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Comments on the article: Verboten

04/04/2007

Politicians ban the pleasures of the working man in order to feel they have power over something. By Jens Jessen

 
Thinkergong
(1 comments)
registered on 12/09/2008
Scarcity
It would very much surprise me if the author has, in previous articles, expressed simmilar resent towards private companies where management-imposed restrictions -where alcohol, smoking, dogs etc are prohibited- make life less pleasant.
Some people firmly believe in a free market society, and truly understand the consequences defined by scarcity (= more limitations to freedom make freedom more valuable). If you dislike the laws in your country, you could take responsibility and move to a country that satisfies your needs better. If you already live in a country with for you 'the highest possible value the market of countries offers', and still aren't satisfied... maybe wining and moaning about the downs will make your life even more pleasant! You can also spend your time blaming science the time-travel machine doesn't exist (for free of course).

It would have been interesting if the writer had made an effort explaining why the working man votes these politicians.
Maybe the working men think about the long term; that easy acces to junkfood will make their offspring's life less pleasant? Maybe they think 'an unhealthy or undisciplined society' will produce a lower economic standard and therefore a less pleasant life? Maybe the working man simply finds that 'dangerous dogs' will make his life less pleasant? These are all explanations that strike me more plausible than 'a compensation for the powerlessness of politicians'. ML.
Created on 12/09/2008 | Reviewed on 16/09/2008
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Inkling
(1 comments)
registered on 14/05/2007
G. K. Chesterton was right
G. K. Chesterton warned of this, blaming it on Puritan tendencies that fester all the more in the absence of religion. And after Hitler came to power, you could tell his loathing for the Nazis by the comparisons he drew between them and Prohibition. Both displayed the same obsession with regulating and restricting.

In his Eugenics and Other Evils, the "other evils" are precisely what you mentioned, depriving the working man of his beer, his smoke and a home life free of government meddling. (Note the homschooling family being hassled in today's Germany based on a Nazi-era law.) He mocked these alleged public safety concerns with a ditty about a man who wasn't allowed to smoke on the job, lest he "burn the waterworks down."

The marvelous Chesterton is well-read in America. He deserves to be much better read in countries such as Germany and his own England, who're suffering from the very ills he warned about.

--Michael W. Perry, author of the soon-out Chesterton on War
Created on 14/05/2007 | Reviewed on 18/05/2007
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Kevin Pfeiffer
(1 comments)
registered on 20/04/2007
Quote:
Anyone who prohibits himself something, for whatever reason or neurosis, doesn't like to see someone else indulging in it. He who practises abstinence disapproves of his neighbour's sex, the anorexic can't stand the sight of bursting grocery bags, the wooden sandal-wearer looks down her nose at the chrome tanned pumps on the elegant madam.
This article hardly deserves comment (pleasure has been taxed and restricted for centuries), but since it comes just as Germany is about to implement some reasonable protections of the rights of non-smokers...

Whether we look down our noses at those who smoke in public spaces (or let their dogs shit on the sidewalks) is not important. I don't have to eat my neighbor's groceries, have sex with him or her, or wear his pumps, but when a few people insist on smoking in public restaurants, train stations, and lobbies, then we all have to breathe it. And the majority of us would rather not.

The pending restrictions on smoking may restrict the pleasures of a few (to their bathtubs, kids' rooms or own automobiles), but for most of us, enjoying food in smoke-free rooms will be a newfound pleasure.
Created on 20/04/2007 | Reviewed on 20/04/2007
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Curt Carpenter
(4 comments)
registered on 15/03/2007
Verboten
This, in my opinion, is a brilliant piece of work -- and a good example of what the German press does so remarkably well. At one moment I wanted to cover my mouth so I could laugh without being noticed/ridiculed -- and at the next momemt I was stunned by the reminder of a simple, yet undeniable truth wonderfully expressed!

It's true, afterall, that politicians need to be seen as "doing something!" When was the last time we saw a President/Prime Minister/Cabinet Minister say -- "I have no idea what's going on -- and even less of an idea about what to do!"

And Yet it would be so wonderfully refreshing to hear such a confession!

And so superior to the alternative (identified in this article), which is to concoct a "strawman" issue and then CRUSH it trough the brilliance of our forceful leadership! ("These dogs are E-V-I-L -- and must be BANNED!!!)

So anyway -- well done indeed Mr. Jessen! You made me laugh and cry simultaneously!
Created on 04/04/2007 | Reviewed on 05/04/2007
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r8lobster
(1 comments)
registered on 04/04/2007
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bleat
Cockeyed it might be in places, but don't obscure by namecalling.

There's some real items in there. Jessen's piece isn't a plea for teenage smoking--it's that all smoking, bit by bit, is out. There's nothing here about being in favor of binge drinking. It's about drinking and increasing social--even more to the point, state--disapproval, with a large side of snooty and hypocritical condescension from the morally superior.

And sooner or later they come for your vice, and you can get back to work, thank you very much. It is creeping social puritanism in disguise of political action, since the more important issues--health care, jobs--seem to be intractable.

And of course there is a bias. In looking at cheap flights, well, why should the rich be the only ones allowed to move around with ease? To get all righteous about climate change--certainly among the most pressing problems of our time--and slap a big fee on cheap flights and feel good about it seems a little short-sighted.

You're just telling the little people to get back to their Myrtle Beach tack as they are an issue when they choose air travel. Doesn't do much about the bigger problems. How about, um, making better airplanes?
Created on 04/04/2007 | Reviewed on 05/04/2007
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