Posted on 06/14/2006 7:38:10 AM PDT by Small-L
Down through the years, I've attempted to warn my fellow Americans about the tyrannical precedent and template for further tyranny set by anti-tobacco zealots. The point of this column is not to rekindle the smoking debate. That train has left the station. Instead, let's examine the template.
In the early stages of the anti-tobacco campaign, there were calls for "reasonable" measures such as non-smoking sections on airplanes and health warnings on cigarette packs. In the 1970s, no one would have ever believed such measures would have evolved into today's level of attack on smokers, which includes confiscatory cigarette taxes and bans on outdoor smoking.
The door was opened, and the zealots took over. Much of the attack was justified by an Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) secondhand smoke study that used statistical techniques, if used by an academic researcher, would lead to condemnation if not expulsion. Let's say that you support the attack on smokers. Are you ready for the next round of tyranny using tactics so successful for the anti-tobacco zealots?
According to a June 2 Associated Press report, "Those heaping portions at restaurants -- and doggie bags for the leftovers -- may be a thing of the past, if health officials get their way." The story pertains to a report, funded by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) titled, "Keystone Forum on Away-From-Home Foods: Opportunities for Preventing Weight Gain and Obesity." The FDA says the report could help the American restaurant industry and consumers take important steps to successfully combat the nation's obesity problem. Among the report's recommendations for restaurants are: list calorie-content on menus, serve smaller portions, and add more fruits and vegetables and nuts. Both the Department of Health and Human Services and the FDA accept the findings of the report.
Right now, the FDA doesn't have the authority to require restaurants to label the number of calories, set portion sizes on menus or prohibit allowing customers from taking home a doggie bag. That's for right now, but recall that cigarette warning labels were the anti-tobacco zealots' first steps. There are zealots like the Washington-based Center for Science in the Public Interest who've for a long time attacked Chinese and Mexican restaurants for serving customers too much food. They also say, "Caffeine is the only drug that is widely added to the food supply." They've called for caffeine warning labels, and they don't stop there. The Center's director said, "We could envision taxes on butter, potato chips, whole milk, cheeses and meat." Visions of higher taxes are music to politicians' ears.
How many Americans would like to go to a restaurant and have the waiter tell you, based on calories, what you might have for dinner? How would you like the waiter to tell you, "According to government regulations, we cannot give you a doggie bag"? What about a Burger King cashier refusing to sell french fries to overweight people? You say, "Williams, that's preposterous! It would never come to that."
I'm betting that would have been the same response during the 1970s had someone said the day would come when cities, such as Calabasas, Calif., and Friendship Heights, Md., would write ordinances banning outdoor smoking. Tyrants always start out with small measures that appear reasonable. Revealing their complete agenda from the start would encounter too much resistance.
Diet decisions that people make are none of anybody else's business. Yes, there are untoward health outcomes from unwise dietary habits, and because of socialism, taxpayers have to pick up the bill. But if we allow untoward health outcomes from choices to be our guide for government intervention, then we're calling for government to intervene in virtually every aspect of our lives. Eight hours' sleep, regular exercise and moderate alcohol consumption are important for good health. Should government regulate those decisions?
I replied, "Name one."
That's all I ask for. Good for you.
Good comeback, dad!!!!
"Sometimes the market can't correct the problem if everyone offering a service, say air travel, decides to offer smoking."
Actually, if the air travel providers were all making a profit in this scenario, then the market would be working just fine. If you specifically didn't like smoking on airplanes you would be free to risk your capital and hard work to start a non-smoking alternative. If a demand existed you would also make a profit. The market will not meet every individual's demands, but it will offer enough alternatives that people will be satisfied.
Why should the government be involved at all? Why should they make it illegal for someone to offer a smokers only airline? The answer is control, plain and simple.
Orwell had it spot on.
As seen time and time again in the gun-grabbers template/strategy of incrementalism.
Actually what I believe to be rude is the fact that airlines are forbidden to give travellers a choice. If I remember correctly Aeroflot was the last airline that still had some flights that permitted smoking....that was until the US threatened to end landing rights here unless they banned all smoking on all flights.
Even if the restrictions were to be lifted, I seriously doubt many airlines would bother offering flights that permitted smoking. Since the ban the airlines do not change the air as often as they used to, thus reducing fuel costs, but at the expense of severely hurting the quality of air in the cabin.
I avoid air travel if at all possible, not because I can not smoke, I've never smoked on an airplane, but because I get ill from lack of fresh air. Even in a motor vehicle where no one is smoking I must keep a window open if I don't wish to become ill.
And here's the backup for Walt's and your claims:
Taking money back (completely logical and constitutional)
http://www.mises.org/rothbard/moneyback.asp
How Progressives Rewrote the Constitution (video)
http://www.cato.org/realaudio/cbf-02-15-06.ram
The Issue of Tariffs: How U.S. Revenue Collection Was Turned Inside-Out (video)
http://mises.org:88/Sophocleus
Size Matters: How Big Government Puts the Squeeze on America's Families, Finances, and Freedom And Limits the Pursuit of Happiness (video)
http://www.cato.org/realaudio/cbf-02-02-06.ram
Big Business and the Rise of American Statism (exc essay)
http://praxeology.net/RC-BRS.htm
The Founding of The Federal Reserve (video)
http://mises.org:88/Rothbard-Fed
The Great Depression, World War II, and American Prosperity, Part I (video)
http://www.mises.org/multimedia/video/Woods/Woods5.wmv
Secrets of the Federal Reserve (the web of power is phenomenal)
http://www.barefootsworld.net/fs_m_ch_01.html
Jackson's 2nd Bank US VETO (very important - what he correctly and constitutionally opposed is just what we ended up with in 1913)
http://alpha.furman.edu/~benson/docs/ajveto.htm
"The Separation of Commercial and Investment Banking: The Morgans vs. the Rockefellers" (the true thieves of the taxpayers and obsconders of the const)
http://www.mises.org/journals/qjae/pdf/qjae1_1_1.pdf
I can see it now:
electronic scales and laser height measurement at the ordering counter
instant BMI calculation with computer screen showing allowable choices for the customer
all data transmitted to "National Health" for later analysis
Don't give them anymore (not so) bright ideas..........
We have been reduced to fighting for "liberty" on issues like blowing smoke in other people's faces, being intoxicated in public, having unnatural sex with the blessing and support of government, adopting children no matter what your perverse lifestyle, buying and selling virtual child pornography, and on and on. If these are the battles we fight for, all the while more and more of our money is being confiscated and our children's minds are being twisted and corrupted in government schools, we've already proven our unfitness for liberty. Get used to government control and just put on an x-rated movie or something to ease your sorrows.
"Government tends to step in when the people refuse to fix the problem themselves."
Only because the government gets to define the problem in the first place. Enterprising individuals see opportunities to use the market to their advantage.
"It is ridiculous that smokers feel they must smoke on airplanes."
Says you. However, if I offered a smoking only airline you would be free to not chose my service. Therefore, a government restriction is not necessary.
"It shouldn't take government power to make free people be considerate of each other."
If people are not free to be inconsiderate, then people just aren't free. We have no right to be free from offensiveness, we do have a right to chose to avoid offensive situations.
Only the weakest in our society turn to the government to enforce their preferences. These are the members that are to weak to chose to frequent places that cater to them or are to weak to take their own risks and start a business on their own. In our society we are catering to the weakest, therefore weakening all of us.
Now, one more beer and finish this joint before I go back to work.
Come and get me, Nanny! Bwhahahahaha!
Very excellent point, and very well stated.
You seem to think that smokers are the only people who are self-centered and rude which is pretty funny coming from a guy that's practically demanding that everything go his way.
Amen!
Also
I like the way you think :)
The problem, as I see it, is the people promiting this kind of mentality do not realize just how absurd they really are.
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