I don't buy that one bit. I don't believe child endangerment laws are an example of micromanagement or an infringement on your freedoms, and as far as I'm concerned, they aren't strong enough. I do agree with you that what the parents did... placing the life of their child purely in the hands of God... was a perfect example of wrongs done, stupidity enacted, ignorance revealed, and mistakes made.snoopy wrote: And now, for an opinion that I really hold: Bet, here's why I think micromanagement is the wrong way to go: You are inevitably going to have wrongs done, stupidity enacted, ignorance revealed, and mistakes made. If you maintain freedoms, it's individuals that do it, and individuals that live with the consequences. If you give the government all the power, it's now both people and the government doing the things, and it ends up being the whole society that pays the consequences for the government screw-ups. By centralizing power, you make those who hold it more empowered to abuse it. By centralizing power, the greater the consequences when the imperfect humans who wield it screw up.
My suspicion is that the parents are paying enough of a price in what they are doing to themselves with the guilt.
At least, with stronger laws, I can hope the police would have a chance to take those abused children to a doctor and in the event the child dies, use those same laws to place the parents on death row where they belong. When a parent refuses a life saving medical treatment for their child for whatever reason and the child dies, it should be treated the same as a parent starving or beating them to death. So, if the child dies in your government scenario then your government didn't do anything to protect and serve the interests of the truly innocent.
I doubt very much that those parents feel any "real" remorse for what they did because they have that wonderful religious attribute... God wanted their child to be in heaven with Him. A convenient out, like free will.
Snoopy, God has no power on earth to save anyone. Doctors and police do.
Bettina