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A Lie We Tell Ourselves
Sometimes it feels easier to
believe in lies than to take an honest look at things the way
they are. The following is an example of one such lie.
If It Saves One Life It's Worth It
The lie that some new regulation
or action is worth it if it saves one life is just a pleasant
thought, usually with no relation to reality. It may or may not
be worth it, depending on the cost. You can rightfully put unlimited
value on your own life. However, all actions to save others lives
have to take into account the real cost.
For example, as a nation we
could save 45,000 lives by strictly limiting highway speeds to
20 miles per hour (lets be honest - dying from an accident at
that speed is rare). Permanently revoking the driver's license
of anyone violating the limit would probably keep most people
obeying it. Of course that would be too inconvenient for us.
It is too high a price for us - even though it would likely save
45,000 lives.
The real question then, is
this: How much is it actually worth to us to save a life? For
example, if a new safety feature required by law in cars saves
200 lives per year, is it worth it to us to each pay $50 more?
If 20 million cars are sold each year, this would be one billion
dollars extra cost, or about 5 million dollars per life saved.
Of course, we could decide that as a society we will pay just
3 million, or as much as 10 million.
When looked at in this honest
way, more lives will be saved, because regulations will be aimed
at maximum efficiency in achieving results. If there is a way
to save 1,000 lives for a cost of just 100 million dollars, we
would rationally choose that instead, because we could save more
lives at a lower cost ($100,000 per life saved).
According to the lie, saving
a life should have unlimited value to society. When people believe
this, it is difficult to argue against inefficient regulations
if they happen to save a life or two. All such regulations have
a real cost, and if we impose a cost for less efficient safety
regulations, we have the ability to save fewer lives. There is
a limit to what we can do, after all. The lie ignores this at
our peril.
Let's look at this another
way. Suppose we were to decide that as a society we are willing
to impose a cost of just x dollars (say 30 billion) per year
on the economy or taxpayers in order to save lives. In this case
it is natural to look for the ways that save the most lives with
the money or economic strength available. This is much more rational,
and will actually result in a safer society.
Unfortunately, the lie that
"if it saves just one life it is worth it," is just
one example of the many lies we tell ourselves as a society.
Discover more lies in the e-book
"99Lies", part of the "You Aren't Supposed To
Know" package at: http://www.TheSecretInformationSite.com/99lies.html
99 Lies | A Lie We Tell Ourselves |