New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg literally believes he
is his brother's keeper, and in fact the keeper of all the millions of New
Yorkers and visitors to the city. He was thus compelled to ban the sale by
restaurants and other venues of sugary drinks in doses larger than 16 ounces,
citing an ethical mandate for someone to do something to protect people from
themselves.
Such feelings are at the root of boundless dictates from
governments at all levels, and are frequently the product of folks who believe
not only that they know better than we do what is best for us, but also feel
led to control our behavior for our own good.
However, New Yorkers may rest marginally easier now that a
state Supreme Court Judge has properly ruled that the Bloomberg Ban is
"arbitrary and capricious," and is now null and void.
This penchant among the nation's nannies produces varying
degrees of damage. Some actions, like the Bloomberg Ban, are relatively harmless,
merely restricting the personal liberty our Founders provided for us to pursue
happiness.
Others, like the ban on Edison's incandescent light bulbs
that have served us economically and dependably for well more than a century,
have more serious effects. The newly mandated compact fluorescent lamps (CFLs)
are said to use less energy and last longer than their predecessors, but are
far more expensive, do not fit in many fixtures that incandescent bulbs do, and
contain mercury, a substance that in emissions from coal burning electricity
plants is viewed with great alarm by environmentalists, but is just peachy in
CFLs. If you are unfortunate enough to break one of these bulbs, you must
declare a minor hazmat emergency and execute a rigorous, time consuming and
inconvenient cleanup routine. None of this is deemed nearly as important as the
minuscule reduction in electricity use that CFLs provide, however.
Hyped-up environmental fears have spawned legions of
regulations and initiatives, among which is the development of green cars that
either run on electricity, or hybrids that alternate between conventional
gasoline power and electricity. At the heart of this movement is concern over
those dastardly carbon emissions produced by burning gasoline and diesel fuel.
Electric cars emit no carbon dioxide and hybrids only do so when operating in
gasoline mode.
We are told that if we do not take dramatic action
immediately to reduce carbon emissions, the world will heat up and it will be
even worse than the sequester. But the degree to which the activities of humans
affect the world's temperature is a subject of (excuse the term) hot debate
among scientists, and the evidence thus far -- when all the fraudulent and
contrived data is omitted -- fails to support the doomsday prediction.
Nevertheless, President Barack Obama thought this was
important enough to set a goal of having 1 million green cars on the road by
2015. But like CFLs, green cars are not consumer friendly, and sales in 2012
totaled a mere 50,000, well below what is needed to achieve Mr. Obama's goal.
Consumers do not trust the immature technology and do not like their higher
sticker prices.
Worse, you aren't told that environmental benefits are far
less than we've been led to expect. A report by the National Center for Policy
Analysis discusses the problems, noting that while electric cars do not
contribute to "global warming," that is true only in the sense that
they do not emit carbon dioxide. Building an electric car produces more than twice
as much carbon-dioxide as building a conventional car, and because electric
vehicles use electricity typically produced with fossil fuels, it indirectly
emits about six ounces of carbon dioxide per mile compared with 12 ounces for a
conventional car. Buying a green car that costs a lot more, uses an untrusted
technology and contributes very little to environmental improvement holds
little appeal for most people.
A Cato Institute report quoted former president Ronald
Reagan: "Government exists to protect us from each other. Where government
has gone beyond its limits is in deciding to protect us from ourselves,"
and then suggested that "today’s
policymakers would do well to heed Reagan’s
words," noting that "Lawmakers at all levels of government have shown
increasing contempt for personal responsibility and an increasing tendency to
employ the power of the state to influence behavior. Government today pressures
us to avoid risks, even risks that many of us knowingly and willingly take.
There seems to be a consensus among nanny-statists that, with enough public
service announcements, awareness campaigns, and social engineering efforts,
Americans will start behaving as the nanny- statists want them to."
Yet, the nannies in both the public and private sectors
ignore evidence that Americans prefer to think for themselves, enjoy the
personal liberty we were given, and pursue happiness as we decide to, even if
there is some risk attached to it.
Don't lie to us about the condition of the environment to
gain control or force foolish changes to how we live, or force us to eat better
or act differently for our own good. Just go away and leave us alone.
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