By WALTER E. WILLIAMS
Last month, at a Raeford, N.C., elementary school, a teacher confiscated the lunch of a 5-year-old girl because it didn't meet U.S. Department of Agriculture guidelines and therefore was deemed non-nutritious. She replaced it with school cafeteria chicken nuggets.
The girl's home-prepared lunch was nutritious; it
consisted of a turkey and cheese sandwich, potato chips, a banana and apple
juice.
But whether her lunch was nutritious or not is not the
issue. The issue is governmental usurpation of parental authority.
In a number of states, pregnant teenage girls may be
given abortions without the notification or the permission of parents. The
issue is neither abortion nor whether a pregnant teenager should get one. The
issue is: What gives government the authority to usurp parental authority?
Part of the problem is that people who act as instruments of government do not pay a personal price for usurping parental authority. The reason is Americans, unlike those of yesteryear, have become timid and, as such, come to accept all manner of intrusive governmental acts.
Can you imagine what a rugged American, such as one
portrayed by John Wayne, would have done to a government tyrant who confiscated
his daughter's lunch or facilitated her abortion without his permission?
I believe that the anti-tobacco movement partially
accounts for today's compliant American. Tobacco zealots started out with
"reasonable" demands, such as the surgeon general's warning on
cigarette packs.
Then they demanded nonsmoking sections on airplanes.
Emboldened by that success, they demanded no smoking at all on airplanes and
then airports and then restaurants and then workplaces — all in the name of
health.
Seeing the compliant nature of smokers, they've moved
to ban smoking on beaches, in parks and on sidewalks in some cities. Now
they're calling for higher health insurance premiums for smokers. Had the
tobacco zealots demanded their full agenda when they started out, they would
not have achieved anything.
Using the anti-tobacco crusade as their template and
finding Americans so compliant, zealots and would-be tyrants are extending
their agenda. Why not control what we eat? San Francisco, Chicago and several
other cities have outlawed or seek to outlaw foie gras in restaurants.
Here's my challenge to these people: Don't be a coward
and use the state to accomplish your agenda. If you see Williams eating foie
gras, just come up and take it off his plate.
Other food tyrants want to stop us from eating Dove
and Haagen-Dazs ice cream, Mrs. Fields cookies and McDonald's Chicken
McNuggets.
San Francisco has already banned McDonald's from
selling Happy Meals with toys to children. Seeing San Franciscan compliance may
have been the source of inspiration for the North Carolina schoolteacher who
took the 5-year-old girl's lunch.
Americans have become compliant in nation-crippling
ways. Over the past several years, gasoline prices have been shooting through
the roof, but not to worry.
President Barack Obama's current secretary of energy,
Steven Chu, said in December 2008, "Somehow we have to figure out how to
boost the price of gasoline to the levels in Europe." That translates to
$8 or $9 a gallon.
During a recent hearing on the Department of Energy's
budget, Secretary Chu was asked whether it is the DOE's "overall
goal" to lower gas prices. "No," Chu responded. "The
overall goal is to decrease our dependency on oil, to build and strengthen our
economy."
Because Americans are so compliant and willing to
suffer silently at the gasoline pump, the Obama administration is willing to
press on as handmaidens of environmental extremists who want to halt the
exploration of our country's vast oil supplies, which are estimated to be
triple those of Saudi Arabia.
The Obama administration would rather pour more
taxpayer dollars into risky alternative crony energy suppliers and electric
cars.
The OPEC nations have to be laughing at us, and I
wouldn't be surprised if it were revealed that they are making under-the-table
payments to environmental wackos.
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