According to conventional progressive wisdom, regulation is the means
by which a compassionate government protects the weak and innocent from
the strong and malevolent.
Try telling that to Brad Jones.
Jones is one of the owners of Buckingham Slate, a Virginia business a
little over an hour's drive west of Richmond. The company is
distinguished by the quality of the highly valued Arvonia slate it
produces. And by the fact that its roots trace back almost to the Civil
War. And by the fact that federal regulators smacked it with a $4,000
fine.
Over a trash can.
The offending can — or "waste receptacle," in the words of the Mine
Safety and Health Administration's official citation — was "not
covered." What's more, "the receptacle was full." It "could be smelled."
There were — brace yourself — "flies fl[y]ing in and around the
receptacle." And to crown all, "management engaged in aggravated conduct
constituting more than ordinary negligence" by allowing this "condition
to exist." The horror.
READ MORE: http://www2.timesdispatch.com/news/rtd-opinion/2012/nov/04/tdopin02-we-need-regulation-but-not-this-much-ar-2333362/
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