The Nanny State
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
DIGG THIS
More and more
Americans, especially urban do-gooders, are becoming enemies of
freedom.
Have you ever
thought about what freedom is? It is simply the freedom to make
your own decisions without outside interference. If you choose to
smoke, drink and gamble, you should be free to do so. If you can't,
then you aren't free.
There
is an excellent book on this topic. The title is Nanny
State: How Food Fascists, Teetotaling Do-Gooders, Priggish Moralists,
and Other Boneheaded Bureaucrats Are Turning America Into a Nation
of Children. The author is David Harsanyi, and the publisher
is Broadway Books.
I confess
that I have very old-fashioned values. I believe the government's
sole duties are to guard the coast, deliver the mail and protect
us from violence and fraud. It is not the duty of the government
to protect us from large restaurant servings, trans fats, saturated
fats, tobacco smoke, and books and magazines the prudish disapprove
of. It is not the duty of the government to make sure that parenting
is easy, that no one ever offends us, and that our eyes never see
a liquor ad or a Confederate flag.
It is not
the duty of the government to tell me what I must eat, drink, smoke
or chew. It is not the duty of the government to tell me how to
rear my children. Personal health and personal safety are personal
responsibilities, and the government should butt out.
It's OK with
me if the government wishes to come pick up the body of a would-be
burglar, but when someone attempts to invade my home, I consider
it my personal responsibility to stop him. I consider that it is
my unalienable right to acquire the means to do so.
It's distressing
how easily Americans are accepting the Nanny State, which is tyranny,
pure and simple. An oligarchy of do-gooders who are going to force
you to live the way they think you should live is tyranny. That's
why the holy concept of limited government is so important. Once
you allow government to encroach on your personal life in the name
of doing what's good for you, you are on the slippery slope that
leads to slavery.
I don't understand
how Americans can buy the blather that our armed forces are dying
for freedom in Iraq while the same Americans turn their backs on
freedom at home.
Just because
you disapprove of how someone lives does not give you the right
to control his or her life. Only if the person attempts to harm
or defraud you can you interfere in his or her life, and only then
to the extent of preventing the harm or the fraud.
I thank God
that I was born with Celtic blood and am genetically addicted to
freedom. I have always despised being told what to do by anybody,
and I always resist it. The very notion of molding my life according
to someone else's rules and regulations is an anathema.
I started
working when I was 11 years old, and it never, ever occurred to
me to ask the government if I could work. That was between me and
my employer. It was, as far as I was concerned, none of the government's
business if I worked, under what conditions I worked, how long I
worked or how much I was paid for my work. The only person I ever
consulted was my father.
I learned
a lot from all of my employers, including how to look out for myself
working around machinery and lifting heavy objects. There again,
I considered personal safety my responsibility. I didn't need the
government to regulate the workplace. I simply surveyed the hazards
and took appropriate actions.
Americans
had better wake up and start taking responsibility for their own
lives, or they're going to end up slaves to a despicable, incompetent
bureaucracy. What greater horror can you imagine than to be ruled
by the likes of Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif.?
September
10, 2007
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2007 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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