Upscale said:
You have to understand the main motivation behind these complaints. It's not the safety issue or even the cost issue, even though these things are of a definite concern. It's the being forced to use the technology issue that really irks many Americans.
More than any country in the world, Americans take their freedoms and their rights more seriously than anybody else. And, when someone comes along, be it government, an individual trying to get their product mandated like Steven Gass or even the insurance industry forcing companies to comply, Americans get really upset. This "being forced to do something" hatred is ingrained in almost every American and not something that can easily be reasoned away.
Amen, brother, you hit the nail slap on the head! It's not like we're backwards or stupid or unaware of consequences, we just plain don't like being told what we ought to do for "our own good". I have to disagree with you on one point, it's not a hatred of "being forced to do something", it's a(IMO, emotionally healthy) reaction to someone pointing a gun at our head(i.e., making a law) to force us to do what we most likely would do anyway if left alone to make our own decisions. Then we buck up, scream, holler and generally raise Hell. Some of us will figure out a way around the new Law, never mind that it takes more effort and costs more than complying... The majority of us will realize it's something we'd do anyway and go along, but we'll resent being forced to do it.
The end result is that the lawmaking authority loses credibility since it wasted a lot of time passing a law to make us do what anyone with a modicum of common sense would do anyway. And now we have to pay the price of enforcing that law, the investigations, the prosecutions, the incarcerations, the appeals, et cetera, ad nauseum, instead of letting the idiots who didn't care enough to exercise that common sense suffer the consequences of their actions at their own expense.
Climbing down off the soapbox,
Bill