Don2 (Don1 Revised)
Contributor
Former Grafton pharmacist convicted of attempted tampering with 500 COVID-19 vaccines gets three years in prison
What should be the fundamental principles here? Suppose it's that you have freedom to have your beliefs but once you put your beliefs into action as a company employee and those actions harm another person in some way, then the government should stop you? But that can't be the principle because we're told in other contexts that that doesn't work because it's "force." We're also told if you tell them they have to get a different job, that's force. So what's the fundamental principle(s) at play?
What I don't want as an answer is "you have to follow the law" because what I am talking about is what are the principles that we OUGHT to use to DERIVE the laws in this case when one person's irrational (religious) beliefs impact another person.
What should be the fundamental principles here? Suppose it's that you have freedom to have your beliefs but once you put your beliefs into action as a company employee and those actions harm another person in some way, then the government should stop you? But that can't be the principle because we're told in other contexts that that doesn't work because it's "force." We're also told if you tell them they have to get a different job, that's force. So what's the fundamental principle(s) at play?
What I don't want as an answer is "you have to follow the law" because what I am talking about is what are the principles that we OUGHT to use to DERIVE the laws in this case when one person's irrational (religious) beliefs impact another person.