Because determining whether someone committed adultery is way too invasive, we'd have to give the government complete access to our everyday lives. It would require a massive expansion of the surveillance state, which means the cure would be worse than the disease.
Of course, we're getting that anyway, but the system is not interested in creating a great society, quite the opposite in fact, so get ready for state enforced adultery by 2050.
Also, people must be free to make their own mistakes and pay for them (naturally, not through arbitrary punishments) in order to grow. A society of people who have always been prevented from failing looks... a lot like today's universities, actually. You don't want that.
Because determining whether someone committed adultery is way too invasive, we'd have to give the government complete access to our everyday lives. It would require a massive expansion of the surveillance state, which means the cure would be worse than the disease.
Of course, we're getting that anyway, but the system is not interested in creating a great society, quite the opposite in fact, so get ready for state enforced adultery by 2050.
Also, people must be free to make their own mistakes and pay for them (naturally, not through arbitrary punishments) in order to grow. A society of people who have always been prevented from failing looks... a lot like today's universities, actually. You don't want that.
You might need a loicense to present that much fact and logic in one comment.