It's all a function of aversion to risk. All animals have a built in aversion to risk that over time gets honed and refined by their environment. If you learn that you can run a read light 99 times out of a hundred and not get caught, you will run them more often
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Firstly, people who intend to use guns will be much more likely to be good at using guns than people who keep them around for emergency use; that is, the average criminal will be a better gunslinger than the average non-criminal ( ... )
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That being said, your go-cart idea is awesome! Also, video games--where you rack up points for following traffic laws, maintaining control of your vehicle during bad weather, and driving defensively when amongst people who don't follow the traffic laws. I think people would have a much, much easier time learning traffic laws interactively than by passively reading a boring book.
Also, courses on basic car maintenance, recognition of symptoms, and tips on buying cars/buying insurance/etc. would be helpful.
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I like trees too, but I like my rights to clear cut my land more. If I own it, why should someone else be allowed to tell me when, where, and what I can do to it?
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I'm mostly talking about developers, who wipe out acres and acres of trees. This causes huge problems for everyone else. Woods protect the soil, cleanse the air of pollutants, are important carbon dioxide sinks, and house wild animals. When you remove large numbers of trees, you fill streams with topsoil (which is the #1 killer of endangered fish species in the U.S.), cause problem animals like snakes and opossums to evacuate into people's yards, etc., etc. It's just a big mess.
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But that's not a very realistic way to approach it. If you are killed by a drunk driver, you're dead. That's it. It's over. Whether or not the culprit is caught and punished, you're still dead.
It's in our best interests to curb high-risk behavior before the damage is done. I know it doesn't sound as pleasant, but that's the way the world works. In theory, there are a lot of things we should be doing differently. But, in practice, it doesn't always work; there are too many variables we are not accounting for.
The 10th Amendment states this:
The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved for the States respectively, or to the people.That does not mean that rights not addressed in the Constitution are necessarily reserved to the people; it means that the ( ... )
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