Well, another laundry list of things I didn't say. I'm talking about control of your body ... what goes into it. Now, is this a Fourth Amendment matter of being secure in my person against unreasonable searches, that is, an unreasonable inquiry by the state into what I put into my body? That's one possible line of argument. Is it part of the 'penumbra' of privacy that the SCOTUS says is an inextricable element of the Constitution? I don't know, the whole 'penumbra' argument makes me uncomfortable.Darth Wong wrote:You think that alcoholics suffer no consequences of their own behaviour? Alcohol is WORSE because it not only shortens the lifespan of the user but also endangers everyone around him.Chmee wrote:Um, the people taking the Vioxx were the ones that died ... is that really a valid comparison if our discussion is about protecting people from alcohol users more than protecting the users themselves?
No, and that's not what I said. tharkûn's argument quite validly focused on the conflict between my right to make personal choices and the right of others to be safe from dangerous choices I could make, so I was responding to that. If you want to talk about the purely personal damage one can inflict on one's self with alcohol abuse, I'd say yes that's terrible, but in a free society I am relatively willing to let them make personal choices even when they are not the 'optimal' choice ... I don't want to get into a slippery slope argument here, but if the strongest argument is 'don't let them have it because it's bad when they abuse it,' we have to get rid of processed sugar, saturated animal fats and caffeine right along with the beer & wine.
Darth Wong wrote:Could you please name all of the people who fought wars and died for the freedom to drink alcoholic beverages? Or the passage in the Constitution where it says that this is a fundamental right? Or the part of the UN Universal Decalaration of Human Rights where this is enumerated? You seem to act as if this is one of those really important fundamental freedoms that people should be willing to risk or sacrifice their lives for (tens of thousands of lives per year, in fact); I don't recall seeing anyone but you describe it as such.Well, I think I answered this already ... I'm referring to the intended consequence of the 'wand' here, aren't I? It's removing a choice from everyone, a successful prohibition, right? I don't see how you can look at the lost liberty in that hypothetical as an 'unintended' consequence, it's the entire point of the action.
But if you're looking for literal enumeration, show me where it says in the Constitution that the federal government posseses the legislative authority to regulate what I eat and drink .... I missed that part, too. In a government of limited powers and specific guarantees of a citizen's liberties against the whims of a majority, the presumption is always on the side of the individual's liberty, not the security of the majority.
I admit that's a concept that seems to have less and less support in the post-9/11 world, but it's one I still consider worth defending.
I'm not sure how that fits with a request for an 'ethical' analysis. Whose ethics? A pure numbers balancing test? If that's the test, I think prohibition wins, because a pure numbers test won't even care about personal liberty.