Well the issue extends deeper than that. It extends down to the question of state police at all - if it turns out that this is how they need to conduct their operations, and that pressing need overrides due process, then what unique benefit does the state provide that otherwise couldn't be provided for in the market (incorrectly assuming, of course, that market police forces didn't enforce due process)? Once again we don't see any answers... just more questions. Questions about the role of parents, questions about the age of consent, questions about the proper role of police, et cetera. This is the classic problem of centralized planning: unforeseen consequences and ambiguity.
This also applies to the question of the cults' existence. If landowners were not, by law, compelled to "not discriminate", then surely FLDS compounds would dramatically decline - who would want to sell their land to them? And if someone did want to sell their land to them, then why do we have discrimination laws? To see how the cults even set up shop in the first place, is a prime example of how the government actively prevents problems from being solved, which lets them grow until eventually violent coercion can be justified.
Surely the people of the town knew about the cult far before federal officials did. But specifically because of the removal of responsibility from citizens, nothing was done. The responsibility was put in the hands of the State. But the State can't solve for local problems, as this points out, specifically because of its existence as the protector of "everyone". The children are being ordered back into the custody of the FLDS.
To make the argument of necessity is to spit in the face of every other victim in society who has been forced to trudge through our legal system in search for justice. What makes these children so important that police will intervene, yet when there's death and violence running rampant in a ghetto, the victims are told to wait for justice?
I don't see the justice to it. Or the logic. Or the "order" and "harmony". What I see is the very sort of thing that the State supposedly guards us against, being used by the State, in order to justify the State's right to guard us. How is society supposed to function in a nation like that? What is freedom when it can be thrown away in a second's notice for the pressing need of the moment? Especially when, as we now see, the "end" that the means justified, wasn't even achieved?
This also applies to the question of the cults' existence. If landowners were not, by law, compelled to "not discriminate", then surely FLDS compounds would dramatically decline - who would want to sell their land to them? And if someone did want to sell their land to them, then why do we have discrimination laws? To see how the cults even set up shop in the first place, is a prime example of how the government actively prevents problems from being solved, which lets them grow until eventually violent coercion can be justified.
Surely the people of the town knew about the cult far before federal officials did. But specifically because of the removal of responsibility from citizens, nothing was done. The responsibility was put in the hands of the State. But the State can't solve for local problems, as this points out, specifically because of its existence as the protector of "everyone". The children are being ordered back into the custody of the FLDS.
To make the argument of necessity is to spit in the face of every other victim in society who has been forced to trudge through our legal system in search for justice. What makes these children so important that police will intervene, yet when there's death and violence running rampant in a ghetto, the victims are told to wait for justice?
I don't see the justice to it. Or the logic. Or the "order" and "harmony". What I see is the very sort of thing that the State supposedly guards us against, being used by the State, in order to justify the State's right to guard us. How is society supposed to function in a nation like that? What is freedom when it can be thrown away in a second's notice for the pressing need of the moment? Especially when, as we now see, the "end" that the means justified, wasn't even achieved?
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