lPeregrine wrote:Batman wrote:lPeregrine wrote:
Just as one example, having sex in the hypothetical bus stop forces everyone else to either put up with it, or leave and give up their bus trip.
Bzzt. Wrong. It forces them to go where they no longer can see it. Still close enough to catch their bus.
Assuming they
can. Which isn't all that easy if you've got a couple having loud screaming sex out in the open.
Which STILL does no objective harm to them. The number of people physically hurt by being exposed to the aufio of sex is? They're being hurt by they're on prejudices and nothing else.
And I can't recall anybody demanding public sex should be allowed everywhere. The oh-noes crowd wanted public sex to be either banned or at least discouraged, period. I myself have argued there are areas where public sex would almost inevitably interfere with the functioning of society and should be restricted. BY FINING THEM WHEN THEY ACTUALLY DO SO.
Good, so we agree then. Fines for public sex are not unreasonable.
Yes they are. You apparently have a reading comprehensing problem.
FINES FOR INTERFERING WITH THE FUNCTIONING OF SOCIETY ARE.
Your evidence for public sex inevitably doing so is?
It's a minor inconvenience, much like losing a bit of sleep one night.
There's a difference between having to step away a few feet and not being able to sleep all night.
Besides the fact that it isn't just a matter of stepping a few feet away, you can be fined for that loud party whether it's 3am, or the middle of the afternoon.
Happily ignoring the fact that you CAN step away and no longer see the fucking couple and are NOT entitled to not being exposed to offensive noises in a public space while you ARE to a degree in your own home.
Neither of them should be criminal matters, but a small fine to discourage people from doing it too often isn't unreasonable.
It is when no verifiable harm can be associated with them doing it. What's the harm done by a couple fucking somewhere on the grass in, say, Central Park?
I notice you failed to answer this.
And by the way, you can also be fined for noise violations in the middle of the day. So just like public sex, there's no objective harm besides "unnecessarily annoying the rest of society".
Noise violations DO cause objective harm you imbecile. Exposure to public sex does NOT.
Please, name the objective harm caused by having to listen to my neighbor's loud music (at a level that is safely below any danger of hearing loss for me) in the middle of the day.[/quote]
This is a trick question, right?
The answer is "no more than public sex"... there is no harm caused beyond annoying the rest of society, and possibly disrupting someone's activities.
Bzzt. Wrong again. The difference is that you don't even
have to ignore public sex as it happens in, guess what, public spaces.
Your neighbour playing loud music affects you in your own home, and ignoring loud noises isn't exactly easy.