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The War On Personal Responsibility

The front page of Sunday's Sacramento Bee features the Center for Consumer Freedom and its "counteroffensive" against lawmakers and activists who push for excessive regulations on our favorite foods and drinks. Anti-soda crusader Harold Goldstein tells the Bee that Americans simply can't be trusted with the complex task of feeding themselves. "The delusion is that we all make free choices," he insists. While Goldstein's rhetoric seems outrageous to most, inside the increasingly influential world of the food police, there's nothing unusual about it at all. Indeed, it's hard to find a card-carrying member of the Gastronomical Gestapo who doesn't dismiss the concept of personal responsibility out of hand. If, as the food cops insist, the exercise of individual choice has limited bearing on what we put in our mouths, who does make these decisions? Aliens from the recently-discovered 10th planet? Sub-atomic microbots who live in fluoridated water? Perhaps it's the ghost of Milton Hershey.

Actually, most nutrition zealots believe that responsibility for food choices should rest with individuals -- as long as those individuals are named Kelly Brownell and Michael Jacobson. Here's how noted food critic Robert Shoffner describes their philosophy: "People are children and have to be protected by Big Brother or Big Nanny from the awful free-market predators ... That's what drives these people -- a desire for control of other people's lives." If they prevail, the Center for Consumer Freedom contends in the Bee, governments are likely to:

...enact laws that would allow a waiter to decide if a patron could have dessert, much like a bartender can decide whether to pour a customer another drink. Just as cigar bars were banned in California ... ice cream parlors could get the ax. The next thing you know, the center says, there will be scales in restaurants, and customers will be served or denied certain foods based on weight.

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  • Activist Cash

    Kelly Brownell
    Background
    Kelly Brownell is a Yale psychologist on a decade-long crusade against what he calls America’s “toxic food environment.” He is best known for having first proposed the infamous “Twinkie tax.” read more here »

    Marion Nestle
    Background
    Marion Nestle is one of the country’s most hysterical anti-food-industry fanatics. She writes: “Sellers of food products do not attract the same kind of attention as purveyors of drugs or tobacco. They should.” read more here »

    OpEds

    High-sodium food fight
    It doesn't take a Ph.D. in nutrition to know that a pile of pancakes, sausage, bacon and eggs is not a healthy breakfast. Except, apparently, when it comes to the nutritionists at the Center for Science in the Public Interest. read more here »

    Cooking with the master, Julia Child
    "With enough butter, everything is good," Julia Child said. Child, who lived to be nearly 92 years old, would be the first to tell you moderation is the key to a happy and healthy life. read more here »


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