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I agree with you on everything you said, I'm just saying things simply don't work like that
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If I came up with a grand new method for transportation of people and goods ...
the only bad thing is that it would kill of a hundred people a day in the USA alone, and severely injury for life at least three times as many ... Do you think I would be met with standing ovation? Well, why not? A hundred Americans a day - that is far below 1% of the total death count in the nation, so let's clap our hands and welcome it. It isn't such a big deal!
40-50 years ago, Norway had approximately the same number of people killed in car traffic per million inhabitants as the USA. Authorities started fighting it - they didn't say "no big deal". So today we have roughly 100 deaths a year. The USA has 60 times as many people; that multiplies up to an expected 6000 traffic deaths a year. The actual count is five times as high, a little over 30,000 a year. Almost a hundred a day.
We managed to save four out of five. We have managed to keep corona deaths at less that one sixth of the US figure, per million inhabitants. Is that just wasted efforts? Should we rather have said: No big deal - let people be killed in car traffic! Let people die from corona! There are other death causes taking more lives; why should we worry at all about any but the top five on the list? If your problem is not on the top five list, we do not care about your life. Stop bothering us, just lay down and die!
I know: I am pulling it to extremes. But that is really what people are doing when they say "So many more people die from (say) cancer, so we should move all our resorce over to cancer research!" That is just a more polite way to tell the corona patients to lay down and die, because we don't care.
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Member 7989122 wrote: But that is really what people are doing when they say "So many more people die from (say) cancer, so we should move all our resorce over to cancer research!" That is just a more polite way to tell the corona patients to lay down and die, because we don't care.
How about putting an equal amount of money per capita on each research?
Who could complain about that?
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To me, that is rule thumping.
With some issues, there may low hanging fruit. An example: Setting up a divider in the middle of the road to prevent front-to-font collisions has had very significant effect on traffic deaths in Norway, and you can get a lot of dividers for a single week of cancer research.
Some research is very expensive, but when it succeeds / is completed, it will have great benefits, while cheaper research may lead to far less benefits. If you can prevent a disease totally, that is much better that something that saves a life, but leaves the patient severely handicapped, requiring full time nursing for the rest of his life.
What is "a research"? Is vaccine development "one research", or is corona vaccine "one research"? Is cancer treatment "one research", or is every project in that area a separate one?
Lots of projects are multi-national: Many countries contribute, many countries benefit from the results, but possibly in very varying degrees. Some results benefit the entire world population, even those countries that did not contribute. How will you calculate how much money a given country, with a given expected benefit, should contribute to the resarch?
If one research project aims to prevent the stop a disease killing 1/million a year, another project to stop a disease killing 1000/million a year, are they entitled to equal amounts of money?
I certainly think resources must be spread out over many different project for many different plagues / dangers. I just don't think that there is a simple, mathematical formula that can be used and which is "fair" to all projects.
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Sweden has more or less handled it the way you are suggesting. Last week there were reports of elderly people waiting for being taken in at nursing homes now was being admitted to fill up the empty beds after those who had died from covid-19. It looks as if they are doing their best to reduce future expenses on senior citizen care.
Some of the reactions I see against the lockdown reminds me of one reader's question that was coined the most clueless question of the year in US media: This was during the cold war, and this one lady had, appearently in dead earnest, asked a question to an article about neutron bombs: "Is there any danger that a neutron bomb will erase all the VCR tapes that I have recorded?"
I am really shocked to see what people seem to be their god given right, come rain or come shine. An example: During Easter, Norwegians flock to their mountain cabins. Today, these are certinly not isolated, small shacks, but rather dense villages, each cabin sitting on a lot maybe twice the size of the cabin itself. And there is a tradition for meeting other cabin dwellers in huge parties with lots of close contact, alcohol and what follows - a perfect spreading ground for the virus (look at the Austrian skiing resorts!).
The problem is that during Easter, the total population grows by a factor of maybe 20-25 times, and the local health services is essnetialy dimensioned for the remaining 51 weeks of the year. If there had been an large outbreak of covid-19, there would have been no realistic way to handle it. Most of the vicitms would have had to manage on their own. So the Norwegian authorities chose to forbid going to your cabin during Easter.
Norwegians simply refused to accept it. Several people (among them one prominent lawyer, well known through media) threatened to report the Norwegian state to the European Court of Human Rights - it is a "Human Right" to go to your mountain cabin for spreading a pandemic virus! Hotels near the cabin villages had their order books filled up by cabin owners who would claim "I am not at my cabin, I am at the hotel". People tried to change their official address of residence to that of their cabin, so that they would not "go to their cabin", but stay at home...
We have a god given right to go to virus sharing events at our mountain cabins. That is not the only case where "human rights" are brought up: A few months ago, I saw someone argue that a fiber connection to the Internet shold be declared a Human Right. Tourists going to see other parts of the world feel personally offended if they arrive at a place where they cannot buy a can of coke. In some countries, you can claim being protected by the constitution if you shoot and kill someone who comes in through your front door - at least you have the constitutional right to carry deadly weapons enable you to do so.
Our "human rights" to go to a mountain cabin at Easter, to buy Coke anyplace in the world and to kill anyone coming in through the front door might seem obvious from or local observation point. In a global perspective, it may appear completely crazy. In a free society you are of course entitled to say "To h*ll with the rest of the world; I demand my rights and will not yield to any concern for others". That is to say "I don't want no society around me. I want to be completely alone, ignoring everything and everybody else". I am sad to hear that.
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Sander Rossel wrote: Sitting at home isn't the answer, especially not for longer periods of time. Does it strike you that we seriously argue that locking people up, denying them any sort of freedom of movement, is exactly what will cure criminals, make them into better humans?
Why is it so that what is truly beneficial for one group of people (i.e. those who have broken the law) but highly devastating to others (i.e. us)? (If the assumption is correct, of course.)
Could it be that the confinement we experience is not strong enough, it should limit our movement to a single room, maybe without any communication facilities?
Or is it because we haven't committed any crime, that we would indeed benefit from the confinement if we first went out to do some nasty crime?
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I don't think locking people up will cure criminal intents and I also don't believe it's good for them.
It is meant as punishment and hopefully they will feel so severely punished that they won't do it again.
At least it should give them time to think about what they did and why it was wrong.
If anything, locking up criminals should benefit society because at least one criminal can't do any more harm.
On a side note, study showed that getting a girlfriend/wife and kids are far more effective for "curing" criminality than jail.
Also, it's not the same.
A criminal in jail does not have the stress of providing for his family or going to work.
I mean, he may have (for his family at least, his job is surely gone), but he literally and very surely can't.
We still have jobs and houses and families and everything, but we aren't allowed to work and we don't know if our work will still be there in a month.
The consequence could be that we lose all of it, while an inmate has already lost.
Also, criminals aren't necessarily socially isolated while a lot of us currently are.
No, truly eradicating criminality (if such a thing is even possible) could be gained from good education for everyone and eradicating poverty and inequality.
Of course you would keep those criminals who do it for the adrenaline.
Unfortunately, people are inherently unequal in that some are more healthy or beautiful or smarter than others.
We also have varying interests, some could gain you a lot of money (like if your interest was programming) while others only cost you money (like collecting).
Also, crime pays, a street value of a gram of cocaine in the USA was $96 in 2017.
A few grams is a lot of (easy) money!
Also, the chances of getting away with stealing are pretty high if you don't get caught red-handed.
Anyway, my point, your comparison of criminals in jail and "good" people in isolation doesn't seem to hold up.
Neither does your thesis of "locking up people cures them of criminal intent".
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Sander Rossel wrote: Neither does your thesis of "locking up people cures them of criminal intent". So what did you mean when you wrote:
It is meant as punishment and hopefully they will feel so severely punished that they won't do it again. Are you saying that they still have the criminal intent, yet stopping their criminal acts?
Most statistics show that prison is the best place to learn, in case you want to continue your criminal actions. Especially with young people, throw them in jail for a small crime, and they will come back to jail quite quickly after release, but for a more serious crime. They will climb up the ladder to ever more serious crimes.
Prison essentially serves our demand for retaliaton: We wish to hurt, to injure, to harm the person we throw into the dungeon. Claiming that we do it to keep him away from future crimes is just an excuse to make it look like we are doing a good deed by our hurting, injury and harm.
It seems quite obvious that if we, the population as a whole, had a choice between curing a criminal 100% for his criminal dispositions, with no sort of hurting, injury or harm to serve as retailiation, or to stimulate his criminal inclination but having the joy of retaliation, we would choose the latter. That is in fact what we have been constantly doing in the entire Western world for several centuries. Very few stand up for the other alternative. It is not that we don't want do "cure" him - but you are not seriously suggesting that he shall not be punished, are you?? If he has done something wrong, he must be punished! After we have inflicted pain, injury and harm, he can learn to behave, but we are not going to accept that he is not punished hard first!
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Member 7989122 wrote: Are you saying that they still have the criminal intent, yet stopping their criminal acts? I do not
Member 7989122 wrote: Especially with young people, throw them in jail for a small crime, and they will come back to jail quite quickly after release, but for a more serious crime. Of course, they say you are the average of the five people you hang out with the most.
So as a rebellious youngster you hang out with some bad boys and you still have some good friends or class mates, so you average out as someone who steals a pack of gum.
You get caught and are thrown in jail where pretty much everyone is badder than you and you are forced to hang out with them so now you average out as someone who would steal a car and beat up the owner in the process.
If you're very lucky you get in contact with some dealers and now you can deal drugs with your newly stolen car
I agree with you on every account, but I really don't see how any of this is still COVID-19 related though, unless you're talking about going in simply for being outside during COVID-19 and coming out as a violent gang member
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I guess it helps to understand the origin of imprisonment was as an alternative to corporeal punishment.
In the old times punishment was immediate and corporeal to act as a discouragement and deter people from doing crimes, on the basis that if you got caught you ended up flogged or in the pillory. (or worse)
In those times prisons were only used as storage for rich people that either were in debt or that they tried to get a ransom for.
It was during the enlightenment that the idea of corporeal punishment being inhuman took root. And the idea of an alternative was to give criminals time to consider their crimes in solitude with god would create better citizens.
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That idea has failed to manifest in real life.
Especially today. In the old days of corporal punishment, when you had taken it, you had paid you dues to society, and you were entitled to be treated as a man that had no social debt. I guess there are many cases where is wasn't perfectly so, but in today's society it becomes stronger every year that any sentence will follow you for the rest of your life, no matter how much you have paid for it by years in prison. Your neighbourhood demands to know what you did wrong as a teenager and take their precautions against you. Potential employers demand to know everything about your past. Meetooers want to ruin the rest for your life for 35 years ago having looked at a girl in a way they do not approve of today. An increasing number of criminals receive the maximum sentence that the law allows, but in addition, they are to be kept "in custody" for another number of years "to protect society against them". Formally, it isn't a prison sentence, yet "in custody" means "in a prison cell", and it is unbound: You know when your prison sentence ends, but when the period of custody ends, it may be reconsidered and extended for as long as the court pleases. It isn't a prison sentence, so it isn't limited by the laws. You are just put into a prison cell to protect society against you...
I think this is the ultimate proof that a sentence to prison is no sort of cure whatsoever for criminal inclinations.
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Sander Rossel wrote: Is this a free country or what!?
Of course it is (according to the normal definition of "free"). However, you still have strict rules (as do most countries) that most of us accept as necessary for the benefit of all. For example, there are rules regarding driving on a particular side of the road. They clearly limit the freedom of people who wish to drive on the other side, perhaps simply to get past a long queue that inconveniences them. Not many people would argue that those rules are unreasonable.
My point is that some rules are necessary and acceptable even if they sometimes seem arbitrary and restrictive. There will always be some measure of disagreement about where the line should be drawn between total freedom and necessary restriction. We need to be careful about claiming that some are just wrong because they don't meet our judgement about where the line should be drawn.
Phil
The opinions expressed in this post are not necessarily those of the author, especially if you find them impolite, inaccurate or inflammatory.
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Yeah, I'm not attacking having rules, but telling people they cannot go outside and giving them such ridiculous fines crosses a line.
Urging people to stay inside, fine.
Urging people not to visit friends and relatives, fine.
Bugging people about why they're outside when they're outside and urging them to go home, still fine.
Trespassing a private residence and giving out fines because a car is parked out front and you can see visitors through the window, crossing a line.
Giving out fines that people have to work months for to pay because they're cutting someone's hair who has agreed to that, crossing a line.
Allowing people to live together, but then giving them a fine when they go outside together, not only ridiculous, but also crossing a line.
Giving people a criminal record for being outside or visiting relatives, crossing that line like there is none!
It may be difficult to draw the line, but our government is certainly crossing it and we can only wonder if it's still for "the greater good".
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Ah simulations - like climate change. Let's take a very complex situation, put it on the internet, and further stampede the masses.
I recommend this: NUKEMAP by Alex Wellerstein[^]
Charlie Gilley
<italic>Stuck in a dysfunctional matrix from which I must escape...
"Where liberty dwells, there is my country." B. Franklin, 1783
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
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Smoking Meth and posting bible verses on Facebook does not make you a Methodist!
When you talk, you are only repeating what you already know.
But if you listen, you may learn something new.
--Dalai Lama
JaxCoder.com
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... jutht methed up?
Software rusts. Simon Stephenson, ca 1994. So does this signature. me, 2012
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Be nasty to a woman, defending it with bible verses, could make her a Metoodist.
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... it's old, but so appropriate: Social distance bar fight[^]
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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Never seen that before but it is hilarious, thanks for pointing it out.
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Read the title, saw the link to YouTube, went in expecting to see a Shatner fight scene...
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"Relevance is not Relevant"
Ravings en masse^ |
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"The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits." - Albert Einstein | "If you are searching for perfection in others, then you seek disappointment. If you seek perfection in yourself, then you will find failure." - Balboos HaGadol Mar 2010 |
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is this where I can disagree?
pestilence [ pes-tl-uh ns ] noun
1. a deadly or virulent epidemic disease. especially bubonic plague.
2. something that is considered harmful, destructive, or evil.
Synonyms: pest, plague, CCP
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Oh I'm sorry, is this a five minute disagreement, or the full half hour?
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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Quite a revaluation!
When you talk, you are only repeating what you already know.
But if you listen, you may learn something new.
--Dalai Lama
JaxCoder.com
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She hasn't realized what I've done yet, but the thyme is cumin.
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