Public interest and panic


Aside from the issue of paternalism, the government is always being asked to apply policies to protect us from some threat or other. These good intentions can often have unintended consequences, not least because we always overestimate rare incidents and underestimate common ones.

For example, in the first month of the blackout in the second world war (obviously intended to protect cities from bombing raids), there were 600 more deaths on the roads than expected.


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