Per the cell phone thing. I've thought that an in car jammer that would only allow 911 calls would be a solution that I could support.
I, like a majority of people, think that I wouldn't like to live in the 19th century legally or socially. The world got a lot more complex since then. I do think that we have a lot of unnecessary laws. But clean air is necessary for health. Clean water also. Etc, etc. For the most part you can't go back.
We do tend to make a lot of victimless crimes way more important than they are. The State just shouldn't have that power. Once you're adult (I wouldn't put that at less than 25) you should be able to do as you please where others aren't involved. Otherwise it's just a matter of time before they'll be hunting down people who eat hamburgers.
For the first point - I could agree with that.
Second? Yes, things have gotten more complex. Yes, more laws are probably needed now than a hundred years ago. I shan't argue with you there (a good portion of the laws that should/would be immediately subject to rescission are laws that we just don't need anymore. Then laws favouring "special interests" come next. Then, "preferential regulations," followed by "consensual/victimless crimes."
(Regulations differ from laws only somewhat - but they can be ripped through as well. Most of 26CFR should be discarded out of hand, 49CFR needs some serious review and the highlighter applied for sections to be rescinded/redacted.
(Anything that was passed by publication in the
Congressional Register - and therefore not subject to public debate or vote - should be rescinded out of hand. If it's not important enough to stand a vote or debate, it's not needed. And yet, if something is published in the
Congressional Register and
not challenged within sixty days,
it becomes law. A lot of backdoor regs & laws get passed that way...)
If they want to hunt down people that eat hamburgers, they'll have a hard time. Most of us kick, bite, shoot back, and I doubt we've all had all of our shots... I do agree with you tho - once you pass the Age of Majority (whatever age that is - and make it
one age for
everything. None of this 18/21 crap...) the government should be treating you with benign neglect, and only bothering you if you ask them for help or do something wrong.
I would vastly prefer such a system, but that would first require restoration of the Social Contract and for people to think somewhere past the end of their collective nose and to actually consider the potential impact of their actions
on other people and act accordingly.
Why am I so hot on cellphone use while driving? I see it all the time here in the South Ghey, and from what I see, I think it can reasonably be considered a public menace. Agree? Disagree? Discuss.
As far as the original topic - commercial drivers who blow at 0.01% should be stripped - it's not a "two-ton missile" they're in charge of, it's a "twenty-ton" missile! That makes it an even greater threat to public safety (ask anyone who has seen a roads incident involving a loaded semi - or, better,
responded to one.)
What you do in your off time is your own business. If you are an alcoholic, but you show up
cold sober for work and exercise the pilot's rule of "twelve hours between bottle and throttle," I honestly have no trouble with it. Show up with a little in your system - alcoholic or not - termination should be immediate.
There are cases of "functional alcoholics" (typically early on) who only drink off-duty - alcoholism is, in most cases, a progressive condition.
My main trouble with the system of law is that it is a
created system, which means it was
made complex. There are about as many legal specialties as there are medical specialties now - but in medicine, specialisation is often necessary for digging deeper into certain conditions, and the system of human physiology is something we've inherited. Our legal system has accreted so badly that it's probably approaching the point of collapsing under its own weight, and I have a problem with that.
Besides, have you ever been to a law library? Cripes - it's nuts!
Far too much paper involved (I also have a problem with precedents having the effect of law - it makes a trial a conflict between technicians. I think that
each and
every case should be tried
on its own merits irrespective of prior interpretation of the law. If the law is badly written, it may be modified. If the law should not be, it may be struck. But, I shouldn't have to look up the law I'm charged with violating, then spend the next four months looking through prior legal cases to see about a way to weasel out of it...)