In a post this morning, I wrote that Vancouver's plan to ban doorknobs from being implemented in new buildings in favor of lever-style handles was a great idea. Doorknobs are less ergonomic, and an aging population might appreciate the switch.
Many readers on social media disagreed. Fervently.
Here's a sampling of some comments from Facebook and Twitter, organized by some of the most common criticisms:
WHAT ABOUT THE CHILDREN:
Commenters pointed out that it's easier for dogs/cats/children to work a handle than a doorknob:
Door knobs aren't bad. They're the only thing keeping my pets from opening doors on their own!--Rayna Montez, via Facebook
God forbid people decide what sort of door hardware they prefer in their houses. Sometimes knobs are preferred when kids and clever animals are around.--Chris Ferguson, via Facebook
THE SLIPPERY SLOPE ARGUMENT:
What's next? A perfectly ergonomic world? But at what cost?
The libertarian complaints are well warranted, why should states infer like this. What happens if a new study finds that the color red improve moods... should all new houses be forced to paint only in red? Preventing people from making their own choices in the name of such cute utility arguments is a really nasty downward slope.--Thomas Egebak, via Facebook
While we're at it, let's ban stairs. From now on, ONLY ramps are allowed /snark/--Dan Ader, via Facebook
Levers make sense ergonomically but as a dwindling member of a once free society I object to statists mandating how I live.--Philip Wilson, via Facebook
THE MOST CONVINCING ARGUMENT:
I stand by my original points. But there was one counter-argument that truly made me pause.
If Jurassic Park is any warning, levers cannot stop Velociraptors!--Chris Ferguson, via Facebook
Paving the way for Velociraptors to eat all of us....--Bud Atherton, via Facebook
Its clear I am not the only one deeply concerned about the risk this poses to velociraptor infested areas. These fools will get us all killed!!!!--Ethan Surbaugh, via Facebook
@PopSci@AthertonKD welp, we now know where the raptors will head first…once we clone them and fail to contain them on a tropical island.
— Mr. Invisibo Ninjo (@invisiboninjo) November 20, 2013
To these last points I can only say: there is definitely NOT a raptor at my desk right now who forced me into this line of argument. DO NOT SEND HELP IMMEDIATELY.
You can add more opinions to the comments section here.