bookmark_borderHawaii police arresting people for quarantine violations

In Hawaii, police are cracking down on dangerous criminals perpetrating such horrific deeds as visiting beaches, buying groceries, and picking up take-out food.

Hawaii requires all people entering the state to quarantine for 14 days, which is the strictest requirement of any U.S. state. Violations are punishable by a $5,000 fine and/or one year in jail. Government officials enforce the quarantine rule by requiring travelers to tell them what hotel they are staying at, and by telling hotels to issue room keys that can only be used for checking in, and not for re-entry. They also repeatedly call travelers and alert the police if the person does not answer his or her phone.

At least 20 people have been arrested for violating the requirement. This includes a couple from California celebrating their honeymoon who were arrested for leaving their hotel room. Another couple, from Virginia, were arrested for attempting to go to a grocery store before checking in at their hotel. Other individuals have been arrested for swimming at a hotel pool, for operating personal watercraft, and for purchasing groceries at Costco.

Honolulu City Council Member Kym Pine believes that travelers should be required to either be tested for the virus before boarding planes to Hawaii or have their locations tracked via cell phone. Speaking to the Associated Press, she made the curious argument that the economic damage caused by the lockdown rules – the unemployment rate in Hawaii is estimated to be between 25% to 35% – makes it particularly bad for people to violate them. “The people that are coming don’t care about us,” she said. “They obviously could care less whether they get the virus or not. So they obviously could care less about that mom and dad who have no job and no food.”

This just doesn’t make sense. The cause of Hawaii’s economic devastation is the rules that the government put in place banning events from happening, businesses from operating, and people from moving about freely. It’s the government who could care less about people with no jobs and no food. They caused the situation by implementing authoritarian measures that prioritize safety over not just economic prosperity but also freedom. People violating the harsh regulations are not causing Hawaii’s economic problems; the regulations themselves are. If anything, someone who cares about the economy would encourage tourists to visit, not punish them by throwing them in jail when they have done nothing wrong.

bookmark_borderCambridge man (and others) get a bit overzealous about social distancing

In one of the latest examples of people taking things a bit too far with regards to coronavirus safety measures, a Cambridge man allegedly threatened another man with a knife for having the audacity to exist on the same street as him. The victim was jogging and minding his own business. A man with two children, who was 30-40 feet away, screamed “Get the [expletive] on the other side of the street” and allegedly pulled out a knife. Although the man denied doing this, police found a knife in a yard bag nearby.

Speaking of overzealousness, in France, police dispersed a group of a couple dozen people who had the audacity to dance in the street. The cops also spoke to the person who was playing the music to which the group was dancing and warned him not to do so again. This individual, who had been playing music from his balcony for weeks to bring a bit of cheer to his neighborhood, publicly apologized.

And in another example of ridiculous excess, in Brooklyn, NY, cops broke up a funeral procession, chasing after and screaming at mourners. NYPD Chief Terence Monahan called this funeral for a rabbi “completely unacceptable,” and Police Commissioner Dermot Shea said, “We will not tolerate it. You are putting my cops’ lives at risk and it’s unacceptable.” Since March 16, there have been 60 arrests and 343 summonses issued in New York for social-distancing-related “crimes.” 

People should be able to play music in their own homes without being reprimanded, and to jog on a public street without being accosted and threatened. As for the funeral, how, pray tell, is a group of people going about their business, harming no one, and doing something they have a fundamental right to do “unacceptable”? And how does it put cops’ lives at risk? Anyone who does not wish to risk contracting the virus can simply not attend the funeral, and not have contact with the people who attended. There is no reason for cops to have anything to do with a funeral; the only reason they would need to be there is to enforce New York’s totalitarian policies, which should not exist in the first place.

These and similar incidents underscore the fact that we are now living in a world in which such simple actions as jogging on a public street, dancing, or attending a funeral are considered crimes. Police and private citizens are punishing innocent people who are doing nothing wrong and are simply going about their business. Mean-spirited, senseless statements and actions such as these are truly unacceptable and should not be tolerated in what is supposed to be a free society.

bookmark_borderMore protests against government overreach around the country

My heart is cheered at the news reports of protests all over the country against state governments’ authoritarian, anti-liberty actions in response to the coronavirus pandemic.

In Michigan, protesters held what they described as “Operation Gridlock” to express their opposition to Governor Gretchen Whitmer’s stay-at-home order.

In Texas, a “You Can’t Close America” rally took place outside the State Capitol in Austin. “It’s sad how easily, with the snap of a finger, they’ll just shut down society,” said protester Dave Litrell, “and it’s even more sad that most of the people just acquiesce.”

In Indiana, protesters rallied outside Governor Eric Holcomb’s residence to criticize his executive orders closing businesses and directing people to stay at home. (Looks like one had an awesome picture of Ron Paul according to a photo in this article.) Protester Andy Horning said, “I’ve got kids who want to live a good life. I don’t want to bequeath them a Venezuela. I don’t want to bequeath them a North Korea.” One sign read, “My freedom does not end where your fears begin.” It would be hard to say it better than that.

Similar protests have taken place recently in California, Florida, Idaho, Maryland, Minnesota, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, Virginia, and Wisconsin.

“Free people make their own risk assessments,” read one sign in New Hampshire.

“Quarantine is for sick people,” said Eric Moutsos, a protester in Utah. “When you lock healthy people away, that’s tyranny.”

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said of the protests: “People are frustrated, we’re anxious, we’re scared, we’re angry. Look, if you have partisan divisions splitting this nation now, it’s going to make it worse… This is no time, and no place for division. We have out hands full as it is. Let’s just stay together, and let’s work it through.”

But this statement does not really acknowledge the protesters’ dissenting viewpoints. It’s not that people are anxious or scared or angry… it’s that people believe the government’s policies are wrong. Cuomo makes no attempt to listen to the protesters’ arguments or to understand where they are coming from. He essentially says that everyone should simply have the same opinions as him and follow the policies that he and other governors enact. But the whole point of the protests is that not everyone supports those policies. Cuomo does not acknowledge that people can read about and think about the issues and have different opinions than he does. He does not acknowledge that people can have different ideas about how best to work through the situation and what values should be prioritized.

President Trump, to his credit, had good things to say about the protesters. “These are people expressing their views,” he said. “They seem to be very responsible people to me.” He also tweeted his support:

These pictures from the protests make me proud of my country. My views about individual rights, particularly in the context of the pandemic, place me in the minority, but reading about and watching videos of the protests makes me feel that I am not alone. I hope that there will always be true patriots like these, bravely fighting for freedom.

bookmark_borderCoronavirus is no excuse for totalitarianism

The global COVID-19 pandemic has caused untold suffering, from the lives lost to the economic devastation to the stress of routines being upended. But the most upsetting aspect of the crisis, in my opinion, is the curtailment of individual liberty. Local, state, and national governments have implemented increasingly strict measures to stop the spread of the virus, many of which violate people’s rights and therefore are morally wrong.

Many, if not most, states in the U.S. have enacted stay-at-home orders, meaning that all businesses are banned from operating, other than those that the government has deemed essential. Restaurant service, sporting events, and most retail shopping is banned. So are gatherings of more than ten people. People are urged, with varying degrees of coerciveness, not to leave their homes unless absolutely necessary.

As Boston Globe columnist Jeff Jacoby writes in an excellent column, the amount of power that the government has seized merely by declaring an emergency is disturbing. “In Massachusetts, Governor Charlie Baker is empowered by state law to ‘exercise any and all authority over persons and property’ in whatever way he deems necessary to cope with the crisis. The law allows him to do virtually anything – from banning weddings to prohibiting travel to commandeering utilities to closing schools to throwing innumerable people out of work by declaring their jobs nonessential. Legislative approval is not required. Nor is a public vote. Nor is there any fixed date on which those godlike powers must be surrendered. Similarly sweeping emergency powers are available to governors in other states. Many similar powers are available to the president.”

Continue reading “Coronavirus is no excuse for totalitarianism”

bookmark_borderCovid vaccine should not be mandatory

As Covid-19 vaccines gradually roll out, it’s a good time to revisit the topic of whether or not they should be mandatory. As someone who believes in individual rights and liberty, it is my opinion that they absolutely should not. Like any medical procedure, whether or not to get a Covid-19 vaccine should be a personal choice.

In an opinion piece in the Boston Globe Magazine a while back, Tom Keane argued that the government should require the Covid vaccine. “There’s a powerful moral argument that needs to be made,” he writes. “The vaccine isn’t about you. It’s about everyone else. Those who refuse to get the vaccine will in effect be imperiling the health and lives of their relatives, friends, and fellow citizens.” Keane personally criticizes those who oppose mandatory vaccination, calling them “cranky” and describing their position as “against all reason and morality.” He suggests that, as opposed to forcibly sticking needles into people’s arms, the government require the vaccine in order for people to go to work, go shopping, go to restaurants, or board planes.

“Indeed, the simple requirement can be that if you want to leave your house, you must get vaccinated,” he writes. “Maybe that seems intrusive. But it’s actually far less so than what we endured at the height of the lockdown from mid-March through mid-May, when the state shut down its entire economy. Maybe a few diehard anti-vaxxers will resist and simply stay forever in their homes. Fine by me. As long as they can’t mix with the general population, they won’t pose any threat. While normalcy returns for the rest of us, and we work and play as we used to, they can stay stuck inside, isolated and alone, glaring out their windows as life passes them by.”

There are numerous problems with this. First of all, I really don’t appreciate the negative characterizations of people who oppose mandatory vaccination. People with different opinions than Keane’s are not necessarily any more cranky, angry, or resentful than he is; they just have different opinions. Second, the proposed requirement that people receive a vaccine as a condition of being allowed to leave their house is, for all practical purposes, just as coercive as forcibly sticking a needle into someone’s arm. Keane makes it sound easy for someone to simply choose never to leave his or her home, but doing so is essentially impossible. Unless a person has enough money to last for the rest of his or her life, he or she must work. Even for someone who has the good fortune not to need employment, it will still be necessary to purchase groceries and other necessities, or perhaps to go to doctor’s offices occasionally. Not to mention the fact that psychologically, it would be impossible for all but the most avid homebodies to have an acceptable quality of life without being allowed even to take a walk down the street.

Which brings me to my main point: contrary to Keane’s contention that opposing mandatory vaccination goes against reason and morality, it is entirely morally permissible not to get a vaccine. It’s true that a person’s decision not to get the vaccine may have indirect effects on other people. But the key word here is indirect. The more people in a community who opt not to get the vaccine, the higher the prevalence of the virus in that community, so an individual person’s decision not to get the vaccine does contribute infinitesimally to raising the risk of infection for everyone in the community. But think about how directly a person is affected by being forced to make the choice between submitting to an unwanted medical procedure and being confined to one’s house for the rest of one’s life. People have the right to make their own decisions about which, if any, medical procedures to undergo. People also have the right to freedom of movement, meaning the ability to leave their house as frequently as they wish and to go wherever they wish to go. Therefore, people have the right to both of these things, and it violates people’s rights to force them to choose one or the other.

For those who argue that vaccination’s impact on other people justifies taking away the individual’s right to choose, it’s important to ask yourself: what is more of an invasion, to be around people who have not gotten a vaccine, or to be forced to get an unwanted vaccine in order to avoid a life sentence of house arrest? People have a right to control their own bodies, but they do not have a right to control the disease risk that is present in the environment around them, especially when doing so requires invading the bodies of others. If you are so concerned about catching the virus that you do not feel safe going outside unless you know that everyone else outside has been vaccinated, it is your responsibility to stay home. It is not other people’s responsibility to stay home in order to make you safer.

I would also add that Keane’s proposal is, in my opinion, more intrusive than the stay-at-home orders that shut down states’ entire economies. Requiring a medical procedure in order to do something is in some ways more invasive than banning the thing altogether. And stay-at-home orders, although they closed businesses deemed non-essential, did not completely ban people from leaving their homes as Keane’s vaccine mandate would do; people were still allowed to at least walk around outside and go to supermarkets and essential businesses. Plus, even if a vaccine mandate was less invasive than a stay-at-home order, that would not make it acceptable. Both violate people’s rights, and therefore neither ought to be enacted. Proving that your preferred policy is less oppressive than another policy does not prove that it is okay.

So in conclusion, people who opt not to receive the Covid-19 vaccine are making a choice that is perfectly morally acceptable. It is cruel and unusual to suggest that someone who makes this choice should receive a life sentence of house arrest.