the attitude that it is all right to do what harms no one but oneself is usually accompanied by a disgard for the actual interdependence of people. destroying one's own life or health means not being available to help family members or the community, it means, instead, absorbing the limited resources of the community for food, health services and education without contributing fully to the community.
which of the following, if true, most strongly supports the view expressed above?
A. the cost of avoidable accidents and illnesses raises health insurance rates for everyone. B. harm to one person can result in an indirect benefit, such as the availability of work in health-related fields, to others. C. life would be dull if it were necessary to abstain from all of the minor pleasures that entail some risk of harm to a person who indulges in them. D. the contribution a person makes to the community cannot be measured by that person's degree of health. E. the primary damage caused by the consumption of alcohol, tobacco and unauthorized drugs is done to the person who uses those substances.