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Politics : A US National Health Care System?

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To: Lane3 who wrote (12167)12/9/2009 12:23:47 PM
From: TimF  Read Replies (1) of 42652
 
That seems a pretty big stretch to me. Can you back that notion up?

What happens when you violate a law that is enforced strongly (meaning one where they aren't going to let you slide)? They impose a criminal penalty on you. What happens if you resist that penalty?

Neither does anyone passing a law that requires a fine for inaction.

False. If someone doesn't have accounts that can be seized, and won't pay the fine, they either drop it (unlikely, but it could happen, and if it does than the law is not "enforced strongly"), or they seize property to pay it (possibly with deadly force if its resisted), or they arrest the person who doesn't pay (again possibly with deadly force).

Sure, there are always some nuts out there but you can't design laws around nuts.

I didn't say or imply they should design it around nuts, but they know the "nuts" are out there. The possibility is far more reasonably anticipated than the nagging leading to bank robbery case. If you look beyond each specific law, and rather to a large series of continued encroachment of individual liberty eventually it becomes almost certain that there will be some reaction along those lines, and in fact there has been cases of something along those lines happening.

Further, no one expects this law to be enforced strongly, I don't think.

Well I suppose they might not go so far as say Ruby Ridge.
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