Siren Prime wrote:hellkitty wrote:Frankly, I feel that once you're a certain age, if you want to destroy your body and mind, that's really your decision, isn't it?
True.
I've always heard "everyone has the right the be an idiot".
I don't like it, but it's true.
Not really. They don't have the right to do something that overtly adversely affects my right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness (certain restrictions apply of course).
Most crimes you can think of, be they motivated by greed, anger, or lust, fall under the category of stupid, but we don't consider theft, murder, or rape to be rights protected by the U.S. constitution. Heck, try fielding ignorance of traffic laws as your defense if you go to court for running a red light. So no, you don't have the right to be an idiot, or at least, to do idiotic things, not in America anyway.
Why?
Disregarding the alarming image of the guy back home who pulled a girl's ears off because he thought they were attacking her, there's still less dramatic drug-related concerns like drunk driving, unprotected sex, abuse and neglect, or loss of financial independence to consider. All of these can potentially harm me, either directly, or by raising my taxes. No man is an island, even in the most individualistic of cultures; we pay for the mistakes of others, so it's in our best self-interest to to try and prevent those mistakes or at least minimize their consequences.
And of course there's the other inherent problem about the "once a person reaches a certain age" philosophy - that the idiocy of adults has an odd habit of trickling down to minors, children who are biologically programmed to imitate the observed behavior of adults as an essential mechanism for learning.