact many of the codes issued by the government were late in the game, UL had issued such reccomendations already and the government regs just mirror the Underwriters reccomendations. Plus in order to maintain UL listings manufacturers must submit to inspections and continuing tests. Like anything else the process that spurs the development and enforcement of standards isn't immune to market forces.
Further more when the Lab fucks up and gives a reccomendation that turns out to be wrong in terms of safety they can and have been sued. People recover damages and restitution. The government almost universally claims sovereign immuintity from such legal actions, so there's another plus to the market solution. If a market entity messes up, it can be forced to pay some sort of damages and restitution. When the government messes up and sets a poor standard or provides a dangerous product, no matter how severe the screw up is people rarely even lose a job, much less pay restitution of any kind. In fact, and this is the perverse nature of the government, the very agency that screws up ends up getting
more money and a bigger budget so it can 'address the problem.' That's like buying a toaster, having it turn out to be defective and burn your house down, and then being forced to buy a 'better' model toaster from the same company.
Not only is the government not immune from the defects of market based solutions, say being bought off by one large client, it
is immune from the forces that minimize those defects. It's the worst of both worlds.
Get 3 idiot/cheapskate brothers building substandard homes on postage stamp sized lots, each a fire hazard, each one catching fire because of the "freedom" of poor choice made by all of them. 3 adjacent structures catch fire and go up in a blaze, what of the risk to the abutting neighbors, each of whom purchased houses built to what architects and engineers would generally deem "safe and inhabitable", but were unaware of the fire hazards of those living next door because there is no standard building code? Are the neighbors to pay that price as well?
Other what I've written than above, would you rather they had no homes at all, or that you had to help buy them with government subsidized mortgages because the costs were too high?
What if someone wants to save $ by buying the old Ford Pinto, the one with the gasoline tank that ruptures and explodes onto it's passengers upon being rear ended? What if I'm walking along a street with my family, some vehicle accidently plows into the Pinto, exploding their gas tank, incinerating it's occupants and blowing the whole exploding mess onto myself and my family? I have to pay the price of the cheapskates/idiots freedom of choice with my life and that of my family?
Life can suck, can't it? But your example proves my point actually. Safety isn't some magic trump card. If it were no one would be allowed to drive, period. If they were allowed, sidewalks would somehow be seperated a lot more safely from roads. I don't think you're suggesting everyone be forced to ride in a Hummer with a top speed of five miles an hour and ten foot high, three foot thick concrete lane and road/sidewalk dividers, and all pedestrians wear fire retardant clothes, are you? If not then you're admitting through action if not word that there are
other factors that are considered in all decisions besides safety. What people seem to want are products that are reasonably safe or safe enough within the bounds of all their considerations. This is the fatal flaw in all government regulations: they are by nature divorced from the market forces that determine just those cost benefit trade offs.
The person who is adverse to water purity standards doesn't HAVE to use city/town water.
But they do HAVE to pay for it. That's the problem, the distorted value and price structure that results.
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Aside from being cheap/stoopid, what if he's equally unscrupulous, owns a computer with some desk top publishing software and is able to fake a certificate upon a family who makes an offer to purchase his house 5 years down the road? No building standard, no original certificate of occupancy from the town?
Now that's outright fraud, which I'm sure you're aware all Libertarians like myself say is and should be illegal. You're assuming that if the government doesn't take the function of providing proof that certificate is valid, no one will, which is flatout wrong. In fact by making the service available 'for free' the demand for, and thus the supply of alternatives is reduced.
You may feel it's your right to sit in your house and drink, smoke crack, shoot smack, and pop LSD. Yet if I live next door to you, I and my family may be at risk of you running into my home wildly hallucinating that my wife, kids and I are the 4 riders of the apocalypse, and blast us all with your shotgun. Is that a price that I or anyone else should be willing to bear for your freedom of choice?
No. Other than being a hysterical situation that doesn't reflect the broader reality, it's the price that you and everyone else should be willing to bear for
your freedom of choice. Please explain to me what exactly is stopping you from going to an area with like minded people to ensure your environment and neighbors more accurately match your desires? High costs and a lack of alternatives, that's what. What's the primary force in the market that drives costs up in all areas and destroys alternatives? Government. Without government involvement communities do have the right to band together and decide to set their own standards as to what type of neighbors they want. Want to live in this neighborhood? These are the fire codes your house must meet, these are standards of behavior we find acceptable, these are the repurcussions if you don't abide by the rules. This is not the same process as enacting such standards into law, because then choice is removed for everyone.
If you want to talk about what's right and wrong insofar as "ethics and morality", look at both sides of the coin, and broaden your perspective to include the repurcussions of someone's freedom of choice to make poor decisions.
Oh I have. I used to be more liberal than Null. In the end it became clearer and clearer that such reasoning didn't work and didn't reflect reality.
Your brand of libertine philosophy works only in a vacuum. In thinking through the possibilities of the examples above, most of which you site, it falls way short.
Not really. I never claim perfect end results, just better ones. You seem to always assume the opposite, regardless of whether or not it's true. For example, a man named Sam Peltzman did an exaustive study of US drug regulation and came to the conclusion that in its efforts to keep us safe from harmful drugs, the government caused more harm by not allowing more beneficial drugs on the market. Manufacturers have removed draw strings from the hoods of their coats in some areas to avoid lawsuits from kids strangling themselves, but that leaves kids who buy the same coat in colder climates with the ears getting frostbitten. It is those who enact the one size fits all laws that aren't acknowledging we don't live in a vacuum, because they don't acknowledge the differences among us and the need to work them out in the most equitable fashion. They just impose their one standard, whether it's good or not, reasonable or not, effective or not, and say "live with it."