A
MINORITY VIEW
BY
WALTER E. WILLIAMS
RELEASE:
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 2008, AND THEREAFTER
They're Coming
After You
My February 2002
column, "They're Coming After You," warned that Americans who
enthusiastically supported the anti-tobacco zealots' attack on smokers were, like decent
Germans did during the 1920s and '30s, building the Trojan Horse that would one
day enable a tyrant to take over. The whole issue of tobacco smoke nuisance is
really a private property issue where the owner should decide how his private
property shall be used, whether it's an office building, restaurant, bar or
home. That's unless one group of people wishes to use the coercive powers of
government, in the name of health or some other ruse, to impose their
preferences upon others.
Anti-tobacco
zealots don't have a monopoly on tyrannical designs. There are those who wish
to control what we eat, and the successful attack on smokers has provided a
template for their agenda. Chief among the food tyrants is the Washington, D.C.-based Center
for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI). These tyrants want taxes on foods
they deem as non-nutritious. They've even proposed a 5 percent tax on new
television sets and video equipment and a $65 tax on each new car or an extra
penny per gallon
of gas. Why? They see watching television and videos, riding instead of
walking, as contributing to obesity. Thus, in their view, just as tobacco
companies were responsible for people smoking, television and video
manufacturers are responsible for people
being couch potatoes. Automobile companies are responsible for people riding
instead of walking. The restaurant industry is responsible for American
obesity.
Some people have
told me that these tyrants would never get away with controlling what we eat. Here's the
Mississippi Legislature House Bill 282, introduced this year by Rep. W.T.
Mayhall, that in part reads: "An Act to prohibit certain food
establishments from serving food to any person who is obese, based on criteria
prescribed by the State Department
of Health; to direct the Department to prepare written materials that describe
and explain the criteria for determining whether a person is obese and to
provide those materials to the food establishments; to direct the Department to
monitor the food
establishments for compliance with the provisions of this act." The bill
proposes to revoke licenses of food establishments that violate the provisions
of the act.
You shouldn't
believe that if this measure is successful in Mississippi that it will stay in Mississippi.
Moreover, it will be expanded upon because most people who are obese don't
become so by eating at restaurants; mostly, it's food eaten at home. Thus, the
food tyrants won't be satisfied with restaurant restrictions, just as the
anti-tobacco
zealots weren't satisfied with warning labels on cigarettes. They will push for
legislation restricting the sale of foods at supermarkets. Since an obese
person can get a svelte person to do his grocery shopping for him, legislators
might propose sting operations
to fine or arrest people giving an obese person high-calorie food.
The food tyrants
have a compatriot in the person of Yale University's Professor Kelly D.
Brownell, director of the Center for Eating and Weight Disorders. He thinks
Americans eat
too many hamburgers and French fries. Professor Brownell, who is fat himself,
wants government to tax fatty foods and those with little nutritional content
and use some of the tax proceeds to build bike and hiking trails. Suppose not
enough Americans bike
and hike. I bet he and his ilk would call for legislation that mandated some
form of exercise.
Most evil done
in the world is done in the name of promoting this or that supposed good.
Americans turning away from rule of law and constitutional government are following
in the footsteps of other people around the world who discovered their
liberties gone and recovering them was next to impossible. But, what the heck.
You might be among those Americans who don't smoke and are not obese, so why
sweat it?
Walter E.
Williams is a professor of economics at George Mason University. To find out
more about Walter E. Williams and read features by other Creators Syndicate
writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.
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2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.