Also, if people want a decision like this overturned, they should make their voices heard to those people instead of camplainging about it on the Internet.
Well, when I started this thread I wasn't really concerned overturning the decision itself, but merely to provoke thought on the idea of the nanny state. It then occurred to me there is an obvious connection between banning fire extinguishers and banning other "dangerous" items (like weapons). I'm pretty sure a few of you, such as Ghostrider, knew where I was coming from with this thought.
One of the things people say when they ask me why I keep and carry a handgun in my home is, "Are you expecting to get into a gunfight or something? Just trust the police to protect you".
I then ask them, "Are you expecting your house to catch on fire tonight?"
"No."
"But you have insurance, right? And you probably have a
fire extinguisher too, just in case. Why don't you wait for the fire department to come save you?"
This is, for me, all about personal responsibility and independence.
For bureaucrats, it's all about removing the power to help yourself in an emergency in order to enhance their own job security, increase their budgets, and gather more power to themselves. The police department needs crime and victims to stay in business. The fire department needs fires to stay in business. Teachers' unions need public schools to be mandatory and home-schooling to be outlawed to stay in business. Citizens who can take care of themselves undermine this.
It's called "rent-seeking", and it's what's behind this fire extinguisher nonsense. And it happens in every nation.