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Tuesday, August 28, 2007
Thomas Sowell :: Townhall.com Columnist
No Trade-Offs?
by Thomas Sowell
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A whole nation following the tragedy of a mine cave-in in Utah was struck by the further tragedy of another cave-in at the same mine, killing men who had gone underground to try to rescue the miners trapped there.

The second tragedy was avoidable -- but only if we were willing to talk about human life in terms of trade-offs. But our society has become too squeamish to do that.

As day after day went by, with no sign whatever that the trapped miners were still alive and with dwindling chances each day of their remaining alive, even if they had somehow survived the cave-in, at some point it makes no sense to risk more lives to try to save them.

"But what if it was your brother or your father down there?" some would say. "Would you want to stop looking if there was any chance at all that he might still be alive?"

The short answer is: What if it was your brother or your father who had to risk his life in a rescue attempt underground?

Trade-offs are inescapable in every aspect of life but anyone who talks about trade-offs when life is at stake is likely to be denounced as someone lacking in compassion, if not cruel.

Squeamishness is too often confused with humanity, but the consequence of squeamishness can be needless suffering and needless deaths.

Many a cold-blooded murderer has had his life spared because people squeamish about executions imagine that it is more moral or humane to lock him up for life -- or until he escapes or is pardoned someday when an even more squeamish governor is elected.

Additional people murdered by convicted murderers are part of the grim price paid for that squeamishness.

They can be murdered while in prison or on the outside, perhaps during one of those "furloughs" for prisoners so fashionable among those who flatter themselves as being more advanced thinkers than the rest of us.

The price of their vanity can be deaths more terrible than the executions they regard as too cruel to carry out.

Some of the victims of our squeamishness die unnoticed because their deaths are not considered to be as newsworthy as the deaths of victims of mine cave-ins or of murder.

Thousands of people die every year waiting for organ transplants that never come, and some of these deaths come at the end of months or years of debilitation and suffering. Continued...

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About The Author
Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institute and author of The Housing Boom and Bust.
 
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talent scout is an idiot
By now, I everyone probably feels the same way.
I've never read so much nonsense as I have from talent scout.
Avoids direct questions and lacks logic to a sad degree.
And, I've never seen any one use so many ad hominem attacks.

KM - wow
"talent scout" demonstrates a knowledge of an LA gang which has not been prominent for many years, and claims to have served in the Army.

So, unless he "Googled" the LA gang, he's been in this country long enough to know English.

Therefore, there can only a couple of possible reasons for his lack of English skills -- he is either lazy or incompetent. Considering how he answered all challenges with ad homenim (which I did my best to ignore), I'm inclined towards believing the latter.

I'm not the one who will argue over minor mistakes in spelling and grammar, so long as I can get the point being put across. But when the words are strung together so poorly until no one can get the point, then that's worse than mere bad grammar; that's a complete failure to communicate. A number of people have complained at not being able to figure out "ts"'s poorly strung words, so I know it's not just me and Fergus.

It is not the reader's responsibility to struggle to decipher what the writer must have been trying to say. It is incumbent upon the writer to organize his thoughts and lay them out in such a manner so as to make himself clear.

Probably 9 out of 10 instances of miscommunication are the writer's fault.

I am sorry to have wasted so much time on the issue. I should have known better. It should have been clear early on that "ts" needed no rationale beyond simple assertions.
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