auscyclefan94 said:
You don't think you are, but you have. I understand limits to freedom but I don't agree with it on this point. I think there is a difference or line between what is over-the-top in restricting freedom and what is reasonable. I do not see the fat tax reasonable for the aforementioned reasons.
Oh wise one, lead me to the light! I appreciate that you have not responded to anything I have said, but merely said a blanket statement that is, well, meaningless, in absence of context that you failed to address. You have learned well and are well on your way to a meaningless career in futile debating.
If you think you can escape some semblance of paternalism in society, you are deeply misguided. Speed limits on roads? That's an expression of paternalism, as it places the safety of the greater good above any individual's desire to drive 160 kph in a designated 60 kph zone. Stop signs on intersections cramping your style? Oh god, paternalism.
I will give you an example since you can't seem to grasp what I am trying to say. Say you have in your hand the following coins: a 1 cent coin, a 5 cent coin, a 10 cent coin and a 25 cent coin. Now, you can say two things about this. One, is that you have four coins. The other is that you have four coins of differing value. This is a token-type distinction. To say you have four coins is to say that you have four tokens whereas to say you have four coins of differing value is to say that you have four types of coins. Understand? Good.
Now, let's apply this to a sin a tax such as a fat tax. One of the assumptions a fat tax assumes is that not all free choices have the same value. That is, free choices fall within a range of values, some trivial, some important, with the caviat that people are willing to sacrifice trivial choices in order to make more important ones. Ergo, I would be willing to sacrifice fatty foods through a fat tax if that will help me achieve my goal of being able to travel in the future once I retire. Because let's be honest, it is easier to travel if I have some degree of moderate health rather than having the weight and appearance of a bloated walrus. In this case, I would put the value of being able to choose fatty foods at 1 cent and my being able to travel once I retire at 25 cents because I identify more with the travel goal because it is much more meaningful to me. Still get it? Good.
If you identify freedom of choice as strictly a token that cannot be curtailed in any shape or form, you are demeaning it by saying the value of the ability to make a free choice is equal across all situations. I would not say that the freedom to choose a package of chips over a bunch of broccoli has the same value or is equally as important as that of being able to choose where you would like to work, where you live, etc. To think that a restriction of choice that a fat tax would implement as unreasonable is unreasonable because it is premissed on the idea that all choices have equal value, which is quite frankly, moronic.