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Why should the law care about what I do behind closed doors?

08.06.2025 07:51

Why should the law care about what I do behind closed doors?

It shouldn't to a point.

Liberty is not boundless. It does have its limits.

You can stand on a public sidewalk and take pictures of my house. You can't walk into my house uninvited and start taking pictures.

Why do some young mothers trick a guy into believing that they're pregnant and it's their child when years later they find out that it's not even theirs should he still pay child support or not?

But what if you're raping little girls behind closed doors? Killing gay men? Watching child porn?

Your speech is free. But if it causes malicious harm to someone, you can be sued.

If evidence arises that you are doing these things behind closed doors, don't you think the government has a moral obligation to investigate?

If a guy is attracting a bunch of what he believes to be "ugly" women, is he crushing the dating game?

The law shouldn't care (if you are a law abiding citizen) about who you take into the bedroom as long as they are consenting adults. How many guns you own. What you eat for supper. What kind of TV shows you watch. Whether you watch porn or not.

Society sets laws announcing those actions that it deems unacceptable in polite society. If evidence appears that causes a reasonable person to suspect that illegal activity is going on, society should investigate. Of course society might find itself having to jump through hoops by adhering to constitutional law. It cannot just invade your personal space and demand to know what you're up to just because they don't like you.

The law doesn't care about what you do behind closed doors as long as it is within the bounds of what the law allows.

Do people have to be a pastor to baptize?