| | I haven't been posting in a long while (but I have been lurking!), I think since the "phuck off" incident. I stopped partly because of that conflict, and this one (and for other reasons), but I have to resume now. It is only I who have been lurking in the abyss.
From the first time I read Adam's article, and Jeanine's repudiation of bourgeouis mentality, I have sympathized with her, and her passion for passion. I understood that capable, responsible youths are being oppressed by a misplaced and needless authority.
Granted, this authority is only misplaced in the tragically rare cases of the young and nearly fully self-realized (like me; I like to think that I am capable and responsible. I will be seventeen in 70 days), and that for the rest of humanity, an arbitrary age limit is proper. However, to sanction this arbitrary age limit is to allow the infringement of the rights of a few (and the few who probably deserve those rights most) for the sake of the incompetence of the many. Last time I checked, this unforgivably betrays a prime tenet of Objectivism (and incidentally, the very first one introduced to me, and subsequently responsible for my passion for it).
I think Jeanine wrote for herself and those with a passion as full as hers. Her dissenters have written for the mediocre majority. I cannot speak for the dissenters, but as a thinking, rational teenager (try to judge the validity of this statement via my posts, please) I have experienced the injustice of a monstrous and aribtrary authority; hence, my enthusiasm for freedom
So here we reach sort of a dilemma, one that I think the morality/maturity testing would resolve. Who will the laws endorse?
The testing would be extensive, like a psychologist would spend a few weeks with the testee in his/her daily life, and judge from the testee's actions whether or not he/she is objectively capable of independence. Or something very thorough like that; suggestions are very welcome. These psychologists would (hopefully) be only the most respected, insightful, objective, and (I need a word for the ability to judge someone's character) judgemental (?), but most of all the embodiment of the morals and maturity we'd look for in a testee.
The tests would occur in rare cases, be paid for by the testee, and if the testee passes (by criteria probably set by the government), he or she would be able to consent and enter into contracts, and be recognized by the government as capable and be granted some rights of adults, probably (this sounds like the graduated driver's licenses!). The age of 18 would still stand as an age of responsibility, or whatever.
I've actually thought of this extensively since as long as a year ago, I think. It especially applies here.
Moral yardstick anyone? Might this work? Suggestions are welcome.
-Michael
|
|