Wednesday, February 7, 2007

Double Helix Sensibility

I feel a little pressure to post some perfectly articulated intelligent thoughts, since people actually seem to be reading this blog... but then I'm reminded that this is a blog... So I don't need to create a cohesive, bulletproof thesis on any particular issue. I'm also concerned that I'll become one of those people that "rants and raves" on the Internet about the same thing, over, and over, and over, again. These two issues have converged for me today. And I can't resist...

I was shocked and disturbed the other day when I heard a Senator in NY is trying to pass a bill which makes crossing the street while on the phone, or while wearing head phones, an illegal act. I could easily write thousands of words on this issue and the feel-good laws that continue to be passed in this country. But I won't. Nor will I write a few thousand words about the knuckleheads in NJ that want to ban smoking in cars with children.

Today, I'm just keeping my fingers crossed so the Atlantic City Council will vote to allow casinos to reserve 25% of their floor space for smokers: sounds very democratic to me since at least 25% of the population smokes. I don't know if I can handle the trauma of gambling my money away while NOT smoking a cigar.

Anyway.... I think James Watson, one of the four discoverers of the Double Helix structure of DNA, said it best:

"I don't want to restrict anyone from doing anything unless it's going to harm me. I don't want to pass a law stopping someone from smoking. It's just too dangerous. You lose the concept of a free society. Since we are genetically so diverse and our brains are so different, we're going to have different aspirations. The things that will satisfy me won't satisfy you."

Thank You Mr. Watson, and God Bless the free society...wherever that is.

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