The Color of the Sky
by
Paul Hein
by Paul Hein
The
best definition is an example. Imagine defining "blue"
to a person born blind. And even a person with perfect sight, such
as a small child, will learn that blue is the color of the sky,
or perhaps the color of that car parked over there, or a favorite
sweater. How could you describe the sound of the piano to an aborigine
who had never seen, much less heard, one?
Or
consider the word "government." You can look it up in
the dictionary, and find it is "an organization which wields
political power," or "that group of individuals who govern,"
with "govern" having previously been defined as "rule,
regulate, control." Or you might look, in the case of the U.S.,
to the Constitution, and find there what the Founders thought government
ought to be, and which, in fact, it actually was, for a millisecond.
But
the best way to learn the reality of government is through example.
The rather dry and abstract terms of the dictionary, or the glowing
and thrilling words of the Constitution, you may find, have little
bearing upon what, in its actual operation today, government is.
The
local Chrysler plant provides a good example. In a St. Louis suburb,
the automaker assembles mini-vans, and pickups. The plant, which
I have visited a couple of times (and if you get the chance, do
so yourself. It is an awesome experience.) is enormous, with 2.64
million square feet of floor space. The company’s policy has always
been to allow workers to smoke. Until recently, no one has complained.
One of the workers, however, Rossie Judd, has asthma, and the smoke,
she claims, triggers attacks. She’s had to visit the emergency room
five times because of her asthma, and has been on sick leave for
nearly a month as I write this.
Perhaps
it has occurred to you, as it has to me, that Ms. Judd would be
better off in another job. To continue to work in an environment
which is so unhealthy would, at once time, have been considered
foolish. Not today. Ms. Judd is going to use the power to government
to change the entire plant to her liking, and she will doubtless
succeed.
Contradictions
appear. If our society is a democracy, as we’re always told it is,
then how can one person make the majority adhere to her wishes?
If our economic system is "free enterprise," why isn’t
the enterprise in question free to set its own rules?
Well,
never mind. It seems there is a law: the Missouri Clean Indoor Air
Act, which says that no more than 30% of the total workspace may
be used for smoking. It’s hard to argue with the logic of this:
29% would have the smokers standing atop one another, and 31% would
mean the plant was filled with smoke. This percentage wasn’t just
picked from the air, after all. Doubtless, there were exacting studies
of the total air volume in the plant, the number of smokers at any
given time, the number of cigarettes smoked, and the resulting concentration
of smoke in the air, as compared with the amount which is apt to
trigger attacks of asthma, as well as other diseases. Anyway, the
Chrysler plant, by allowing smoking throughout the area, is evidently
in violation of this state law, as well as federal law.
The
union which represents the workers has stated it will not oppose
a change in the company’s smoking policy, to bring it into line
with the law. A union spokesman said, "I can’t fight a state
statute. I will not fight the law." The idea of a union going
to the mat for its workers is evidently passé. It will still
collect the dues, of course, but to expect it to fight against a
politically correct cause on behalf of the dues-payers is unrealistic.
A
non-profit (?) law firm in St. Louis is assisting Ms. Judd. Its
director said, "They (Chrysler) have come around. This is a
big step forward for employee health and safety." Is that so?
Let’s see: suppose Chrysler sets aside 30% of its floor space for
smokers, who can smoke there at certain times never mind what this
does to productivity. The concentration of smoke in this area will
obviously be much higher than when the smokers were distributed
throughout the plant. If smoke is a health hazard, how will this
policy contribute to the health of the workers? Of course, their
being there and smoking is voluntary, but so is Ms. Judd’s being
employed at the plant in the first place. How can a large number
of workers be forced to risk their health to protect the health
of one of their number? And if they must cross a busy work-space
to get to the smoking area, their risk of being injured accidentally
by various machines is increased.
The
director also expressed amazement that Chrysler would allow smoking
"all over the building. I couldn’t believe it in this day and
age." This day and age being, of course, the day and age of
all-powerful government, unrestrained by any Constitution, extending
its power in every direction over as many people and companies as
possible, in as many ways as can be conceived, under whatever pretext
it thinks it can get away with. (You don’t really believe that Ms.
Judd’s health is of even the slightest concern to Missouri or the
United States, do you?)
That’s
what government is today. Forget your dictionary, or the Constitution,
or Declaration of Independence, or the Bill of Rights. Government
is as government does.
September
29, 2003
Dr.
Hein [send
him mail] is a semi-retired ophthalmologist in St. Louis,
and the author of All
Work & No Pay.
Copyright
© 2003 LewRockwell.com
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