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-   -   The proper role and scope of government (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=26074)

Griff 02-06-2012 08:26 PM

I didn't over look that a single dairy plant had 16,000 proven and between 168,791 and 197,581 actual cases, much as you didn't overlook that this single farm caused 40+cases. Increased scale/consolidation is one of those unintended consequences which advocates of regulation tend to ignore. I also didn't ignore that this occurred after pasteurization much as meat can easily be contaminated after being radiated. The once sterile food gives a false idea of security leading to less care in final packaging.

Universal precautions are SOP in schools and day cares.

Even you admit that the farm in question is essentially out of business, so the profit over people line of thought is nonsense. Small farms (which are regulated btw) are not like Cargil they can't just switch plants when things go bad. I never said no oversight, but we could argue about the best way to do that when I'm not so tired.

I frown on feel good bans that limit what others can do.

Lamplighter 02-06-2012 08:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Griff (Post 793314)
<snip>I frown on feel good bans that limit what others can do.

Agreed... Peace

Pico and ME 02-06-2012 09:15 PM

When enough people get sick from these farms, even those democrat despising republicans will be clamoring for regulations/bans.

Griff 02-07-2012 05:10 AM

Oh, I don't know, there was no clamor to ban spinach or Jack-in-the-Box when they were killing people.

ZenGum 02-07-2012 05:13 AM

Highfructosecornsyrup.

Griff 02-07-2012 05:14 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ZenGum (Post 793352)
Highfructosecornsyrup.

...from my cold dead bloated hand.

Lamplighter 02-07-2012 08:14 AM

Red No. 1

Spexxvet 02-07-2012 08:46 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Griff (Post 793303)
I understand your concern, but you are attacking people's life choices. Some of us are not excited by the idea of a supposedly risk free world bought by a simple exchange of personal liberty/choice. To me, it is very much the same as the War on Terror, there is always a cost for a nominal increase in safety. In this case, we create a (n awful tasting) biological blank slate which, given opportunity, salmonella easily inhabits. This kind of stuff is why rural America votes Republican, despite Democratic protestations that it is against their interests. The left does not understand what other people value or simply dismiss those values as not rational.

Your choices can and do impact others. When you get sick, you use the healthcare system. This will absolutely have an inflationary impact on me. It will either increase my insurance price, my taxes, or my self-paid healtcare prices.

Clodfobble 02-07-2012 11:10 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Griff
or I could be completely off base.

I'm with you, Griff. Didn't have time to jump in, but you said everything I could have. I'm Clodfobble, and I approve this message.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Spexxvet
Your choices can and do impact others. When you get sick, you use the healthcare system. This will absolutely have an inflationary impact on me. It will either increase my insurance price, my taxes, or my self-paid healtcare prices.

As did the hundreds of thousands who still got sick off of pasteurized products. The missing data point is, next to 40 ill people, how many people are safely consuming these raw farm products, compared to how many sickened/unsickened mass-factory consumers there are.

Pico and ME 02-07-2012 12:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Griff (Post 793351)
Oh, I don't know, there was no clamor to ban spinach or Jack-in-the-Box when they were killing people.

I just posted because regulations/bans are not brought about solely by democrats. Look at bans on gay marriage and the fight to ban abortions or even the the right to work laws which ban union dues.

It's even probable that the fight to ban these types of milk farms are probably being egged on by the big factory dairy farms themselves (repubs, for sure) to discourage competition.

Lamplighter 02-07-2012 12:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Clodfobble (Post 793423)
I'm with you, Griff. Didn't have time to jump in, but you said everything I could have.
I'm Clodfobble, and I approve this message.

As did the hundreds of thousands who still got sick off of pasteurized products.
The missing data point is, next to 40 ill people, how many people are safely consuming these raw farm products,
compared to how many sickened/unsickened mass-factory consumers there are.

Clod, I hope your remark above was exaggeration only for impact... otherwise I call BS.

I realize public health statistics are not convincing to the believers.
But here is a link that summarizes another link (downloads a pdf)
on disease outbreaks in the U.S. during the past year.

85% of Outbreaks and Illnesses from Milk Products were traced
to Raw Milk or 60-day Aged Raw Milk Cheeses in the Last 18 Months


The details are in the pdf of that download. There is risk in discussing
the numbers of illness cases because cases depend on the size of each dairy's clientele.
Basically the numbers outbreaks are very small (14 raw / 1 pasterized),
but the numbers of dairies and the amounts of dairy products are hugely disproportionate.

A Libertarian argument against government intervention denies
the world's history and the impact of pasteurization and vaccination.
It was the futility of such a Libertarian view that was my original point in these posts.
.

Clodfobble 02-07-2012 02:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lamplighter
Clod, I hope your remark above was exaggeration only for impact... otherwise I call BS.

I was specifically referencing this part from Griff's link:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Griff
I didn't over look that a single dairy plant had 16,000 proven and between 168,791 and 197,581 actual cases, much as you didn't overlook that this single farm caused 40+cases.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lamplighter
There is risk in discussing
the numbers of illness cases because cases depend on the size of each dairy's clientele.

This is what I was already saying, when I referred to the "missing data point." The other problem with any debate of this nature is how to factor in the additional effects of pasteurizing products, beyond pathogenic infection.

The human species is dependent on symbiotic relationships with "good" species of bacteria for a number of biological functions, and it may turn out that indiscrimately wiping out bacteria in our lives will eventually cause a species-wide health crisis (say, for example, the skyrocketing rate of autoimmune diseases.)

No one can say for sure what the overall impact of such a policy will be--it may be that we're not as good at killing things as we'd like to believe, and our efforts won't really matter, or it may be that those individuals who depend more on this symbiosis will die out, and the species will evolve to match the new environment we've created.

Regardless, if your argument is really that people should be forcibly protected from making themselves sick, can I assume that you are also in favor of outlawing tobacco, and enforcing government-mandated dietary guidelines for all obese citizens?

Lamplighter 02-07-2012 03:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Clodfobble (Post 793493)
<snip>

Regardless, if your argument is really that people should be forcibly protected
from making themselves sick, can I assume that you are also in favor of outlawing tobacco,
and enforcing government-mandated dietary guidelines for all obese citizens?

I start from the premise that some form of government is required for a modern society.

That government should/must do what people cannot or will not do for themselves.
Therefore, government must regulate certain activities in which others will/can/may be harmed.

Thus since not everyone can be a self sufficient farmer, the distribution of safe
food products to the public is valid regulation by government.
Therefore, the Libertarian premise of no government intervention is doomed to fail.

I do also subscribe to the notion of the most good to the most people.
Therefore, not all people will be happy or unaffected by governmental actions,
and a smaller number may even be negatively affected.
(That's the reason I include vaccinations as a legitimate activity of government ... to protect
the greatest number possible,while doing unavoidable harm to the smallest number possible.
It's also my reason for concern over the current activities fracking for production of natural gas.

For the examples you mention (tobacco and obesity),
the latter is a gray area still open for discussion.
We don't yet know if a better informed public will deal with the problem.
But the former is now clear, the tobacco industry was lying about
the safety of tobacco and making a profit based on that lie,
so government intervention is/was justified.
Likewise, since children cannot make their own decisions,
government legitimately forbids them from certain activities.

Of course, the survivalist way of life would avoid these issues,
but living in modern society does have a cost.
.

Clodfobble 02-07-2012 03:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lamplighter
For the examples you mention (tobacco and obesity),
the latter is a gray area still open for discussion.
We don't yet know if a better informed public will deal with the problem.
But the former is now clear, the tobacco industry was lying about
the safety of tobacco and making a profit based on that lie,
so government intervention is/was justified.

Government intervention, in the case of tobacco, was suing the tobacco companies for lying, and making them print facts about the deadliness of smoking on their packets. So does that mean you're fine with the sale of raw milk to consumers who specifically prefer it, as long as there is a big Surgeon General's warning on the bottle?

For the record, I'm not in favor of pure Libertarianism as a form of government myself. But it seems really obvious to me that you are cherry-picking examples "in need" of regulation when exponentially larger and more destructive examples are readily available. People who chose to smoke in the past might "deal with the problem," now that they are better informed? People who are obese might "deal with the problem" if only they were aware of the dangers of a high-carb, refined-sugar diet? Honestly?

infinite monkey 02-07-2012 03:26 PM

The Ohio Casinos will not allow smokers to work there. OK.

As far as I know, a 400 pound cheeseburger-monger can.

A raging alcoholic can. (Well NO not on the job.)

Meh. It's easier to single out the 'evil' people than it is single out the 'pure and good' people. Whatever that is.


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