DO WE REALLY DO WHATEVER WE CAN “IF IT SAVES JUST ONE LIFE”? Or want to?

Of course not.

Consider the “senseless violence” that occurs on American roads every year. We should do whatever we can if it saves just one life, no?

Let’s see.

In late July 2012, a pickup truck packed with twenty-three people veered off a Texas highway and crashed into two trees.

Nine people were injured in the crash, but they were the lucky ones. The other fourteen occupants of the truck were killed. In the aftermath, bodies lay everywhere. Among the dead were two children. Alcohol was not involved, and there was no evidence of another vehicle at the scene. The weather at the time of the crash was dry and clear.

So why was the call for legislation not swift and immediate after such a terrible event? Because people knew that these sorts of things happen from time to time, and there is little, if anything, that legislation can do to change that.

Oh no! Say it ain’t so? Well . . .

. . . .  We could address automotive deaths at any time if we were truly committed to doing so. One piece of legislation could virtually guarantee that no one would ever die on American roads again. All we would have to do is to reduce the speed limit on every road in the country to five miles per hour. That would save more than just one life.

Of course, everyone knows that imposing a national speed limit of five miles per hour is ludicrous. It also would do more harm than good.

Think about it. The cost of policing would rise dramatically because almost everyone would want to drive much faster than five miles per hour. This would leave fewer police resources available for preventing and investigating other crimes. Few people would have the time to commute more than five miles or so, and even a commute that short would take two hours every day.

But the law would do more than upend lives. We might all starve because we would have profound difficulties keeping grocery stores stocked with food. We would also have trouble getting people to lifesaving medical care quickly. Many people would, in fact, die because we passed a law intended to save lives.

Fact is,

THERE’S NO WAY AROUND TRADE-OFFS

The “if it saves just one life” argument is usually nonsense. All human actions involve trade-offs. As the speed-limit example illustrates, a gain in one direction inevitably leads to losses in another. There is probably no such thing as a law that universally saves lives. There are only laws that save lives in one place in exchange for losing lives in another.

You mean . . . ?

When politicians say, “If it saves just one life,” they can appear to care deeply while simultaneously absolving themselves of the responsibility of crafting a rational response to a difficult issue. It allows them to trade on emotions instead of facts.

Well, some of them are good at that. Let’s, as hip people say, “Let’s unpack that.”

If we really believed that any law is justified if it saves just one life, we would require all Americans to pass a mental health evaluation on a regular basis or be institutionalized (more than 38,000 Americans commit suicide annually). We would outlaw all motor vehicles (almost 35,000 Americans die in vehicle accidents annually). We would require all houses to be single-story structures (more than 26,000 die in falls annually).

We would ban alcohol (almost 17,000 die annually from alcohol-related liver disease).

Oops, we tried that, didn’t we?

We would require people to be certified as swimmers before allowing them into any large body of water (more than 3,500 die from drowning annually). We would prohibit women from getting pregnant unless they had no family history of birth complications (more than 900 American women die in childbirth annually).

Of course, none of these things will ever happen, nor should they. Life is full of dangers that cannot be legislated away.

And THERE’S NOTHING WE CAN DO ABOUT IT!

via The “If It Saves Just One Life” Fallacy – Intercollegiate Studies Institute: Think. Live Free.

Why I Support Justice For George Floyd But Oppose BLM

Black Lives Matter is on pace for hypocrites-of-the-year award.

BLM is silent about black lives taken by black criminals
Over 90% of Black American homicides are by black thugs (<1% by a white policeman).

BLM is silent about those black lives killed by blacks.

Justice? Really?

If to be “silent about injustice” is to be a perpetrator of injustice, then BLM is guilty of a grave injustice by their silence about blacks killing blacks.

If actions speak louder than words, then BLM’s message is that black lives taken by black criminals do not matter.

BLM is silent about blacks killing blacks because it does not suit the political narrative and purposes of the “progressives” who have hijacked the movement. It makes you wonder what those purposes are.

Indeed.

via Why I Support Justice For George Floyd But Oppose BLM | Capitalism Magazine

What a book review looks like when the author is “binary”

The reviewer is relentless in giving the author his wish, as in we-dare-not-call-they-he, how few they is, etc.:

Gessen’s credentials as an observer of autocracy are impeccable. Aged fifty-three, they (Gessen identifies as nonbinary) spent their childhood in the Soviet Union and the US, then moved back to Russia in 1991 to work as a reporter.

In 2012 they were fired as the editor of a popular science magazine for refusing to send a journalist to cover one of Vladimir Putin’s more ludicrous publicity stunts, flying a wobbly motorized hang glider to “lead” a flight of Siberian cranes on their westward migration.

One of the few out gay people in Russian public life, they became a target for homophobic politicians. In 2013 they left Russia after the passage of legislation against “homosexual propaganda” opened the possibility that the state would take away their children.

They is quite a good writer, we (I) suppose.

Putting a black square on your Facebook page means you are ___________

Remarkable comment on two bishops, riots, and a tin ear . . .

Pluot (named for the hybrid fruit, because I switched from food and wine blogging to better things)

I was going to title it “We have two disappointing bishops on our hands,” but then I noticed the Facebook meme for “Blackout Tuesday” and got distracted.

The two disappointing bishops are, pardon me I mean no disrespect but I must say it, Bishop Barron and our own good Cardinal Cupich. The excellent and hardworking Bishop Barron concludes at the end of a longish article, “Pentecost and the fires in our streets,” essentially that all the looting is owing to “400 years of racism,” which by the way is Antifa’s own trope. Yes, so that’s why Antifa would try to burn down a historic Episcopal church in Washington D.C., and that’s why my employer has had at least five stores of its retail chain in Chicago looted, and one essentially destroyed, even to the warehouse, the IT room and all the cash registers.

And our good Cardinal Cupich writes a…

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Liberal Democratic governors and mayors, mugged by reality in George Floyd fallout

In the middle of the John Kass piece:

The looters roll on into the suburbs. And suburban soccer moms, with their guilt and their “Hate Has No Home Here” signs in their front lawns, download police scanner apps and wonder where they can buy a gun.

Yes. On our suburbanly quiet N. Side street was a car parked yesterday with “Abolish the police” sign pasted on the door. And the no-hate signs are common. A shrug is all it takes to resume my stroll in relative contentment. These are voters, however.

via Chicago Tribune

Profane exchange: Lightfoot, chief City Council critic tussle over police tactics during looting

Does she know what she’s doing?

Chicago Newspapers

Ald. Ray Lopez said the mayor told him he was “full of s–t” when he demanded to know her plan to protect neighborhoods. His response? “I told her, ‘F–k you. You don’t know what’s going on.’”

Heated exchange:

By Sunday night, Lopez said neighborhoods were in chaos, and he believed his warnings about a “coordinated attempt to destabilize our city” had proved true.

On a second conference call between the mayor and aldermen, Lopez said several aldermen were “in tears” about the damage done to their communities.

“I asked her point-blank. I said, ‘I told you this was gonna happen in the morning. I warned you. What is our plan for the neighborhoods? How are we gonna stabilize the communities? We need a five-day plan. The assumption that this is all gonna go away because you’ve got a curfew is wrong. We need to stabilize the communities. I want an…

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