Monday, March 30, 2020

That Will Help

5 comments:

Douglas2 said...

https://lrl.texas.gov/legis/billsearch/BillDetails.cfm?legSession=63-0&billtypeDetail=hb&billNumberDetail=110

Bicycle Bill said...

This is why most people detest politicians.  Instead of working on something that will actually benefit someone or protect someone, they come up with something like this which will likely go nowhere but will still take up a certain amount of time for the introduction, the reading, and the referral to whatever committee deals with this sort of garbage — time that could have been better spent doing just about anything else.

-"BB"-

Anonymous said...

A law that won't be obeyed is a bad law. Moron.

Tim said...

"A law that won't be obeyed is a bad law. Moron."

Our prisons are full of people who disobeyed some law or other--so all laws are bad?

Anonymous said...

Because it breaks a principle similar to double jeopardy.

If you think it's a good idea, why not make another law, introducing another layer of punishment for breaking /this/ law, and another law for breaking that, and another and another? Then pass a law saying anyone breaking five or more laws at once must obviously be an irredeemable criminal and shall be executed?

Well, because that would clearly be moronic, and clearly unjust. So the time to stop it is with the first fatuous law in the cycle, which is Kaster's.

But the laws /prior/ to this one - don't steal, don't murder, are fine, and don't need to be meddled with. And if there are problems with any of them, you fix those particular laws, you don't add another layer of jeopardy (and complexity) on top. Well, at least, that's what happens in states and countries that have a clue.


BTW another type of bad law is a law that won't be enforced, and for great injustice!, have laws that are selectively enforced.