This year's renewal of home insurance cam with all kinds of new stipulations.
One was satellite photos from Google Earth with areas of my roof circled where they suspected some damage. I was able to have a conversation with my agent and the underwriter and tell them when we last replaced the roof, and assured them that we had been on the roof recently (Christmas lights) and got them to back off. It sounded like they were using some machine analysis looking for odd stain patterns.
My take is that the industry as a whole is trying to improve the quality of their assessments and risk exposure.
And then you get in a VFR over IMC situation... kaboom!
Then we see everyone LOL until the falling bits land in their BBQ, then it will be WTF and everyone goes all NIMBY.
Ha! You beat me to it. I was going to do this and try to work 'EIEIO' into it.
Please address the shopkeeper who finds has a drug-addled person sleeping in their doorway. The shopkeeper whose customers are scared to come downtown anymore. When you say "It is their [i.e. drug user's] choice", well yeah, but choices have consequences. What about the consequences on everyone else? Does everyone in society have to back off in order to accommodate some random person's bad / dangerous / scary / threatening / disturbed behaviors? It appears you are saying yes. It's a hard no for me.
Everyone seems to be talking about their rights, but rights come with responsibilities.
There's that old saying which comes to mind... "your right to swing your arms ends where somebody else's face begins."
Interesting answer. Not intending to become political, but that seems a very laissez fair, Libertarian approach. "I do me, you do you." The obvious problem with this approach is that it ignores the externalities, i.e. the widespread effects beyond just the person who engages in these activities.
When you have someone who uses their freedom to, say, take fentanyl, you can write them off and say "they are making a bad choice, but it is their free choice to make, and if they die, they die." But one person becoming hooked on an opioid has far reaching effects beyond the individual (addiction, crime, run ins with criminal justice system). It has a huge negative effects on that person's friends and family, often associated with homelessness, corrosive effect on cities with hollowed-out zombies walking around, begging at traffic lights which drives business away. To me, those negative effects can't just be dismissed, and individual liberties that have such profound negative effects on others (not to mention the individual) can't be given a free pass.
Drugs should be legal.
All drugs or just some drugs?
Let's take this to its logical conclusion, say fentanyl. You are saying fentanyl, a substance that is crazy dangerous and addicitive and deadly, should be just another thing anybody can put in their Amazon shopping cart?
Biology grows on you.