mikepage said:
I hope you didn't see me as implying otherwise.
Look I'm not rah-rah-regulation. And I recogniize there's a lot of regulation done badly and a lot of regulation done for the wrong reason. I think seat belt laws, recreational-drug laws, laws prohibiting prostitution, and a host of other laws should be discarded.
Still I think there's a proper role for regulation, primarily regarding safety, as I stated before.
I think the people should agree on what maximum risk they wish to assume as they go about their daily activities, and the government should try to devise standards and compliance mechanisms for public businesses that try to insure it is not exceeded.
I also want to make a distinction. When you walk into a pool hall, you're not thinking about fire exits, about wiring, about how much radon might be in the air, about whether their well water is contaminated by the buried crap at the oil refinery next door, and so on. But note all these risks are ancillary to the activity you're choosing to do--play pool.
I draw a distinction between those ancillary risks and direct risks. Think about a bungee cord operation. I see three ways to handle the bungee cord place at the edge of town. One is no government interference. You're aware I don't like that one. A second is government regulation. The cord is inspected at regular intervals, and the business is only licenced to operate if the risk of the cord breaking is less than one in a million or one in ten million or whatever. There is a third possibility, which would be government monitoring. The government would inspect like before, and they would slap up either a green sign or an orange sign or a red sign (like the terror threat levels). Then the consumer could choose whether to assume the risk. I'd be fine with that.
For ancillary risks, like fire safety at a pool hall, I prefer there's standards that must be met. There's only one pool hall in Fargo. I would not like the idea that to play pool in the only public place I had available, I had to accept some high risk unrelated to pool, even if there were enough other people in town willing to accept that risk.
That sounds good, but is it?
Govt at the local level is much more accountable to the public it is supposed to serve than are State or Federal govts. Yet, the same problems can creep in and trump safety, in this case. Politics can run out "undesireable" business, such as pool halls and their type, regardless of real safety concerns. It wouldn't be the first time, for sure that that has happened!
Here's an example of how I see the more peaceful and fairer future...
You're with friends in a strange town. You're standing in front of a pool hall and wondering if it is OK to enter. You push a button on your pda, it knows where you are and list the two businesses next to you and ask which one you want info on. You push Joe's Pool Hall. It says, "94.6 rating, more info?" Yes. "Zero complaints in last 30 days, two in last year...more info?" Yes. "May 3, 2007, unconfirmed report of cock roaches near front door." Dec 25, 2006, roof leaking into kitchen. more info?" It would list the amenities, including smoking or non, food, # tables, etc....an advertisement of sorts.
Then you punch up your phone book and it highlights two names of your contacts that have been in Joes before, "Call Mike?" Yes. Hey Mike..we're thinking of going into Joe's Pool Hall in Pleasantville...you were there last year...any good?
Then
you decide if the risk is worth it. This type of scenario is coming and if you think about it, it is similar to Wikipedia-type info where it is timely, controlled by the many who contribute, and way out in front of govt inspectors who maybe come into Joe's once or twice a year and aren't paid off by the owner to cover his sorry business practices.
This allows one to choose whatever level of risk one wants and is more effective at keeping new customers safer than current systems.
And this would all be done by private business, as is Wikepedia, so forced payments (ie taxes) are not necessarry so only those who use the service pay for it, but the public as a whole benefits greatly.
Of course, I cannot predict the exact methods to be used, but I think you get an idea of what's coming soon to a business near you...for you.
One of the ways I use for trying to bring govt to a more rational level is to encourage businesses to outcompete it, thus nulling it, as the above example demonstrates.
Jeff Livingston