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Culture War Roundup for the week of October 17, 2022

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I had a class with Alex Tabarrok and he tried to argue for the dissuasion effect of the death penalty by saying "How many people would speed if the penalty was death? Zero of course." Well, no.

Right now, legalizing slavery would do nothing, nobody would enforce it. Yet slavery was widely practiced and legal many hundreds of years ago - and people did enforce it. So, right now, in a "different culture", or with an occupying army or sufficient power, there could certainly be slavery.

Similarly, much harsher penalties for smashing windows is plausible, certainly within the wide space between Rome and today. Homosexuality was punished in many places, before 'death recorded'

and there is no realistically feasible amount of surveillance that you can implement to sufficiently tamp down on this

Cameras are incredibly cheap, drones are somewhat cheap, we could just have cameras everywhere and track everyone's movements with those. I don't think that's necessary at all but this statement isn't really true. Expensive? Sure, but still much lower than the welfare or military budget.

Not that any of that is necessary to prevent smashing windows.

Right now, legalizing slavery would do nothing, nobody would enforce it.

That's a bold claim. Isn't human trafficking widespread (though condemned) globally? Aren't income-sharing agreements and non-dischargeable debts (arguably on the slippery slope of slavery) commonly accepted financial tools?

I'm referring to full on chattel slavery with whippings and whatever, specifically in the US, to say that enforceability of nonprogressive ideas is contingent on will to do so