Daryl wrote:Difference between an optomist and a pessimist. I believe that most western societies are much better now than 1900.
In our case we now have universal health care, a welfare net to ensure no one starves, protection of minority rights, racism is banned, workers have legal rights, access to guns is controlled, universal voting for all adults (not just rich white males), and women can participate fully.
From RFC the curse of big business having too much power still remains in the Honorverse, otherwise things are good there as now for most citizens.
LOL, and these are all *GOOD* things?
"Universal Health Care" merely takes "natural selection" out of the equation, which means undesirable characteristics survive to propagate, rather than die off.
The "welfare net" keeps the population growing at the expense of those still willing to work.
*All* people's rights should be preserved, it shouldn't matter if one is part of a minority or a majority. Equal rights are equal rights - no matter what race, creed, gender, or whatever. On the other hand, limiting one to give another preferential treatment isn't equality. Unfortunately that happens all too frequently as well.
As far as racism, I don't condone it; but all too often it seems it's not a question of depriving someone of something or some opportunity as forcing oneself on someone or group that doesn't want your association. Freedom *TO* associate with those you desire to should also entail freedom *FROM* associating with those you do not.
Workers have for a long time in this country had at least *one* basic right - namely, if they didn't like their employer, they could try and find one that they did. I think things like workplace safety standards and most of the other regulations from OSHA and some of the other regulatory agencies have their place. However, I also don't think any worker should be *FORCED* to join a union in order to have a job. *ALL* states should be "right to work" states.
LOL, since being armed is the *only* way to ensure any "rights" we have remain ours, "limiting access to firearms" doesn't exactly seem like something desirable. Now, I'm firmly on the side of those who want to keep arms out of possession by felons or those with mental problems. And to have laws with strict punishment for those who use a firearm recklessly or in commission of a crime. Some folks say that because of the *kinds* of arms the military has the citizenry having arms is futile. I suspect few of those have ever really shot someone. The US armed forces aren't likely to find opening fire on average civilians something easy to do. A racist militia group or some domestic terrorist cell is one thing. A park or city square full of demonstrating civilians is quite another. The vast majority of the military aren't psychopaths.
And voting is just another right *any* CITIZEN of legal age and sound mind should have equality in.