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| quote: | Originally posted by NeoPhono
Okay, here goes...
I am a libertarian as far as the rights of others do not affect to a direct, traceable and recognizable degree the rights and privelages of others. However, along with the rights I would be willing to give others, I also expect those individuals to have personal responbility in accordance to their rights, and also their personal actions. This being said, I would expect someone with a communicable disease to take it upon themselves to do what it takes to make sure they do not spread a disease they knowingly have. If this requires that an individual no longer has sex, until a cure is found or other reasonable measures, then I would expect the person to do just that.
As I said before, I would be very willing to use my tax dollars to pay for wide scale testing for AIDS/HIV. After an individual knows that s/he is a carrier, I would expect them to no longer have sex with uninfected individuals. If they want to continue having sex with others that are also carriers, I have no problems, as long as they are not doing so in hopes of procreating, for a variety of reasons.
I believe that people should know if they do or do not have AIDS/HIV. If they are knowing carriers of the virus, it is their responsiblity to no longer have sex, at least with uninfected individuals, in order to protect others from the disease. If an individual choses to violate this responsiblity, he should be punished, and if a group continually violates their responsiblity, then it needs to be enforced. Africa is a perfect example of this. Whereas in America, with testing and prevention, new AIDS cases continue to fall, they only increase in heavily affected African nations. It has gotten to the point where I only see two options (short of a cure, which is unlikely). Allow everyone to get AIDS and die off, or forecably prevent its spread. We cannot treat everyone in Africa for AIDS that has AIDS, but we can test them, and prevent them from spreading it.
Although not perfectly analagous, I liken in to a persons "right" to drive. If you become blind, you should take it upon yourself to no longer drive, due to the fact you may injure others. Since many would not be responsible enough to do this, the state checks your vision when you renew your licsence. Although blindness is not contagious, this is an example where I see a need for personal responsiblity, backed by the state having to enforce it. (In a perfect world, my world, enforcement would not be needed.)
Rights *with* responsibility.
Sorry this post is so jumbled, it was written at work in pieces. |
Well Ok, I agree with many of the things you've said above. An Aids patient should bear responsiblity for their disease, a patient should take preventative measures to prevent the spread of their disease, a patient should restrict some of their social activities, and so on and so forth. What you are professing however, is government pre-emption to invade the privacy of people's lives and remove basic civil liberties by assuming they are incapable of bearing that responsibility. Not only that, but you are advocating that we should eliminate an inalienable right to privacy and freedom for an activity that bears joint responsibility by both parties. You mentioned before that aids patients have a responsiblity to limit the spread of the disease, well what of the responsiblities of the healthy individual to be aware of the risks of sex and to take precaution to ensure that their partner is not afflicted with a disease?
As I mentioned before, there needs to be a system of reciprocity whereby a just, equitable distribution of the burden falls upon society as a whole ... not simply the minority. Otherwise, why place any ethical limitations on anything so long as it accomplishes the "greater good"? In this case, we are permenantly suspending the bill of rights for a segment of the population in order to alleviate the proportionate burden of responsibility that is assigned to the majority. Society doesn't like wearing a rubber or getting tested before they stick it in, so their response to this grave injustice is to remove the civil liberties of a popluation afflicted with a terrible disease? I'm sorry, but that decision doesn't seem very ethical to me. Well why don't we increase education of the public towards the risks they are taking, increase the frequency and ease of use of testing facilities, interject a cultural acceptance and attitude for the need to be sexually knowledgeable of your partner's history, i mean there are a million of things that can be done that are far more acceptable than sick camps where you keep all the ill. You stated that you are all for increased funding to help cure the disease, well how would you price the value of your civil liberties?
With respect to your analogy, I would say that it is somewhat flawed in that driving is not a right ... it is a privelidge. The freedom to travel, maintain privacy, etc., are rights.
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