Can't you already do that?
10/6/2010 2:58:34 PM
10/6/2010 4:08:53 PM
The fire department should have offered to buy his house at 50% of the salvage value, then put the fire out.
10/6/2010 4:45:04 PM
10/6/2010 5:59:17 PM
I call BS. SimCity 2000 was a decade ago. There is no WAY those numbers are accurate unless you've adjusted for inflation.
10/6/2010 6:32:36 PM
It’s good to know the optimal solution given the circumstances was for this guy’s house to burn down.I’m glad to see too that people on their own will generally do the right thing.And I wonder of certain people in this thread would be so blithe if their house burned down and the fire department did nothing? I’m betting their would be more hell raising than in a horror movie.
10/6/2010 6:49:17 PM
10/6/2010 6:52:35 PM
it’s what libertarians think they believe. People don’t need gov to help the unfortunate, because people will help the unfortunate on their own. Obviously we can trust our fellow man to be responsible, can’t we?
10/6/2010 6:58:14 PM
No, and we can't trust the government to be either.
10/6/2010 7:01:08 PM
You make "the right thing" sound so cut and dry. There are millions of lives out there that you, yourself, could improve. Why aren't you? You could be volunteering at an inner city school, or helping feed the poor, or performing any number of charitable actions. But you're not - you're posting on the Wolf Web, and if I had to guess, I'd say you're not spending the maximum amount of time, effort, and funds to make the world a better place.
10/6/2010 7:10:19 PM
10/6/2010 7:12:37 PM
^ you’re being delusional if you don’t think you’d flip your shit if your house burned down. Seriously, take a step away from your keyboard, take a deep breath, remove your Soap Box issue flame suit, and think about what you’re saying. Your house, everything in it that you worked hard for your entire life, your 3 dogs, and your cat all just burned to cinders whilst the people who own the hoses and fire trucks said “tough shit,” you honestly think you would sit back at this point and say “oh well, i guess i deserved it!”hahahahaI don’t even know why you think not having cable tv is even remotely comparable to your house burning down… seriously… i expect more from you JCASHFAN.
10/6/2010 7:17:28 PM
Of course I'd flip my shit, of course I'd be angry at the firefighters, of course I'd be emotional . . . that doesn't mean it isn't my fault.Hell, I only wish I could justify everything by throwing my own personal temper-tantrum. If you're going to ask a firefighter to risk his life to save your property or your pets then the least you can do is pay the $75 they ask every year. According to the news report it took TWO HOURS for the fire to spread from the burn barrels to the house. WTF were the pet's still doing in there?[Edited on October 6, 2010 at 7:27 PM. Reason : ?]
10/6/2010 7:25:15 PM
^ it’s not about throwing a temper tantrum.The most rational thing to do, the optimal action for the best outcome, was to put the fire out. A 2 year old can identify.What’s irrational is people arguing that letting the house burn was a good action. It is not in any way a good action.
10/6/2010 7:28:48 PM
since I'm lazy, and we're arguing in two different threads . . .
10/6/2010 7:32:42 PM
10/6/2010 7:43:48 PM
Let's quit gaying up two boards . . . CC only from here on out.
10/6/2010 7:53:58 PM
10/6/2010 9:03:28 PM
I don't get how the scenario you just described would play out? How does the communication that a house is on fire get transmitted to the firehouses? Who pays for that? How do they decide in seconds/minutes on whether they want to load up and go to this non-payer to see if they can put his house out for a fee? What if more than one arrives, does it then become an auction for the lowest cost? How does the homeowner quickly calculate (as his home burns to the ground) when to stop negotiating and let the firefighters go to work?This is my favorite thing about Libertarians, you guys will readily concoct any sort of scenario starting at the end and working backwards filling in the gaps as you think would play out under an ideal free market. Along the way, you don't include irrational thinkers, information asymmetry, and just about anything else that a rational person would question regarding your scenario, it...just works. Until it doesn't...at which point you'll happily point out how much worse it is under government anyway.[Edited on October 6, 2010 at 9:13 PM. Reason : .]
10/6/2010 9:12:30 PM
Would seem to have been alot easier to say:"sir, if you want us to fight the fire, you will need to pay for the costs of fighting the fire +10% +$75"Figure 5 people working for 2 hours at $100 an hour = $1000 at mostPlus water/gasoline/wear and tear on the fire truck and equipment = $1000 at mostThats what $2000 + $200 + 75... $2,275, probably less, make it in monthly installments plans.And of course let that be notice to everyone in the community that you can either pay $75 a year and get all services the FD offers, or you have to pay the $75 premium(s) you owe plus 110% actual costs.There you have accomplished NOT getting on the national news and drawing alot of unwanted attention, and not having to worry that people in the neighborhood are gonna stop paying their $75.
10/6/2010 9:24:14 PM
10/6/2010 9:29:35 PM
^^But what if they WANT to be on the national news? I know I do. One day...[Edited on October 6, 2010 at 9:47 PM. Reason : ^No one cares about your pets. You can just buy new ones.]
10/6/2010 9:46:35 PM
You're right, they should have put themselves at risk to cover someone who didn't opt into the system in order to save this person's collection of smurf glasses and photos of people they probably don't like that much.It's not like these were fire impervious automatons who exist solely to put out fires. These are brave guys and gals who rightly expect compensation for their services. That said, only a government bureaucracy could be so stupid as to disallow emergency use of this service for a much higher one time fee. A private company would have had this written into an on-site contract available to anyone who needed and could pay for the service.
10/6/2010 10:52:48 PM
10/7/2010 1:15:09 AM
10/7/2010 1:51:46 AM
I think libertarianism is a decent philosophy, so long as you don't push it to the anti-gov extreme to the point we can't tackle national issues that require agencies like the EPA, DOD, and CDC etc, b/c (besides economy of scale issues) an oil spill, an infectious disease, and those who would attack us don't stop at state border lines. But I think most sane Libertarians see some room for gov and don't take it so seriously as to do away with want to devolve the EPA into 50 different state agencies, or wipe out the CDC.As for the fire case in particular. I mentioned this in the chit chat version, haven't really read the TSB version, but why not offer a life time pass (maybe to be paid over time depending on someones financial situation) on the spot that is more expensive than just paying the $75 fee every year, but still gives people an out so that don't have watch as their house and pets burn.
10/7/2010 2:41:59 AM
Here's my problem for assuming this house wouldn't have burned down in an actual Libertarian world...what's stopping this rural area of Tennessee from already having a private fire department to meet their demands for fire protection? It's not like the demand would suddenly change; there would still be places too rural to make it cost effective to protect. Why would there suddenly be multiple fire departments in this po-dunk county that doesn't even have one now?
10/7/2010 8:54:16 AM
As disco pointed out, if private firefighting was invented over 100 years ago, then why hasn't the perfectly efficient system for handling a burning home sprung up in these rural areas? Why didn't this business think of people actually not paying and then having their house catch on fire before and have a plan for it? This isn't a difficult business (indeed, they have 100 years of study for it) and yet the private market didn't work.Usually, when this type of argument is made you retreat to the "well, government isn't any better". When that is proven wrong you then retreat to "well, I'd rather have the liberty to screw up on my own", which is so far divorced from the original debate that it simply is a waste of time to talk about it.
10/7/2010 10:09:07 AM
In an area with little or no local government its entirely reasonable to have certain services be paid directly to the service provider to cut down on overhead. In this case they should have put the fire out if he agreed to pay the full cost of service provided for the incident+annual fee. It saves the house and at the same time encourages people to pay the fee instead of waiting for something to happen. Since the full cost for the incident is paid, the people who paid the annual fee aren't out anything. In fact their $75 probably goes a tiny bit further because they aren't paying for that incident.
10/7/2010 10:28:39 AM
Yeah, except all the guy's equity is currently on fire and who has time to run a credit report to know whether he's good for it? Let's keep in mind here that we're not talking about a mere service, it's a life-threatening, high equipment-cost job. ^^In this case, would government have done it better? Do you really think we should be paying for municipal fire protection in every rural area in this country? The cost would be astronomical and largely wasted since residential fires aren't actually extremely common.
10/7/2010 10:50:16 AM
10/7/2010 11:02:06 AM
10/7/2010 11:53:27 AM
firefighting should be a public trust/thread
10/7/2010 11:58:33 AM
If you didn't have a public FD, private ones would certainly arise. The argument that private ones haven't arisen, therefore private ownership of FD is not viable, doesn't hold water. Let's just use this particular situation as an example. South Fulton (or whatever it was called) has their own public FD. They're charging out-of-towners 75 bucks a year. That's gotta be way below the actual market price. There's no way a private FD could cover expenses by charging that much. They'd have to charge at least twice as much, and in that case, everyone would continue to use the public FD. Government monopolies usually win out, because they can get away with charging less. They can also get away with bullshit like this, because there's zero competition.
10/7/2010 12:16:19 PM
10/7/2010 12:39:19 PM
10/7/2010 1:03:28 PM
Private FD departments would not "arise". You simply wouldn't have property development in non-protected areas.I don't see how a Fire Department could ever be a "profitable" enterprise for the general public. The initial investment is huge; Not just trucks and equipment, but a massive network of pipes and hydrants, which require constant maintainance. Unless there was already an infrastructure available, or technology has reached the point where it's unnecessary, or the property development had already occured under a public FD.[Edited on October 7, 2010 at 4:52 PM. Reason : .]
10/7/2010 4:37:18 PM
10/7/2010 4:51:22 PM
A cable company is not a fire department.
10/7/2010 4:56:52 PM
You're saying a FD is not a viable private enterprise, because the initial investment is too high. Has that been true of other industries with similarly high start up costs?
10/7/2010 5:03:55 PM
10/8/2010 1:49:32 AM
10/8/2010 10:13:17 AM
10/8/2010 11:18:52 AM
This was a rural area, no? Isn't it a reasonable assumption that this guy had a well and septic and the water for dowsing the flames was brought on the truck?
10/8/2010 3:39:20 PM
Libertarianism.[Edited on June 20, 2011 at 5:12 PM. Reason : ...]
6/20/2011 5:12:12 PM