Phoenix
Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 16, 2003
- Messages
- 8,584
- Reaction score
- 7,430
Where would you ever get the impression that I would support the notion of majority rules? I wouldn't trust the majority to make decisions that impact my life. That's not liberty; that's not freedom; and that's not the American way. I don't take a poll of my neighbors to see what they think I should eat for dinner, or what kind of car I should drive, or where I should go on vacation. Likewise, I don't support a majority of my neighbors deciding what I can and cannot with my money or my personal property. I don't support a majority of Americans who might decide that we should confiscate Bill Gates' assets and distribute them to those of us "less fortunate" than he. I don't support the majority if they should decide that killing people as a convenience (born, unborn, old, sick, whatever) is a proper thing to do.
The majority does not define right and wrong or the rule of law. The majority is more often than not wrong which is why our founding fathers setup a Constitution to specifically enumerate the powers of the federal government which restricts what the majority, through their representatives, can legally authorize. Freedom and liberty are personal decisions for each person to make. Turning those liberties over to the collective will of the majority is the antihisis of the way I would approach any political or business decision. Mob rule just doesn't appeal to me at all.
Eat what ever the F you want and go on vacation where you want. The FA vote had nothing to do with your dinner, neither did the FAs have any intention of dictating your dinner choices.
You on the other hand have some twisted fascination with dictating your singular view to the FAs, in opposition to their choice.
Hey, teach, I am confused. You want the freedom to choose what you have for dinner but you also want the freedom to choose the FAs contract. Seems to me that is more than you can chew.
