This
isn't about the usual stupid laws. Oh, it's true
that it is illegal to catch fish with your bare
hands in Kansas, and that Wyoming has a law
forbidding you from wearing a hat that obstructs a
person's view in a theater. In South Carolina you
need a permit to be a fortune teller, and in
Kansas City, Missouri, children can't legally buy
toy cap guns, but they can buy real shot guns.
This article, however, is
about laws that are not considered stupid by most
people. This is about one particular class of laws
and regulations - those that are supposedly for
public safety, but are really intended to benefit
some particular group. It sounds good to make laws
that make people safe, doesn't it? More often,
though, that is just an excuse for making money
for some industry, or for bureaucrats who like to
exercise control for its own sake.
The idea for the article
came from the eye infection I have at the moment.
It's a minor problem, and would be easily cured
with antibiotic eye drops. I have used them
before. No side effects, no problems. I would go
buy some right now if I could. Unfortunately,
stupid laws prevent buying such eye drops without
a prescription from a doctor.
But those laws are to keep
us safe, some of you will say. Really? It sounds
reasonable, but let's look at the matter more
closely. Here I am with an eye infection that
could be easily cured with a $5 medicine. The
laws, however, have made it so I have to make a
doctors appointment and get a prescription. Now it
is not only 16 times as expensive, but I don't
have time. We are leaving for South America in a
few days.
The result? I don't treat
it. Is that safer? Before you say this is a unique
case, think about how many people hesitate to
spend a day off work and $80 to see a doctor to
get that $5 medicine. There are millions here
without insurance. So here is a law that is
supposed to make us safer, but results in leaving
an infection untreated (or at least results in
making the treatment 16 times as expensive).
My solution? Wednesday, when
I am out of the "land of the free" and
in Ecuador, I will be free to buy the drops from a
pharmacist. Oh, they have their stupid laws there
too (every country does), but fortunately not so
many of these kinds of regulations. By the way, to
my knowledge, there is not a huge problem with
people over-dosing on eye drops there. That brings
me to the point about safety. Things have there
risks, and pharmacists can explain them to us,
right? Why do we have laws that require doctors to
be involved? Follow the money. Who benefits from
this system? It certainly keeps doctors busy.
Safety? How many people do
you really think would die from antibiotic eye
drops? How many would damage their eyes. Some,
undoubtedly. As I said, things have their risks -
but that includes discouraging treatment by making
it expensive and time-consuming. Oh, and by the
way, The National Academy of Sciences Institute of
Medicine recently issued a report showing that
avoidable medical mistakes cause more deaths in
the United States each year than car accidents or
AIDs or breast cancer. In fact, they are the 8th
leading cause of death. So much for relying on the
professionals to keep us safe.
What is the real reason
behind many stupid laws and regulations that are
supposedly in "the public interest."
They are primarily intended to benefit a certain
group or industry. Do we really think, for
example, that there would be a public health
disaster if hair stylists weren't licensed? Or is
it more likely that it is just a way to limit
access to the field and keep profits up?
By the way, we may laugh at
the laws requiring licensing of fortune tellers,
but I can assure you that before we were so
brainwashed, people would have laughed at the idea
of laws requiring licensing of hair stylists. I
know a house cleaner who thinks there should be a
law licensing all house cleaners. Why?
"Public good" or "safety" will
be the excuse. The real point is that he is tired
of the cheap cleaners undercutting his price.
Licensing would limit access so the
"professional" cleaners could keep rates
higher.
Now, why do we have a law to
stop those crazy unprofessional hair cutters from
causing perhaps two hair styling fatalities
annually, while we allow sugar to be sold freely?
As one of the primary contributors to diabetes,
sugar probably causes tens of thousands of deaths.
But then there is nobody with a financial interest
in outlawing sugar (or they don't have the
lobbying power yet). On the other hand, plenty of
industries make money from laws that limit access
and keep prices up, and they are good at lobbying
for laws that "make us safe."
We can drink, smoke, sit on
the couch for hours, marry whoever we want and do
many other things that are demonstrably more
dangerous than most of the things these laws
"protect" us from. Why not let people be
informed of the risks and make up their own minds?
Because it's bad for business. That's why we have
stupid laws that are supposed to be good for us,
but are really meant as a way to boost profits and
power for some special interest group or industry.
Copyright Steve Gillman. For
inventions, new product ideas, business ideas,
story ideas, political and economic theories, deep
thoughts, and a free course on How
To Have New Ideas, visit:
http://www.999ideas.com.