Well, I'm back... And man! I need to get out of the house. I had potted fruit trees out there scorching in the sun in need of water.

Too much lazy computer time indoors is giving me brain rot.
Anyway, It's a typical JOG reply. 1+2 punch of libertarian rhetoric and conspiracy theory. Although it seems a bit generic, I appreciate it.
I think I have a decent response now.
This reminds me of a previous thread where I brought up the idea of public vs private property.
http://suzukisavage.com/cgi-bin/YaBB.pl?num=1468206901. I made my argument of public property to align with the libertarian idea of freedom, and you had nothing left to say.
In this thread, we're talking about the idea of the individual right vs the public good.
There is a problem with securing the individual's rights at all costs. Under a free market, people could buy whatever they wanted, including pollution-prone vehicles (like Suzuki Savages :cough:cough: ). Lets say everyone on the earth (7 billion?) owned a Suzuki Savage (not EPA jetted) and rode it everyday. Let's say everyone's homes were powered with coal electricity with few or no restrictions on coal fire emissions. Could you breathe? That doesn't include all the other types of pollution. Done on a large scale, such a free-for-all would leave us with a cancer-inducing trash heap to live on.
Now, with today's social media and free market and such, one could speculate that good people would naturally go for less polluting choices because people will teach each other to do better without government interference. Companies could use pollution control as a marketing tool. They could compete on building cleaner vehicles. And, today they do. But, can we really trust Adam Smith's invisible hand to fix all the world's problems?
Now I can draw a link back to the other thread. Do you, the individual, wish give up your
right to walk outside your front door? Do you, the individual, intend to give up your
right to breathe clean air or drink clean water?
Now here's one that's fuzzy... Do you, the individual, wish to
take away someone's right, if they have a right, to pollute and render unlivable their own land which they may one day sell to another? Let's say someone wanted to dump thousands of gallons of cancer-inducing oil and grime, or worse, nuclear waste, all over there property? Lets say this became very popular, so much so that
everyone became deathly worried that their future home or garden would be planted on a nuclear waste dump? Getting clearer now?
Perhaps the concept of public good does not harm the individual as much as one might think. Like using money to purchase goods, he may sacrifice some of his rights in order to gain something else. The question is... Is he getting a good deal?