A friend has raised some issues regarding what I call “paternalism" (or "maternalism" if you prefer): “Why shouldn't people be permitted to gamble if they want to?”
What follows is in no sense represented to be a final draft -- or even a proposal for that matter. Nor is it represented to be the opinions or analysis of someone professionally qualified to speak on the subject. It's just my early ruminating.
The issue comes up in a variety of contexts: motorcycle helmets and automobile seat belts for adults, all kinds of limitations on minors, requiring "smoke free" restaurants and public buildings, limitations on degrees of intoxication, sale or possession of illegal drugs, and so forth.
I've often struggled with this issue and never satisfactorily resolved it, because I start with the default position, or general rule – to which there are of course many exceptions – that people ought to be free to do whatever they want.
And often, when dealing with one of those exceptions, once you brush away all the reasons for the regulation/limitation (e.g., the cost imposed on society by an individual’s foolishness has been covered by a bond obtained by that individual prior to their action) you are left with: ““Look, I really do know better than you what is good for you. What you are doing to yourself isn’t good for you, and since you won’t stop it on your own, we’re going to pass a law to make you stop it.”
And I’m not very comfortable saying that.
So what are these exceptions where some regulation may be philosophically (and politically) acceptable?
1. Children. There tends to be less controversy regarding limitations on "children’s" behavior -- their purchase of alcohol and tobacco, guns, pornography, their obligation to attend schools and when they can drive a car or get married. That’s not to say those issues (restricting a child’s free will) are not also worthy of being addressed – or that they would necessarily be decided differently even if the kids were making the rules. But they don’t; adults do. And adults don’t seem to express much concern, politically or otherwise, about these restrictions on children’s “freedom” – notwithstanding the somewhat arbitrary setting of ages (e.g., drinking age).
2. Harms to others. There’s the old line that "your freedom to swing your arm stops where my nose begins." One basis for restricting individual freedom is that while one should be free to do harm to oneself, one can fairly be restricted from doing harm to others.
Whatever may be one’s position with regard to the purchase, sale, ownership and possession of rifles and handguns, most would agree that limitations on target practice on the streets of heavily populated downtown urban areas is reasonable.
There will be arguments about the degree to which fraud and unfair business practices should be regulated, suggestions that we can’t protect everyone from their naiveté and inexperience and that caveat emptor (“let the buyer beware”) should take care of those problems.
Second hand smoke has been a controversial issue in this category. While one can argue that customers have a choice of bars and restaurants, the workers there have somewhat less choice.
3. Financial burden on taxpayers. Should motorcyclists be compelled to wear helmets?
They are not children, so that rationale is inapplicable. For the most part it is they, rather than others, who will be physically injured or killed in accidents. So why shouldn’t they be permitted to assume that risk?
One reason might be that some dead or injured motorcyclists, not to mention those with severe brain damage, could impose significant economic costs on taxpayers.
OK, goes the rejoinder, what if the motorcyclist is required to post a bond, or otherwise hold taxpayers harmless, against such costs? Then what's the reason to require helmets? Well, there are other losses, as in a wrongful death case, such as the family's loss of the income the motorcyclist would have provided during his or her lifetime. OK, suppose those are covered as well?
At some point you reach the stage where there is no real basis for arguing there is a legitimate public interest in legally requiring the use of safety features by adults (unless they are designed to protect others as well).
And thus, as quoted above, about all you’re left with is the unsatisfactory “Look, I really do know better than you what is good for you” argument.
4. Addictive behavior. If ever “I know what is good for you” might be considered as a possible basis for regulation, it could be with regard to the category of behavior that an individual starts by choosing, but soon becomes behavior over which they have little or no control – such as cigarettes or heroin. I’m not saying that makes it OK to interpose the state to prevent an individual’s free choice; I haven’t resolved that one to my satisfaction; but it does seem to me that harmful behavior to an individual (and no one else) that become addictive is more harmful to that individual (and less of a "free choice") than harmful behavior that can be stopped at any time.
5. Gambling. If it is true that there are significant societal negative externalities from gambling – including increased crime, bankruptcies, domestic abuse, and suicides – then (for some individuals) the free choice to gamble may be addictive, impose costs on taxpayers and cause harm to others.
The challenge is that – unlike, say, heroin use – this will not be the consequence for every gambler. So how to find those for whom gambling creates a problem for taxpayers or others?
Bear in mind that what follows is not intended as a serious proposal for public policy. It is simply a way to start thinking about the issue, to approach it theoretically, conceptually.
Many casinos use "player cards" that provide some kinds of benefits for the gambler. If these used a universal card, they could track total gambling losses, not just those at a single casino. An arbitrary amount (based on some data and rational analysis) could be selected as an acceptable level of gambling losses for anyone -- like the permitted blood alcohol levels, say $100 or $200 per month. It would be presumed that anyone could lose that much without endangering their ability to keep their home and feed their family.
Like I say, I am not for a moment suggesting that this should really be done. But it may be a way to think conceptually about coming up with some scheme that actually would work that could maximize individual freedom to gamble while minimizing the adverse social impact.
9 comments:
Why don't we implant a chip in the butt of every gambler that contains the record of their gambling gains and losses. When they enter a casino a wand is waved near their butt and if it turns green they can gamble and if it turns red the wand has a readout that tells them how long they have to wait to gamble.
A similar use of technology could be used for drinkers in this case the butt chip contains a blood alcohol meter and if their BAC approaches 0.08 they feel an intense pain in the butt. If it goes over 0.08 an implanted LED in their nose start to flash.
My ACLU friends would have heart attacks if either of these proposal were given serious consideration. The fall back policy is that people should not be jerks.
On a more serious note, my fear with this proposal would be that it would lead to more crime.
Now, we've got statistics to show that problem gamblers are more likely to go bankrupt, commit domestic assault and abuse chemicals.
Under this system, problem gamblers would have a whole new game: identity theft.
KL
K.L., who always has a solid contribution to make, is concerned about identity theft under John Neff's "chip in the butt" approach to regulating self-destructive behavior.
Talk about "things that make you go, 'hum.'" I'm not sure I want to explore the details of how identity theft would occur with such a system.
-- Nick
After reading this and the previous post I couldn't help but think that they start from the same place. The impulse to ask why the government (other people) should be able to tell me not to gamble, or not to smoke pot, or to wear a seatbelt comes from the same place as the impulse to ask why the government should be able to tell me how to spend "my" money. I often wonder whether the impulse is a remnant of childhood ("IT'S NOT FAIR!! YOU'RE NOT THE BOSS OF ME!!), but smarter and, I'm sure, more mature thinkers than I have advocated such positions (a tradition stretching at least from Locke to Nozick to modern-day libertarians).
The problem I find is even those people who don't identify themselves with this ideological perspective often include the perspective within their more pragmatic approach and identify the default position as "people ought to be free to do whatever thay want," which really does not admit of the complicated and multi-facited structure of societies, even if one includes the caveat "as long as it does no direct harm to others."
Perhaps we should start from the perspective of wanting to achieve a "flourishing" society, and then ask whether the freedom to gamble helps achieve this goal. Some may suggest that such an approach justifies tyranny, but I think history has shown that a society with more freedoms is more likely to flourish.
When I was in law school, I thought your were a run-of-the-mill left liberal and discounted a lot of what you had to say on public policy (particularly when you introduced Robert Reich). However, this analysis is really impressive. Other than the proposed, but not endorsed, solution, this looks like quality libertarian/economic analysis. I'll take you much more seriously in the future. Well done.
RexusNexus:
(1) Similarities between the majority prohibiting (or requiring) behavior and taxing for public purposes. Yes. But differences as well. There are benefits from living in communities, from civilization. Taxes are the price we pay for those benefits, those public purposes programs (e.g., roads), just as we pay for benefits from privately owned and provided programs. Control of my behavior (e.g., how long the grass in my front yard can be, whether I can gamble away what, in my judgment, I can afford to lose) is in someway similiar, yes, but also usefully distinguished (it seems to me).
(2) The concept of "general rules" (or "default positions") with exceptions is simply an analytical technique and/or a way of, say, drafting legislation. The way in which it "admits of the complicated and multi-facited" reality is through the exceptions. It is, sometimes, a tidier way of structuring the argument, or standards. The other way would be to start elsewhere, or not at all, simply listing each of the separate standards.
(3) "Flourishing society." Not bad. I'd buy it. But (a) We always have the general semanticists' question, "What do you mean?" That is, what does, and does not, contribute to a "flourishing society"? One man's flourishing society is another man's oppressive dictatorship. And (b) we have the process question of "who decides, and how?" How can/should a society decide that its goal is "flourishing"? And, having so decided, then how should it decide whether a given proposal or program will contribute to that end?
For better or worse, a democratic society's answer is with a system of representatives who have at least some loose relationship to their constituents' desires. Only half (or less) may vote; the respresentatives may have been corrupted by campaign finance; and so forth; but there is at least some relationship.
And that, not incidentally, is how a gambling casino came to be built near Riverside, Iowa. There was a vote; "direct democracy." Only about 1/4 of those eligible actually voted for the casino. The Amish don't vote; had they the proposition most surely would have failed. But there was a vote; and the very slim majority of those voting approved it.
-- Nick
James Eaves-Johnson, thank you for what I will take as a compliment.
But I would like to think of myself (however dilusional the thought may be) as someone engaged in "rational analysis" rather than "libertarian analysis," or "run-of-the-mill left liberal" analysis, or "conservative," or partisan Democrat or Republican.
I do have values. I think it's better for children to have health care rather than not, for hungry people to be fed rather than starve, for efforts at peaceful negotiation to be truly, fully exhausted before contemplating war, and so forth.
But I'm totally open to any and all rational, pragmatic ways of accomplishing those things without regard to the partisan or ideological labels that others might want to put on one approach or another.
-- Nick
It was a compliment. I was fairly jaded about the politics of professors in law school. Too many professors in the law school are just hard working (or previously hard working) leftists. Consequently, a professor's indicia of leftism allowed my prejudices to attach to them. Reich gave a speech that I would have considered standard leftist talking points. Your introduction of him attached my prejudices against leftists to you. That you overcame that prejudice is commendable. My comment was not intended to be a backhanded insult.
James:
(1) Thanks. I took it as a compliment -- and a very kind one at that, which I thought reflected well on both of us. Didn't for a moment take it as "backhanded."
(2) I was just elaborating on it by trying to claim to be someone who tries to avoid coming at public policy positions from any ideological, or partisan, positions (whether "liberal" or "libertarian"); preferring to consider all points of view, options for solutions, and then weighing them from the perspective of pragmatic, efficient, effectiveness (and "justice").
(3) I should also, in all honesty, confess that I am able -- when asked, and it is appropriate to the occasion -- to make a talk, or introduce a speaker, in a way that takes the occasion for what it is: a time to rally the troops, to reassure the true believers, to put the speaker in a good light (much as I might participate respectfully in a religious ceremony other than my own faith; or applaud appropriately in the theater at the end of a play I subsequently review (in part) in a critical way).
I like to believe I can separate the two roles (rational analysis of public policy alternatives and performing as a cheerleader), but I may just be fooling myself.
-- Nick
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