Posted on 01/29/2009 11:37:03 AM PST by andrew roman
Liberals know best, and they'll tell you so.
Liberals profess that it is a subjective morality that decides whether to rip the life from a woman's womb is right or wrong, yet they are quick to call the act of smoking as a universal immorality. Liberals gripe about wanting government out of their bedrooms, but have no problem if it shows up in the kitchen ... or at work.
Nanny-statism is alive and well.
If you could take a time machine back to, say, 1980 - or even 1990 - and sit down to talk with someone from that time about some of the societal changes that await them, what are the chances that someone might think you were under the influence of some sort of hallucinogen if you were to tell them that smoking cigarettes in bars would be illegal? In bars! Or that privately-owned restaurants would be banned from using certain cooking oils? Or that it would be mandatory to post the calorie content of food in restaurants?
They'd look at you like you were sporting three heads.
Welcome to the future.
Mayor Mike Bloomberg of New York City has decided to continue his "healthcare as the new morality" campaign and launch his war on salt.
The Mayor is waging a war on salt and he wants food manufacturers and restaurants to
(Excerpt) Read more at romanaround.net ...
Some of us need salt.
I feel half dead when my electrolytes are wonky.
Last physical my Dr. says, "No, salt doesn't seem to make that big a difference."
Now she tells me!
The problem is not with sodium chloride in New York. He’s got it all wrong. It’s ‘salt peter’. The libs up there act as if they have been consuming it for years.
While I don’t think it should be forced, I would love for restaurants to not use salt on their foods, especially fries. Low and no salt chips are hard to find in stores as well. Salt makes me retain water badly. I don’t use sugar either.
Every time this man opens his mouth, he proves himself to be an ignorant “inheritance-welfare” liberal. He knows as much about health as he does about guns. Of the minority of people who actually have hypertension, only a small minority (around 10%) of them have salt-sensitive hypertension.
Salt is good for you, we need salt. In the middle ages, salt deprivation was a slow, hideous method of execution.
No pity for New York voters, you elected this arrogant liberal.
Don’t know where I picked that up, but I just googled “salt deprivation” and got this hit:
FACT - In the middle ages people were put to a horrible death by salt deprivation.
http://www.curezone.com/foods/saltcure.asp
While I can’t claim direct experience ;-), my understanding is that a diet of yeast bread (unsalted) and large quantities of water (and nothing more) will eventually yield the desired result.
Next up, the war on sugar.
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