The Slippery Slope “Fallacy”

As reported by ABC News, what started out as a program to hold unclaimed property, such as the contents of safety deposit boxes owned by people who have moved away without a forwarding address, has gone wildly out of control. The program is now using the flimsiest of excuses to drill safe deposit boxes and sell the contents, often for below-market value, the proceeds going to the state’s general revenue.

In a case reminiscent of the Monty Python organ donor skit (or perhaps the movie Repo Men), a San Francisco woman’s jewelry appraised at over $80,000 was sold even though she lived a few blocks from her bank, had not moved, and was current on all of her box rental feeds. In another case, a man’s retirement savings consisting of $4 million of stock certificates were sold; and “A Sacramento family lost out on railroad land rights their ancestors had owned for generations”.

There’s a reason why some have said that giving power and money to the government is akin to giving whiskey and car keys to a teenager: It’s because the government can be counted on to do wildly irresponsible things when given more power and money. Is it guaranteed to do so? Technically no, but history demonstrates, yet again, that the answer is a resounding yes. As it stands, it is simply best to deprive the government of as much power as possible, for it is certain that the government will abuse it.

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