Along with inestimable human livelihood and wealth, the free market creates various possibilities to foolishly harm oneself. Some questions Sunstein does not raise are:<p>1. Does the option of self-harm have value? If such options are forcibly removed, is the human condition degraded? For example, if one is stripped of having the sense of self-ownership, is that person limited in their level of human development and functioning?<p>2. Can harmful products be forbidden without the threat and use of violence against their would-be producers and consumers?<p>3. How successful could we expect such efforts to be, based on similar past and current efforts? And how costly, monetarily, socially, and in human lives?<p>4. How likely are such efforts, and the institutions that exert them, to be corrupted and bent to the service of powerful interests?