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which would you rather have?

Discussion in 'The Members Lounge' started by Revere, Sep 14, 2007.

  1. Revere

    Revere New Member

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    today I talked with one of my teachers about a question that was going around my social studies class's.

    Would you rather have more freedom and less safety?

    or

    Would you rather have more safety , but have to give up some freedoms?


    just post your thoughts.
     
  2. Stix

    Stix New Member

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    Those who are willing to give up their freedom to improve their security, will gain little and deserve neither. -quote from some guy

    Yes, there are extremes when it might be considerable to exchange a wee bit of freedom for security.
    But in modern day society I will always nearly always favor freedom over security.
     
  3. Boba Nette

    Boba Nette New Member

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    Freedom for sure.Security is getting to be a pain.I had to jump through more hoops to leave the U.S. than I did to enter Canada.
     
  4. JCalhoun

    JCalhoun New Member

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    Freedom.

    Benjamin Franklin said those who are willing to give up freedom for security will have neither.
     
  5. smeghead phpbb3

    smeghead phpbb3 New Member

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    It is very easy to say 'freedom' when you live in a safe, rich and fortunate country such as America or Australia, but I imagine that I would think very differently if I lived in a war torn country where security was a real, threatening everyday concern, and not just something which 'happens to other people'

    I don't think one can ever say that either freedom or security will always be preferrable to the other in any given situation...
     
  6. Blaster

    Blaster New Member

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    I was going to say security, but these quotes have left me unsure. So I'd say both are equally important and it's pretty hard to favour one over the other.
     
  7. Simonr1978

    Simonr1978 New Member

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    Well said Blaster. Ultimately there has to be a balance, you can never have total freedom any more than you can ever have total security and within the laws of anything other than a totally anarchic society you sacrifice some freedom for security. Really it's not and can never be an either/or question.
     
  8. Boba Nette

    Boba Nette New Member

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    As long as you are not free to impose your will on others and security isn't imposing,you're doing ok.
     
  9. majorwoody10

    majorwoody10 New Member

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    its been said that the patriot act is infringeing apon and dangerous to the bill of rights , i personally have not noticed any new infringments ( other than the silly airport seaches of grandmas and school girls )..any one else have any problems from the new laws ?
     
  10. Kaiser phpbb3

    Kaiser phpbb3 New Member

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    Let Singapore be your case study my friends!hahaha
     
  11. corpcasselbury

    corpcasselbury New Member

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    No, although to hear the left-wing types whining, you'd think everybody in the country was routinely being strip searched on a regular basis! :roll:
     
  12. Boba Nette

    Boba Nette New Member

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    I must admit,I'm curious.Explain please.
     
  13. Ricky

    Ricky Well-Known Member

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    This quote has been brought up a couple of times. It is a nice soundbite, but like all soundbites it does not really reflect reality very well.

    For example, airport security is limiting on my freedoms. Every time I want to fly I know that I and my luggage will be searched to some extent. This has been with us for some decades now. However, it is with us for a damn good reason, which is to help air travel be more secure and to prevent airliners from being hijacked, blown up, or (more recently) taken over and flown into buildings. And mostly it seems to work. How often are airliners hijacked these days?
     
  14. JCalhoun

    JCalhoun New Member

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    I can seen that but I think what Franklin was hinting at is what is done in the name of security can also be used for less honorable purposes. At some point we have to draw a line.

    Hitler and Stalin did things in name of security.

    I'm not saying we should not have any kind of security. Just saying it needs to be limited to only what is necessary and practical and should be open to public scrutiny rather than simply taking it at face value.
     
  15. Ricky

    Ricky Well-Known Member

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    Oh yes, I totally agree with that. However, like most things in life it is a fine line that needs constant checking. Too much of either (well, more like to little of either) can become a serious problem.
     
  16. Roel

    Roel New Member

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    Smeghead has a good point here: most people in the West tend to think of their basic situation as one of freedom, in which every infringement of that freedom in the name of security is undesirable. However they often fail to realize just how much of their freedom is already infringed, without this ever being protested, for the sake of security. The very existence of a justice system is an infringement of individual freedom of action, yet how many people will you find who are willing to state that we'd be better off without it?

    Of course, I'm not keen on giving up more freedoms in return for security either, but it's hard to say exactly where you'd want to draw the line.
     
  17. Hoosier phpbb3

    Hoosier phpbb3 New Member

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    I think Ben Franklin knew those freakin' 24-hour security-cameras were in our future when he made that statement.
    :D
    That's one trend I despise. England seems keen on the notion of having it's citizens under constant surveilance. Here in the USA, it's becoming more and more common. Some major cities have traffic lights with monitors that send you a ticket automatically if you run a red-light. A camera records your license-plate # and "you're busted."

    Tim
     
  18. Simonr1978

    Simonr1978 New Member

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    I couldn't agree more, in the UK and particularly in London their are Red Light Cameras at Traffic lights, Speed Cameras all over the place, a newish one is Banned Turn Offence cameras and boxed junction cameras, Cameras on Bus lanes, and CCTV cameras specifically covering all of those cameras mentioned above.

    Yep we've seriously got cameras watching the cameras watching the people... :roll:
     
  19. Blaster

    Blaster New Member

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    Wow. :D
     
  20. Ricky

    Ricky Well-Known Member

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    I like those traffic cameras. It means all the gits out there who seem to think that normal rules of the road don't apply to them get caught.
     

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