apple0154
MEOW
My argument isn't about whether there is authority to do it, it is about whether we should exercise such authority in a free society. Your entire argument doesn't answer the central point.
Where is the victim?
The victim is society; every other citizen.
Why should we, as a free society, allow others to make these decisions for us?
If the government is going to ensure health care for everyone it has to promote a healthy lifestyle and discourage an unhealthy one. Smoking, for example. Do we take up a hospital bed to treat a person with emphysema or lung cancer due to smoking while claiming the government can not offer a bed to someone who has appendicitis?
How can we possibly continue to call ourselves a free society when we have given over even the minutest of choices over to government to make us "secure", to "save" people from themselves?
We have choices among the good things. As for unfettered freedom we saw the result of "private" SS plans in the past. People did not save. That's why the government had to step in and implement SS.
The strange thing is everything was "private" to start with and government plans only came into effect after "private" was shown to be a failure. People tend to express it as if it's always been the government. That's where the "old, tired, worn-out ideas" expression came from. Everything the government controls started out not being government controlled and failed miserably, be it ensuring safe food and water to retirement plans.
And lastly, how can you so hypocritically suggest that taking away such choices isn't equivalent to taking away other choices to "protect" people from "unnatural" acts? They are the same, both are an attempt to "save" you from yourself and in agreement with the "majority". The Federal government shouldn't mess in this, but if we are to remain free we should insist that our local government step out of our business as well.
The government should not restrict anything unless it can be proven to be harmful. Again, it's not just the individual involved. A person participating in an act that has been proven to result in illness/injury means another person stricken with an unprovoked illness/injury must pay a price such as no available hospital bed or doctor or costly medicine or having to contribute to the irresponsible person's financial welfare.