A common belief is that “regulations” interfere with one
life style. There is a feeling that regulations are always negative and we tend
to think of regulations as preventing a person from doing something or forcing them
to do what they do not want to do. Regulations are for someone else. There is a
simple message in all of this, which is that you are in disharmony with
everyone else it is time to rethink your life style—your ego—if that statement infuriates
you, you are exactly the persons who should rethink their life style. The
second message is that it is not always good to be “in sync”; however, it is
also important to realize that regulations are there to protect others from
your indiscretions and transgressions. What is often overlooked is that it is a
two way street. I have noticed that the ones who complain about regulation the
most often and most vehemently are the first ones to say that there “ought to
be law” against whatever it was that someone did that just offended them in
some way.
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The question can be what are the regulations we talking
about. Of course, we can jump to the obvious, things that land you in prison,
or we can look at minor offenses such as use of offensive language or violation
of table etiquette. Traffic laws are a classic example of regulations we live
with everyday. A friend made an interesting statement. He was a long-haul
trucker, who had been driving the same route or years. In the middle of the South
Dakota prairies, there was a stop sign at the “T” junction of two highways. As he approached the junction, he looked both
ways, then in the rear view mirror and saw no cars: not one. He could see the
highways until they were lost over the horizons. Being a philosopher, as many
truck drivers are, he decided that the stop sign was there for his protection
and that he was perfectly capable of making his own decisions in that regard and
did not need stop sign, so he did not stop. Unfortunately, a police car was behind him in
a position that he could not see in his rear view mirror. He explained to me like
a parent explains to a child, “Law should be just reminders and people should
be able to judge which laws they need to follow and why.”
I lived for years in a country where the government wrote laws
essentially the same way they are in England or the United States. The difference
was they did not have the economic resources to enforce them once they became
an independent country; chase cars, breathalyzers, emergency response vehicles,
etc. The curious thing is that most of them bragged that they liked living
there because there were no regulations, which was not true; they were just not
enforced. Most of them routinely violated the laws in one way or another just
as if the laws did not exist. This environment attracted expatriates who felt above
the law, which is what cause me to think about all of this in the first place. They
see it as a modal for the way they think people should live in the United
States.
Most often, the people seemed to think that did not suffer
penalties other than what they did to themselves—this is the Marlborough cowboy
attitude. What this means is they suffered after the fact; therefore, it was their
own business. The tragedy is that when a drunk ran head on into another vehicle
and kill or injured people, the drunk was not the only ones to suffer. However,
this is narrow-minded and is minor when compared to the fact that they influence
society in another way; the children were observing this behavior and losing their
sense of social discipline. They were not mature enough or experienced enough to
make rational decision about what laws they need to follow and why. Now the children
have grown up; thus, regression to bestiality is gaining ground. Anarchy is bestial and not pretty; it has
no place in organized human society.
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