Re: New law changes U.S. eavesdropping rules
I'm not really trying to do anything in particular. I'm just providing a differing POV from the OP.
It really isn't. Driving isn't a right. At best, it's as necessary evil.
The difference is that you don't have to get a license to leave your house. If people are going to not do anything for fear that they may die, or because other people who have done it have died, then no one is going to be able to do anything. And that's ridiculous.
Then write a letter to your congressman, vote, enter politics, etc. No one is suggesting you take this lying down.
Yes, it's a great quote, but Ben Franklin could hardly foresee the issues that we face today. We don't live in a perfect world that is easily described with pithy quotes. We live in the real world.
Originally posted by Cometgreen
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Feba's example is acceptable, I think.
Your response that adults drive cars knowing the risks is, I assume, just the point he is making. I know going outside to the store means I could be mugged, run over, hit by lightning, or blown up by a terrorist, but I accept the risks as they are.
I leave my front door unlocked during the day, even though it means someone could walk in and shoot me. A bureaucrat watching me in my house could deter criminals and increase my safety, but I don't want the government watching me in my own house.
Essentially, as Ben Franklin said, those who give up liberty for a little security deserve neither, and will lose both.
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