If you had answered my question, the answer to your question would have been clear. Clearly many of the laws in America are unjust
Perhaps some laws aren't mean to be "just". They are meant to preserve public order or public safety.
If you had answered my question, the answer to your question would have been clear. Clearly many of the laws in America are unjust
Try blowing out a candle while wearing a mask. Then maybe you'll understand.
Perhaps some laws aren't mean to be "just". They are meant to preserve public order or public safety.
Dozer's dim brain can't understand that viruses don't come out of people's lungs all by their lonesome selves. They travel on much larger droplets of moisture, and masks are very effective at catching and trapping those droplets. Dozer can be told this, but in his nearly brain-dead state he still won't be able to figure it out.
You've seen virions caught and trapped on masks?
Perhaps some laws aren't mean to be "just". They are meant to preserve public order or public safety.
If that were true then every used mask should be handled as a biohazardous material, correct?
I believe that's the argument the Nazis made to justify cleansing their society of contaminating factors like jews, homosexuals, gypsies ...
So every country in the world is using Nazi thinking? Give me a break.
So every country in the world is using Nazi thinking?
... that is why I started this thread. Where is the line?
Off the top of my head I believe the Nazis called it the purification laws, maybe?
Off the top of my head, I think you are way past absurd here.
Every country in the world that forces it citizens to stop at a red light is acting like Nazis? Traffic laws are like "purification laws"?
With the nazis that line was crossed when they allowed and encouraged the passage and implementation of laws that were recognized as inherently unjust.
I have been trying to get you to recognize that the same is true with systems that are not nazi.
So please tell me, clearly- where exactly is that line that governments should not cross.
My apologies. I get riled up when people drag the Nazis into every discussion.
So please tell me, clearly- where exactly is that line that governments should not cross.
My apologies. I get riled up when people drag the Nazis into every discussion.
So please tell me, clearly- where exactly is that line that governments should not cross.
Edit: What is "inherently unjust"? Is being forced to stop at a traffic light "inherently unjust"?
As a broad generality and thus difficult to define clearly in a manner that would apply to specific situations, the line that governments should not cross is enacting (and enforcing) laws that are unjust.
Which brings me back to my question - how just is a law that seeks to punish me for engaging in an action or a behavior in which no one is harmed?
Take drink driving.
yes indeed, drunky, by all means take "drink" driving :darwinsm: