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This would be civil - a criminal case would be DWI or something similarCode:There should be civil punishments or criminal punishments.
That is the paradox - it is a safety hazard,but to the Amish/Mennonites - it is also a religious issue as they believe it is umbilical to use bright colors.Code:This is a safety hazard, not an issue of religious liberty.
.Code:The Amish are accommodated generously by being allowed to drive their horse-drawn buggies on highways -- which were designed for automobile traffic and highway speeds
Normally all traffic - horses, bikes, ect are permitted on highways except limited excess highways - AKA Interstates
So where does religious beliefs end begin and safetyCode:The Amish need to accommodate us by enabling us to be able to see them when speed differentials are dozens of miles per hour.
But who determines what is reasonable?Code:If they do not want to take these reasonable steps to do their part to help ensure the safety of the general public, they need to stay off those roads.
Is it reasonable to make me wear a seat belt?
. So if theCode:If they want to use the modern convenience of paved highways, bright-colored reflectors are not too much to ask. This is especially true given Romans 13, which tells us to obey civil authority
courts rule that a doctor MUST preform an abortion -
he should do it?
.Code:If they want to endanger the safety of everyone on the roads because they do not want to obey reasonable safety laws, they can pay fines out the wazoo and/or go to jail
Why not just designate some roads only for horses/buggies and cars would have to refrain form using at night - that would be a reasonable safety law, wouldn't it?
During the trial for Jacob Gingerich, Levi Zook and Emanuel Yoder, testimony and arguments boiled down to how to balance Kentucky's law requiring safety symbols on all buggies with religious beliefs that prohibit possessions that are too worldly.
SALTCITYBAPTIST:
I can only tell you what I think.
If you think religious liberty means that religious people ought to be able to endanger anyone not in their religion, then your view if enacted will create a dangerous state of anarchy.
we have a lot of amish here also, and frequent amish deaths in buggies, because of speed.Here are the facts: I live in an area where we are subject to encountering Amish traffic. It is a dangerous thing to smack into a horse-drawn carriage at 55 mph. Anyone on the buggy is likely to be dead -- and any survivors involved traumatized. The horse or horses: most likely dead, or soon euthanized. The driver and any passengers: injured or dead. People in nearby cars: injured or dead