You Can’t Have Trans Fats Because They’re Bad for You, Says New
York City’s Board of Health
by
George Reisman
by George Reisman
DIGG THIS
In recent weeks,
the New York City Board of Health has displayed a pattern of profound
aggression against the citizens of New York City. I dealt with one
major instance of this in my last article, Pick
Your Gender and Well Enforce Your Choice, Says New York Citys
Board of Health. There I explained how the Boards
proposed rule to allow individuals to change the sex recorded on
their birth certificates, without the necessity of undergoing any
actual physical change in their sex, would compel other individuals
to deny the evidence of their senses in order to comply with the
law.
The Boards
banning,
last Tuesday [December 5, 2006], of the use of trans fats in
restaurants is a second instance in which the Board shows that it
has no compunctions about violating the sanctity of the human mind
and its freedom to judge and to choose. The freedom of choice of
the citizen apparently means nothing to the Board. Like a curt parent
controlling the choices of a child and expecting that his No
will be sufficient, the Board has taken away the power of choice
from adult citizens and told them they will no longer be able to
obtain food in restaurants that is prepared with trans fats.
What allegedly
justifies this behavior by the Board is the mere fact that trans
fats have supposedly been scientifically proven to be unhealthy.
As reported by The New York Times of October 31, according
to one of the speakers at the Boards hearing on the subject
the day before, at least 6 percent of the deaths from heart
attacks in the nation could be attributed to consumption of trans
fats. `Everything we have learned about trans fats is damaging.
The meaning
of this is that if something is shown to be bad, nothing else is
required to put an end to its consumption: no cognition on the part
of the individual consumer, no choice on his part. These count for
nothing according to the New York City Board of Health and its alleged
experts. They can simply be ignored and brushed aside.
Ignoring matters
of knowledge and understanding, of choice and will, of voluntary
consent, is certainly an appropriate way to deal with inanimate
objects. However, it is not an appropriate, or practical, way to
deal with the more intelligent animals, let alone children. It is
absolutely not an appropriate or practical way to deal with adult
human beings. It is the kind of method employed by criminals.
Matters such as choice, will, and consent mean nothing to them.
A rapist is perhaps the clearest example. Now, with its high-handed
banning of trans fats, the New York City Board of Health has shown
that it provides another example.
Such outrageous
behavior on the part of government has become so common and ingrained
that it well might pass as believable if someone were to claim that
the following was an actual government plan being considered for
enactment.
Within
ninety days, every citizen must report to a government authorized
physician to be weighed, measured, and interviewed. On the basis
of the data so obtained, the physician will determine the appropriate
diet for the citizen in terms of calories, fats, proteins, and every
other relevant category of nutrition.
Within
a further ninety days, each citizen will receive a ration book containing
weekly allotments for the various nutritional categories. In buying
food in supermarkets, restaurants, or anywhere else, the citizen
will have to turn over whatever portion of his weekly allotments
correspond to the nutritional values of the foods being purchased.
All sellers of food will be required to determine the nutritional
values of the foods they sell, if they have not already been determined.
It shall be illegal to purchase food without surrendering the necessary
allotment coupons. It shall be illegal to buy or sell such coupons.
These
measures are necessary because diets and other voluntary methods
simply do not work. People are getting too fat. Diabetes is increasing.
The governments cost of providing medical care is increasing
correspondingly.
This
program is what good health requires. The government already regulates
alcohol and tobacco. The regulation of fats, sugars, and all other
nutritional elements is no less necessary.
Because
of this program, overweight people will finally be compelled to
lose weight, whether they want to or not. Diabetes and heart disease
will be reduced. Health in general will improve. People will live
longer.
Such a program
is implicit in the ideas people already accept. Indeed, nutritional
values must already be printed on the packaging of practically all
foods sold in supermarkets and grocery stores. At the same meeting
at which it outlawed trans fats, the New York City Board of Health
added a requirement that the calorie content of each food item be
posted on the menus of hundreds of restaurants. It thus may well
be only a question of time before such a program is actually proposed.
If and when it is, there is presently no basis for expecting any
principled opposition to it. The opponents will likely be of the
kind wholl think theyve won a profound victory for free
markets if they can make the ration coupons tradable.
The
only basis of serious opposition is acceptance of the principle
that there is something more fundamental and more important than
mere physical health, that is, more important than the condition
of mans body considered as a mere hunk of mindless meat. And
that is respect for the value of the human mind and of the individuals
freedom to act on the judgment of his mind. That is the principle
for which libertarians must stand.
December
11, 2006
George
Reisman [send him mail]
is Pepperdine University Professor Emeritus of Economics, and is
the author of Capitalism:
A Treatise on Economics. Visit
his website.
Copyright
© 2006 George Reisman
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