DickRasmussen wrote:
Think about where we would be without all those unanticipated consequences laws. Take for example the cars of the 50's. Do you really want you and any loved ones to be out there driving without you/them and other drivers/passengers having all the safety technology that is a direct result of those laws? We might have some of the improvements but the laws drove most of them.
Its definitely questionable as to whether or not these technologies wouldn't have been developed without government intervention. There is no real way to know, but I would argue that the mere presence of a brand like Volvo shows that people are willing to pay for safety. Airbags, crumple zones, and ABS were all introduced b/c manufacturers thought people would pay for them, not b/c government mandated them.
The only part that I might buy that wouldn't have been developed would have been car design features that lessen the impact that your car has on OTHER vehicles or pedestrians (and very few of the laws have mandated these sorts of things). I'm ok with this sort of intervention. If the govt wants to dictate that I'm not allowed to mount a full propane tank to my front bumper, I can understand that and applaud that. However, consumers have a definite incentive to buy a car that is safer for themselves and thus would have been willing to pay for them. If they want to choose to put their own safety at risk to save a couple $ b/c they otherwise would have been unable to afford a car, they should have that choice.
I'm not as concerned about the big brother side of this (the black boxes will record the last 60 seconds before impact and 15 seconds after) as I am the expansion of government (another agency doubles in size), the added cost for things I don't want being MANDATED on a car (like tire pressure monitors, for example), and unqualified lawmakers dictating critical characteristics of a car (gas/brake behavior as well as pedal spacing) rather than leaving it to perfectly qualified engineers.