moda0306 wrote:
You're making A LOT of assumptions about how things would actually work...
1) an insurance company would insure crime (I specifically see that exempted in disability insurance). Murder insurance would make committing murder and getting caught have a ridiculously small price to it. This is called a moral hazard. Most insurance companies avoid these like the plague.
I think the risk of becoming a criminal is an insurable issue, for the reasons I gave earlier. Right now insurance companies don't do this, it's true. But given enough information about the risk factors for crime and sufficiently clever actuaries, why shouldn't it be insurable?
moda0306 wrote:
2) People would buy insurance for such a ridiculous eventuality (assumes this reputation report actually punishes you harshly for not having insurance, and anyone actually cares about this damn report)
They would buy it if they cared… see #3:
moda0306 wrote:
3) People caring about the report. It would take decades of reputation before a firm became an authority to the degree where Pizza Hut required you to reveal your report to enter... in fact just saying this is a possibility sounds ridiculous to me.
I think they would care. The trustworthiness of strangers is a major issue in complex societies. Right now all we really have to go on is proximate effects like the "quality" of a neighborhood, or people's personal appearance. This system would allow people and firms to make much better decisions about the trustworthiness of strangers.
moda0306 wrote:
4) That murder is more about someone's economic value than intrinsic life value. What if the person murdered is a little old lady? How do you measure her value? Isn't the entire concept of "rights" or "liberty" in the first place built on the fact that there's something extremely "special" about each individual human being? If someone kills my mom, do they owe me $4 million, or do they owe me their life?
Which would you prefer? The money, or the knowledge that the killer was trapped in a small, unpleasant box for the rest of their lives? Or even the knowledge that they had been killed in return?
Vengeance is problematic in a justice system. The "vengeance" impulse is exactly the sort of thing that leads to "vigilante justice" that's supposed to be prevented by government. If the system is set up to hurt the bad person as much as he hurt his victim, how is it much better than the family going out with shotguns and doing the same thing themselves?
Vengeance also gets in the way of other goals of your average criminal justice system. You can't have vengeance, rehabilitation, restitution, deterrence, or isolation all at the same time. You need to settle on one as the ultimate goal, since they're all basically mutually exclusive. A system that isolates prisoners forever can't offer vengeance, and rehabilitation is pointless. A system that purports to deter crime through public displays of brutal punishment can't isolate offenders or compensate their victims. And so on and so forth.
moda0306 wrote:
What does the report think of vengeance or reclaiming property?
The arbitrators would mandate the return of property, but people doing it themselves is something I need to think more about. It's probably the case that they would simply take a risk of being wrong, in which case their victim would begin proceedings against
them. If they were correct, and took back their stolen property, then probably nobody would care and the arbitrator would decide that it was a moral outcome (given that it's what he would have ordered himself). Just a guess though. Need to think about this some more.
Human behavior is economic behavior. The particulars may vary, but competition for limited resources remains a constant.
- CEO Nwabudike Morgan