EricF wrote:That's not how insurance works. You don't pay to insure everyones property, just the people who's risk pool you share. High risk people are lumped together and pay a higher premium, low risk people are in the low risk pool and have lower premiums.Diogenes wrote:I don't mind people being responsible for their own actions, but why must they be responsible for everyone else's actions? Why am *I* insuring your car from damage? Why don't we all insure our own? Those of us who want it, buy it. Those of us who don't, Don't.EricF wrote: Because we live in a society that makes people responsible for their actions. And because we place value on our cars and necks, and get very angry when someone takes them from us. Unlike MSimon, I am a firm believer in justice. And vengeance
I call this strange idea "Freedom."
We can insure ourselves, thats called being 'self-insured'. Rental companies are frequently self insured. They set aside a pool of money to use in the event there is damage to their property that they cannot recoup from the responsible party.
Unfortunately by and large people are not responsible enough to set aside money for anything, let alone a car accident, so they wind up causing damage to other people. By forcing people to buy insurance, you are forcing them to be responsible for their actions up front.
Good point. "Prior to the fact." Isn't this a legal term meaning you can't charge someone with a crime before they commit it ?
I think this is actually a bedrock legal principle. Why isn't mandating insurance a case of Prior to the fact of a crime, or in the case of civil law, prior to the fact of an injury?
Come to think of it, I think mandatory insurance may be the only example I know of the government Forcing you to pay for an injury you haven't caused before the fact!
I suppose you could say the selling of indulgences might be a prior example of this sort of thing, and that didn't turn out very well, did it ?
