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Let them eat peanuts: Prager shows 'compassion' leads to destructive social policy
WorldNetDaily.com ^ | Tuesday, August 20, 2002 | Dennis Prager

Posted on 08/19/2002 10:53:49 PM PDT by JohnHuang2

The principal of the Nickajack Elementary School outside Atlanta recently decreed that no student would be permitted to bring peanuts or peanut butter to school. She is not alone. According to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, schools in "at least nine states" now ban peanuts and peanut butter.

The reason? A few students are highly allergic to peanuts, and if not treated in time, the reaction can lead to death.

Lest 1 or 2 percent of the students have a bad reaction to peanuts (a reaction that is entirely treatable by the school nurse), the cheapest, tastiest, healthiest food that most kids like – the peanut butter and jelly sandwich – is now forbidden in some American schools.

We have here in microcosm five highly destructive developments in modern American life:

1. Social policies determined by "compassion."

To the Nickajack Elementary School's principal and the many other Americans who support a peanut ban, the issue is simple: peanut butter and jelly sandwiches on one side, the health of some students on the other. Compassion obviously dictates a peanut ban.

More and more Americans want more and more of American social policy – from schools to government – to be guided by compassion. But compassion-first advocates do not understand that while compassion can and usually should determine personal behavior, it must almost never determine society's behavior.

When compassion determines social policy, it is almost always destructive. Because compassion is by definition highly selective, it is not possible to be equally compassionate to everyone. When dealing with the public, compassion to some people inevitably means injustice to others. For example, if compassion for the sufferers of one disease determines society's funding of research into that disease, sufferers of other diseases will receive less compassion and therefore unjustly receive less funding.

Banning peanuts is unjust, even mean, to the 98 percent of elementary-school students for whom peanut butter is the most practical source of protein they will eat at school. It is cheap, delicious and won't spoil as meat or cheese might. For the sake of a few students, thousands are seriously inconvenienced.

2. Compassion or selfishness?

To deny nearly every student at an elementary school the right to eat their favorite healthy food is labeled compassion, and the educators who push for the ban may well be motivated by compassion. But the activists who demand the community's compassion are simply selfish.

On my radio show, I spoke to a parent whose child is highly allergic to peanuts, and who supports school bans on peanuts. After a few minutes of challenges, he acknowledged that he is simply being selfish. I saluted his honesty. Would that the rest of us acknowledge the selfishness that is at the root of so many policies determined by compassion.

3. Compassion trumps all.

Compassion trumps all other considerations, especially facts and reason. The fact is that there is an antidote to peanut poisoning that every school can easily administer. The fact is that banning peanuts actually makes schools less safe for nut-allergic students, since they then let their guard down and think they can eat other students' food. And reason suggests that if we ban peanuts, we should also ban school picnics to protect those who can die from bee stings. But to raise such objections only shows that one is not compassionate.

4. Fear of lawsuits.

As powerful as compassion is, neither it nor justice dominates school, company or government policies today as much as fear of trial lawyers. Parents now sue schools for their children's poor grades. Surely they will for allergic reactions.

5. The pursuit of a risk-free world.

Perhaps it has been this generation's unprecedented affluence. Perhaps it has been the absence of widespread suffering in America since World War II. Whatever the reason, more and more Americans have been preoccupied with abolishing all risks to their well-being. Americans increasingly feel that no price is too high to pay to ensure no risk.

Such thinking, however, is very wrong. With fewer and fewer risks demanding ever more money and ever more legislation, the prices we are paying are getting ever steeper. Just ask the tens of thousands of schoolchildren now eating junk instead of peanut butter.

If your kid is allergic to peanuts, have the school stock epinephrine. Don't deprive all the other children of peanuts. That's not compassionate; it's selfish.


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: peanut; peanutallergies; peanuts
Tuesday, August 20, 2002

Quote of the Day by irish_lad

1 posted on 08/19/2002 10:53:49 PM PDT by JohnHuang2
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To: JohnHuang2
Why is it that just lately little smiley face kids are "exposed" and "possibly dying" from a peanut or peanut derivative, since our parents and other children from out ancestors "made it alive" for over 300 years?

SCrew them, let the Law of Natural Selection take its toll, and let them argue that the Law of Natural Selection is not a derivative of Darwin's Selective process of the Survival of the Fittest...

Let the weak die as they should.

Let the law of Natural Selection take it's toll on the sickly and foolish.

...and why is it that the afflicted sickly kids show up most in New England and California areas, while all the rest of the country seems to be healthy and able to eat peanut butter and jelly sandwiches?

Let the weak and foolish expire, like the clams and crabs they are...
2 posted on 08/19/2002 11:07:59 PM PDT by Vidalia
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To: Vidalia
I'm kinda sick and tired of the Peanut Weenies, too. Screw 'em; their continued existence is their own damn responsibility.

Take the peanut butter to school, kids, and enjoy! Peanut Weenies can go sit in the corner and eat bananas or something.

God, I'm tired of NerfWorld. The wussies won't even ride their bikes without gigantic helmets these days. Suck it up; be brave!

3 posted on 08/19/2002 11:34:52 PM PDT by Hank Rearden
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To: JohnHuang2
This Prager guy is surely a deep thinker. Talk about seeing the ocean in a drop of water
4 posted on 08/19/2002 11:39:57 PM PDT by eclectic
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To: JohnHuang2
Thank you, JH2!!

My very favorite person - Dennis Prager. I love that guy. Flat out love him - ever since I listened to him on WABC in NY back in the '90's.
5 posted on 08/19/2002 11:56:28 PM PDT by Humidston
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To: Humidston
You're quite welcome, friend. Good morning, btw =^)
6 posted on 08/19/2002 11:59:13 PM PDT by JohnHuang2
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To: JohnHuang2
Like the Bible says: "There is a compassion that leads unto death."
7 posted on 08/20/2002 1:16:19 AM PDT by brat
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Comment #8 Removed by Moderator

To: JohnHuang2
Since for every food imaginable, there's somebody with an allegy, the solution is obvious.

We must ban everything.

See how simple things are once you yield to the insanity? :)

9 posted on 08/20/2002 2:14:28 AM PDT by Don Joe
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To: JohnHuang2
"The road to hell is paved with good intentions" - Benjamin Franklin
10 posted on 08/20/2002 6:33:45 AM PDT by lds23
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To: brat
Like the Bible says: "There is a compassion that leads unto death."
Then you'll have to post chapter & verse, for I have searched both the NIV and KJV and found nothing like this statement.

However, I did find that over and over, God is described as compassionate towards those who trust in Him.

11 posted on 08/20/2002 6:54:48 AM PDT by Elsie
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To: one_particular_harbour
((((((growl)))))



12 posted on 08/20/2002 7:01:10 AM PDT by Sabertooth
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