By Alan
Caruba
I recently
read somewhere that there are so many laws and regulations on the books of
federal and state governments that we are all breaking a law at some point
every hour of the day. I have little doubt of that.
Alexis de
Tocqueville, the author of “Democracy in America”, was a Frenchman living under
a monarchy that, not long after the American Revolution would be overthrown. In
contrasting America’s emerging society with his own, he wrote “[Tyrannical]
power is absolute, minute, regular, provident and mild. It would be like the
authority of a parent if, like that authority, its object was to prepare men
for manhood; but it seeks, on the contrary, to
keep them in perpetual childhood: it is well content that the people should
rejoice, provided they think of nothing but rejoicing.”
“For their happiness such a government willingly labors, but
it chooses to be the sole agent and the only arbiter of that happiness; it
provides for their security, foresees and supplies their necessities,
facilitates their pleasures, manages their principal concerns, directs their
industry, regulates the descent of property, and subdivides their inheritances:
what remains, but to spare them all the care of thinking and all the trouble of
living?”
I had a college professor who said that no government is
more than two weeks from being overthrown if it cannot feed its people. This
was the case of the French Revolution and, in more modern times, a major reason
for the initial overthrow of the Egyptian government.
The Socialist movement that emerged in the early years of
the last century is a perfect example of a tyranny that seeks to control all
aspects of people’s lives.
Food is critical to our lives and there is no lack of those
in government and outside of it who are intent on determining, controlling,
what we can freely choose to eat. Some are just petty do-gooders like New York
Mayor Bloomberg intent on imposing his views on the citizens of the Big Apple.
Others spread fear like those who rant about Bisphanal-A, a
beneficial chemical that protects people against food poisoning. The World Health Organization, the European Food Safety Authority and
Japan's National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology have
all discounted its risk to human health. I have written extensively about BPA
and you can visit the blog, The BPA File, I maintain in its support. Another example of food
fear-mongering has been the smear campaign against finely textured beef that
was subjected to some very bad, inaccurate media coverage last year, called it
“pink slime.” It is a filler that has
been commonly used for decades in ground beef and other food products. I wrote
about it in March 2012. To avoid more attacks, Cargill Inc. has announced it
will begin labeling ground beef that contains it.
There have been and are some foods that pose a threat to
health and that is why, in 1906, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration came
into being, signed into law by Theodore Roosevelt. Originally called the Food,
Drug, and Insecticide organization, later shortened to the FDA. By 2008, it had
9,300 employees and I have little doubt they perform a very useful, necessary
service.
The FDA recently ruled that trans fats, partially
hydrogenated fats or oils, are unsafe in food. They are deemed a potential
prime factor that could lead to heart attacks and strokes. In her excellent
book, “Fat—It’s Not What You Think”, Connie Leas, while dispelling many
misconceptions about fat, noted that “Beginning about the 1950s, believing that
saturated fats were implicated in heart diseases, medical organizations such as
the American Heart Association, and government agencies such as the Food and
Drug Administration, urged Americans to abandon traditional fats, such as
butter, in favor in favor of trans fats such as margarine.” Leas said they were wrong and, though it has
taken more than a half century, it is a good thing the FDA has finally ruled
against their use.
Lately in the news is the trend of food companies who are no
longer using the terms like “natural” and “all natural” when describing their
products. A recent Wall Street Journal article by Mike Esterl reported that
“The Food and Drug Administration has no definition, says a spokeswoman, but
rather a long-standing policy that considers ‘natural’ to mean that ‘nothing
artificial or synthetic (including all color additives regardless of source)
has been included in, or has been added to, a food that would not normally be
expected to be in the food.” To varying degrees, while all foods start out as
natural, food processing plays a role in the final product. Spending more money
for “organic” food is a waste of money.
All food starts off as organic. This simple truth is lost on
those who have an irrational fear of genetically modified crops and there is a
worldwide movement to create a baseless fear of GM crops. As Dr. Marc Van
Montagu noted in a recent Wall Street Journal commentary, “In fact, people have
consumed billions of meals containing GM foods in the 17 years since they were
first commercialized and no one problem has been documented.” One would think
that is self-evident since “Mankind has been breeding crops—and thereby
genetically altering them—since the dawn of agriculture. Today’s techniques for
modifying plants are simply new, high-precision methods for doing the same.”
In a world of heavily-funded propaganda to create various
fears about food, it behooves us to educate ourselves about the real science
and real facts about what we eat and drink. Were it not for GM crops, the
growing population of the world would lack the vast amounts of food it
provides. It says a lot about the planet’s capability to produce all manner of
food that one of the problems we hear about lately, whether it is America or
China, is obesity. There is a cure for it—EAT LESS.
We should be mindful of what and how much we consume.
© Alan Caruba, 2013
Alan,
ReplyDeleteGood job! I just hope large numbers of normal people who are searching for truth on this subject read this are convinced. As for those who have been breathing the toxic fumes of environmentalism’s fever swamps; their brains so jumbled they are incapable of enlightenment.
Rich
Thank you, Rich. I have been writing about these issues for a long time. The Food Police will never leave us alone.
ReplyDelete"I had a college professor who said that no government is more than two weeks from being overthrown if it cannot feed its people. This was the case of the French Revolution and, in more modern times, a major reason for the initial overthrow of the Egyptian government."
ReplyDeleteI've said pretty much the same thing in regards to the Obama Regime, because if the Progressives are successful in their destruction of the U.S. economy - and plunge the country into famine and anarchy - I predict the inevitable insurrection will not go in their favor.
@Ron: I agree. It could get very ugly before 2016.
ReplyDelete“For their happiness such a government willingly labors, but it chooses to be the sole agent and the only arbiter of that happiness; it provides for their security, foresees and supplies their necessities, facilitates their pleasures, manages their principal concerns, directs their industry, regulates the descent of property, and subdivides their inheritances: what remains, but to spare them all the care of thinking and all the trouble of living?”
ReplyDeleteSounds almost exactly like B. F. Skinner's Utopian "Walden Two". Scary stuff, since so many are willing to go along with it.
We are living ATLAS SHRUGGED and are on about page 500 where the economy goes into a death spiral leading to the Super Depression.
ReplyDeleteHopefully, the patriots can get control of the government before the last chapter and final collapse of the nation where the major form of transportation across the Great Plains has defaulted back to horse drawn wagon trains.